When Lydia Alice Haslam was born on 5 December 1881, in Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah, United States, her father, John Joseph Haslam, was 33 and her mother, Sarah Ellen Entwistle, was 27. She married Samuel Dallin on 15 August 1911, in Provo, Utah, Utah, United States. They were the parents of at least 2 sons and 1 daughter. She lived in Springville, Utah, Utah, United States for about 15 years and South Salt Lake, Salt Lake, Utah, United States in 1940. She died on 27 July 1949, in Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah, United States, at the age of 67, and was buried in Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah, United States.
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A federal law prohibiting all immigration of Chinese laborers. The Act was the first law to prevent all members of a national group from immigrating to the United States.
After three prior attempts to become a state, the United States Congress accepted Utah into the Union on one condition. This condition was that the new state rewrite their constitution to say that all forms of polygamy were banned. The territory agreed, and Utah became a state on January 4, 1896.
This Act set a price at which gold could be traded for paper money.
English: either a topographic name for someone who lived ‘by the hazels’, or a habitational name from Haslam (Lancashire), in both cases from Old English hæsel or Old Norse hesli ‘hazel tree’ in the dative plural form (-um). This surname has been established in Ireland since the 17th century.
Dictionary of American Family Names © Patrick Hanks 2003, 2006.
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