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Utah
Below you are links to
informational sites related to the Utah Gun laws and regulations. (
Legal lawyer stuff as follows:
Center-fire- Greenfield Industries are not responsible nor
endorses any information found on listed links. blah, blah,
blah. You get the picture. Take everything you read with a
grain of salt.) We have even included some
comical links such as the
Brady Campaign , because everybody enjoys a little
fictional reading from time to time.
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Our
Heavy weight Concealed Weapon Permit
badge comes with a wallet clip back and your
multicolored State seal affixed.
The CCW badges are full size professional quality badges
manufactured by Smith and Warren, one of the top suppliers for
Law Enforcement agencies. The Concealed Carry Permit badges
can be carried in a wallet, ID case or will easily fit in a
badge belt holder or neck holder to readily Identify
yourself to Law Enforcement as a Legally licensed Handgun
owner.
We have
fully
customizable badges available if you wish to have your
permit number or name stamped into the badge. As well as other
badge shapes to fit your personal tastes or needs.
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During the Mesozoic Era (230 to 65 million years ago(, many
types of dinosaurs lived in the eastern and southern parts of
what is now known as Utah. Their fossilized remnants are still
being discovered and unearthed.
Ancient Pueblo cultures, known as the Anasazi and Fremont
Indians, had an agricultural lifestyle in southern Utah from
about 1. A.D. to 1300. Utes and Navajos lived across what is
now Utah for centuries before the arrival of explorers,
mountain men, and pioneers.
While residents of the eastern United States were declaring
independence from England,, Catholic Spanish Explorers and
Mexican traders drew maps and kept journals documenting Utah's
terrain, and the native people, as well as plants and animals.
In the 1820's mountain men roamed northern Utah, taking
advantage of abundant fur trapping opportunities.
During 1847, members of the Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints (Mormons) migrated to the Salt Lake Valley
seeking religious freedom. Before the first Transcontinental
Railroad was completed at Promontory, Utah in May of 1869,
more than 60,000 Mormons had come to the territory by covered
wagon or handcart.
After decades of conflict and misunderstandings, Utah became
America's 45th state on January 4, 1896. During the last
century, people of many ethnic, cultural and religious
backgrounds made Utah their home, drawn by the state's beauty,
and by an abundance of economic opportunities. Together, this
diverse populace made, and continues to make, great
contributions to Utah's quality of life.
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