In an essay called “The Hidden Life of a Miner,” Park City historian Gary Kimball recalled overhearing a couple standing outside his home on Woodside Avenue. The woman was studying a huge steel tower looming in Kimball’s yard, a rusting remnant of the Silver King Mine’s 1901 aerial tramway.
| Updated: 2:14 p.m.
During his lifetime, M. Walker Wallace a Utah businessman and real estate investor with a well-known family pedigree helped lay the foundation for Utah’s sports, culture and tourist industries.
Sapporo, Japan, would get the bid that year and it would be more than three decades before Salt Lake City would actually host the Games, said his son, Matthew Wallace. But that trip to Rome planted the seeds.
Walker Wallace whose U.S. Ski team career was cut short by a broken leg also helped establish Snowbird and Park City ski resorts. He was part of the committee that created Salt Lake City’s Downtown Alliance. He donated time and money to dozens of community organizations from the Utah Symphony and Ballet West to the Nature Conservancy, Planned Parenthood of Utah and the University of Utah Eccles School of Business.