Attractions Lehi Roller Mills Lehi Roller Mills was founded in 1906 by a
co-op of farmers. George G. Robinson purchased the mill in 1910, and it has since remained in the Robinson family, currently run by George's grandson, R. Sherman Robinson. The mill produces some 100,000 pounds of
flour each day. The turkey and peacock flour paintings of Lehi Roller Mills were painted on the silos about 1930 by Stan Russon of Lehi, Utah. He used a rope and pulley system to manually raise and lower himself to be able to paint. Lehi Roller Mills was featured in the 1984 film
Footloose as Ren McCormack's workplace and as the site of the dance. At the time the film was made, Lehi Roller Mills was surrounded by nothing but vacant fields. In one scene, the Reverend Shaw Moore and his wife Vi Moore keep a wary eye on the proceedings while standing in a field some distance away. The area is now home to a variety of fast food restaurants and a shopping center. The Lehi Roller Mills were listed on the U.S.
National Register of Historic Places in 1994. In 2012, the Mills filed for bankruptcy with the intention of continuing to operate during the proceedings.
Thanksgiving Point (dinosaur skeletal mounts seen in the photograph:
Othnielosaurus fleeing from
Torvosaurus)
Thanksgiving Point is a nonprofit museum complex and estate garden founded in 1995. It consists of six main attractions: the Ashton Gardens, Thanksgiving Point Golf Course, the
Museum of Ancient Life, the Museum of Natural Curiosity, Farm Country, and the Butterfly Biosphere. Approximately 1.45 million people visit Thanksgiving Point each year. It is also a location for
Megaplex Theaters and has several restaurants and gift shops. It is the site for the region's only
Tulip Festival, an annual Scottish Festival, annual Cornbelly's Halloween attraction, and
Highland Games. The complex is a
501(c)(3) organization with operations funded by private donations, venue and event admissions, and profits from shops and restaurants.
Hutchings Museum The Hutchings Museum is a museum located near the center of Lehi. It was first established in 1955 in what is now the Lehi Arts Building. The museum later moved its current location in the Veteran Memorial Building at 55 N Center St, Lehi, UT. The collection was donated to the city by John and Eunice Hutchings, who were amateur collectors and naturalists. Originally designed to be a memorial for the veterans in
World War I, the Veteran Memorial Building later expanded to host a library, courthouse, jail, police station, and fire station, among others. The Hutchings Museum's exhibits include a large range of displays and artifacts featuring Native American culture, geology and paleontology, ornithology, live animals, and both local city and regional history. Some of the Museum's most notable artifacts include a gun that reportedly belonged to
Butch Cassidy, a large collection of rocks and minerals, and several pieces of Native American pottery. The museum has online articles, photos, videos, 3-D scans of artifacts, and a virtual tour. ==Education==