Grace, Caribou County, Idaho Genealogy

City Hall
http://www.graceidaho.com/html/citygov.html Grace City Hall 108 E. Center St./P.O. Box 288 Grace, Idaho 83241 (208) 425-3533

Current
Grace 1st, 2nd, 3rd Wards of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints

404 South Main Grace, ID 83241

Historical
Many of the original records of church units are in the Church History Library in Salt Lake City. Many of the membership records covering these units from the date of their creation to about 1948 have been microfilmed and are available at the Family History Library in Salt Lake City or at its Family History Centers. Records of the (1899-1948) are included.

Directories
The Idaho State Archives has in its collections many, city, county and state directories.

Funeral Home
Sims Funeral Home 139 E 2nd S Soda Springs, Idaho (208) 547-3742 http://www.simsfh.com/index.cfm

History
Grace was first settled in 1893 and a post office established there in 1894. Grace was so named at the suggestion of a land attorney at Blackfoot when a post office was located there. The majority of the inhabitants were principally engaged in farming and stock-raising. The town is situated on the southeast side of Bear River, surrounded by a rich farming district. The total population of the Grace Precinct was 1,479 in 1930.

Additional history of Grace, Idaho and the early Latter-day Saint settlers there can be found in: Andrew Jenson. Encyclopedic History of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints. Salt Lake City: Deseret News Publishing Company, 1941, p. 292.

Historical
Copies of the following Grace newspapers are in the Idaho State Archives in Boise.

Grace Herald -- 21 Mar. 1929 through 29 Dec. 1966 Grace Herald -- 18 Dec. 1941 through 12 Sep. 1946 Grace Citizen -- 2 Nov. 1967 through 26 Dec. 1990

Copies of Gem Valley Chronicle, 8 May 1947 to 1 Jan. 1948 are available online at Ancestry ($). This was a weekly paper "advertised as a supplement to the Soda Springs Sun."