Hughes House

Hughes House

The Misses Mollie and Josie Hughes hired the architectural firm of Gibbs and Parker, Kansas City, Mo., to design this ornate Queen Anne style residence. Erected in 1887, it was one of a group of mansions on Main Street owned by the Bryant-Hughes families.

801 South Main Street in Independence, Missouri

Nellie C. Bailey House

Nellie C. Bailey House

Built in 1919, this home is an excellent example of a Prairie style bungalow. The home was built for Nellie Bailey, who had lived with her family for many years in the large Victorian home to the North. Like many of her time, she wanted a home with modern amenities, and had one built on her own property. The house has many elements common to the Arts & Crafts and Prairie style.

The home has horizontal bands of brick and stucco surrounding the home, with casement windows set within those bands. The hip roof features large overhanging eaves and a low-angled pitch. Like many bungalows, it features a large front porch which covers the entire front of the home.

Inside, the home is a collection of beautiful woodwork. Gumwood trim, in horizontal bands, was used in the living room and dining room. Quarter-Sawn Oak, Maple, and Vertical-Grain Douglas Fir, are used in other parts of the home. The home has been owned by three families since Nellie Bailey.

159 North 400 East in Provo, Utah

The James and Manomas Andrus House

The James and Manomas Andrus House
Built around 1886

Known as “The cattle baron of So. Utah.” He was a pioneer, Indian fighter, Bishop, businessman, statesman, and accomplished equestrian.

Manomas Lavinia Gibson Andrus: 1842-1940
At the time of her death she was the oldest living original 1847 Utah Pioneer. She arrived in Salt Lake Valley on 7/29/47, one week after the Brigham Young party.

164 West 100 South in St George, Utah

Jesse W. Crosby Home

Jesse W. Crosby Home

Jesse W. Crosby Sr. obtained this land in 1875. With his wife Hanna, he built this home which remained in the Crosby family until 1957 when Andrew and Verda Pace purchased it. In 1966 the Steven Lorenzo and Ilene H. Hafen obtained this home. The locust trees west of this home are over a century old and were brought here as seedlings on wagons from California.

95 West 100 South in St George, Utah

The Heinrich Gubler Home

The Heinrich Gubler Home

Built circa 1870 by Heinrich Gubler, one of the men chosen by Brigham Young to help colonize Southern Utah, this home was one of the earliest built on ground assigned by that Mormon leader.

Constructed of adobe, as were almost all of the early dwellings, the plainness of that early construction was enhanced by the addition of the porches by Mark and Barbara Greene when they purchased and restored the pioneer structure.

160 South 300 West in St George, Utah

The Temple Quarry

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The Temple Quarry

This is where the rock was quarried for the foundation of the St. George Temple of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Lava, flowing from volcanoes to the North, formed this rock which is impervious to the alkali and water found in the soil where the temple was to be built.

The stone was quarried into slabs averaging ten feet long, forty-two inches wide, thirteen inches thick, and five thousand five hundred pounds in weight. The unique method of loading them for hauling was by placing the stone on six inches of soil, straddling it with the wagon, securing it to the undercarriage, and then removing the dirt from under the rock.

The quarry was active during the early eighteen-seventies.

This is Sons of Utah Pioneers historic marker #81 (see other S.U.P. makers here) located on the Temple Quarry Trail in Saint George, Utah.

Temple Quarry Trail
1871-1874
The Trail (Dugway) was built to access the Quarry on the south west side of the Black Hill. The large lava rock was needed for the foundation and basement walls of the St. George Temple, because the stone was “impervious to the alkali soil.”

Temple Quarry Trailhead
Pioneer workmen transported basalt stone blocks for construction of the Saint George LDS Temple foundation by wagon over this “Temple Quarry Trail.”
Completion of the trailhead, archway, and access to the trail has long been Dr. Mark H. Green’s dream. The city of Saint George dedicates this project in memory of him.