Arthur Miles Home

Arthur Miles Home

Early pioneer, Arthur Miles, built this home in 1876. His daughter, Katherine, inherited the building and resided there with her husband, Karl Larsen, well known historian and author, who wrote many books about Southern Utah. The house remained in the Miles family, then, from the time it was built until Mr. Larsen’s death in 1983.

212 South 200 East in St George, Utah.

Impossible Canyons

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Impossible Canyons

In desperate search for a crossing of the Colorado River before the wild storms of winter might further weaken their starving bodies, Fathers Dominguez and Escalante led their expedition past this point on October 26, 1776.

Five days were spent near the present site of Lee’s Ferry, four miles to the east. Two young expeditionaries swam naked across the frigid river. Barefoot and cold, their bundled clothing having swept away in the struggle for their lives, the swimmers returned without exploring the impossible canyons on the other side. Another attempt to cross on a log raft failed three times in the powerful current.

With only the meat of one of their horses for sustenance, the padres finally picked their way along a treacherous route above the Paria River and through a notch in the Echo Cliffs which Escalante himself described as impassable. On November 7, the expedition jubilantly forded the river at the “Crossing of the Fathers” now under the waters of Lake Powell. These first Europeans known to have seen this dramatic canyon country returned to Santa Fe, their point of departure, in January 1777. They had failed their objective to find an overland route to the settlement at Monterey. But their experience and detailed records expanded knowledge of the remote land on the fringes of Spanish territory known today as the Four Corners Region.

This marker was placed in Marble Canyon by the Arizona Bicentennial Commission 1976 and is located at Marble Canyon, Arizona

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The Old Hurricane Bell

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The Old Hurricane Bell

At the turn of the 20th century, the American Bell and Foundry Company of Northville, Michigan produced bells for firehouses, churches, farms, courthouses, and schools. By 1907, one of their 30- inch bells, weighing 530 pounds, and at a cost of $35.75 plus freight, was hung from a hay derrick near the bowery on the northeast corner of the town square at State Street and Main Street. It was freighted to town by R.P. Woodbury.

As a convenience to the public, the bell was rung 30 minutes before the start of church, the beginning of school, or when a fire or some other disaster required assistance. When the Social Hall was constructed next to the bowery in 1908, the bell was removed from the bowery and mounted over the front door of the Social Hall.

The bell remained there until the school was built in 1918 at 50 South Main Street. If one looks closely one can see the bell mounted behind the façade. School was held in this building through the spring of 1955 when it was razed, and the new elementary school was finished on this block.

The Red Brick Church (the old South Ward Chapel located at 300 South and 100 West) was dedicated January 18, 1953, and the bell was placed inside the steeple. In 1970, multiple wards were created, and the bell was thereafter only rung on special occasions.

The Hurricane Valley Sons of Utah Pioneers, Hurricane Historical Preservation Commission, and local civic and church leaders have worked together with The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints to get the bell returned to its original home at Town Square.

On May 21, 2021, it was removed from the Red Brick Church and restored. This Bell Tower is provided as its final home through citizen donations, City Recreation Arts and Parks Tax, and the Sons of Utah Pioneers.

This is Sons of Utah Pioneers historic marker #280 (see other S.U.P. markers here) located in a park at 65 West State Street in Hurricane, Utah.

Goulds Shearing Corral

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Goulds Shearing Corral

Considerably more than a million sheep were sheared at or near this site between 1910 and the early 1930’s. Some years there were as many as 150,000 sheared resulting in over one million pounds of wool. At times it was the largest shearing operation in the world. Sheep herds trailed in on a prearranged schedule from winter-feeding grounds on the Arizona Strip and Southeastern Nevada for their annual fleecing that took place between March 20th and May 10th. A typical herd of 2,500 to 3,000 sheep could be accommodated daily.

Hand powered shears were first used but soon a gasoline engine and a system of shafts, pulleys and belts powered clippers for as many as thirty shearing stations. The concrete base upon which this monument sits is the same concrete base upon which their power plant was supported. Supported by wide belts under their stomachs as they leaned over the sheep, each man would shear 100 or more sheep in a day. Shearers placed the wool on a conveyor belt where it could be inspected prior to being tamped into huge sacks. A worker recalled, “I’ll never forget the wild cacophony of the shearing shed: sheep bleating, dogs barking, wranglers shouting, clippers whirring, machinery clanking and belts slapping became a deafening din.”

Wagons loaded with twelve to sixteen three-hundred-pound sacks make their four-day journey to the railhead at Lund, Utah (northwest of Cedar City). After shearing, the sheep, now vulnerable to late killing frosts, were trailed to mountain pastures. A narrow toll bridge just below Virgin facilitated the shorn sheep’s journey northward, a two-cents per-sheep toll reportedly being charged.

At the time when this region was struggling for an economic foothold, this industry brought a great infusion of much needed capital. Hauling the wool to the Lund railhead provided work for as many as 50 teams and wagons netting about $10,000.00 yearly to the haulers. As many as 30 shearers were employed and many more young men were needed as wool trompers and wranglers. Supplies and drinking water were delivered from Hurricane to the corrals almost daily. Two cook shacks were needed to feed the men. As one woman lamented, “Mother put up 1,500 quarts of fruit each summer to be used at the shearing corral.”

Multiple events forced the corral’s closure. It was twice torched by resentful cattlemen. By the mid thirties, highways and equipment improved; trucks equipped with power shears could drive to the herds thus lessening stress to the sheep. The Taylor Grazing Act of 1934 ended uncontrolled grazing. Low priced wool from abroad caused severe permanent cuts in United States production.

The sheep and lenticular trails made by millions of their hooves over this region are now a vague memory.

This is Sons of Utah Pioneers historic marker #124 (see other S.U.P. markers here) located southeast of Hurricane, Utah. It was originally placed in 2004 and replaced in 2023.

Fort Douglas Post Theatre

Fort Douglas Post Theatre

Since its construction in 1932, the Post Theater has drawn crowds for films as well as military meetings and community gatherings. Particularly during the years of World War II, expanded recreation activities at Fort Douglas attracted military personnel and their families here to enjoy movies.

Among the most popular and recognized structures on historic Fort Douglas property, the 260-seat Post Theater has been restored to again be a center of educational and recreational activity for the University of Utah campus, community, and the military.

Fort Douglas was operated by the U. S. Army from 1862 to 1991. During the 2002 Olympic Winter Games, this and other Fort Douglas facilities were part of the games’ Athletes Village, where Utah welcomed visitors and athletes from around the world. Today, the fort’s historic and new structures comprise Fort Douglas Heritage Commons, a living and learning center for the University of Utah, which continues to welcome community participation.

This building is #636 on the Fort Douglas Map, located on Fort Douglas in Salt Lake City, Utah.

Fort Douglas Post Chapel

Fort Douglas Post Chapel

The historic Fort Douglas Post Chapel was built in 1884 at a cost of $4,500. Architects designed the frame building in Gothic Revival style, with an asymmetrical design, corner bell tower, and arched windows rarely seen on military posts. Throughout its history, the chapel has hosted services for many faiths as well as weddings, military events, and community gatherings.

One of the most charming and well-known structures on the historic Fort Douglas property, the Post Chapel has been restored to serve as an interfaith center for multi-denominational use by students, campus organizations, alumni, community groups, and friends.

Fort Douglas was operated by the U. S. Army from 1862 to 1991. During the 2002 Olympic Winter Games, this and other Fort Douglas facilities were part of the games’ Athletes Village, where Utah welcomed visitors and athletes from around the world. Today, the fort’s historic and new structures comprise Fort Douglas Heritage Commons, a living and learning center for the University of Utah, which continues to welcome community participation.

This building is #648 on the Fort Douglas Map, located on Fort Douglas in Salt Lake City, Utah.

724 W Lafayette Dr

This home was among the earlier homes built in the Rose Park subdivision. A building permit was issued in March 1947 for a 4-room house without a garage to be built at an estimated cost of $5,000. The four rooms would have included a living room, kitchen, and two bedrooms, with an unfinished basement. Budget Homes (J.C. Baxter), one of the major development and construction companies in Rose Park, built the house. This home is built in an Early Ranch style. Following the war, as household incomes grew, so did the houses themselves, slightly larger (more elongated) than the WWII Cottage. This home showcases the original steel windows, two circular windows, a corner window and a single- car detached garage.

By 1948, James “Kip” and Livonia “Pat” Baxter had purchased this new home. In her life history, Pat remembered that they used their $1,500 in savings bonds for a down payment on the house and that they were the 4th family to move into the Rose Park subdivision. Kip had grown up in Tremonton, but Pat was a Salt Lake native and had graduated from West High School. Kip worked for Kennecott Copper for several years but began working for Young Electric Sign Co. about the time the family moved to Rose Park. Young Electric Sign (now YESCO) became famous, particularly for the neon signs built for Salt Lake businesses and casinos in Las Vegas during the 1950s and 60s. Kip worked for the company for 44 years.

Both Kip and Pat were involved in the local LDS ward. In a time when church members did much of the construction work on their church buildings, Kip did much of the interior painting in the Rose Park LDS Stake Center and was responsible for finishing the ceiling of the church gym.

(above text is from the Preservation Utah home tour)

724 West Lafayette Drive in the Rose Park neighborhood of Salt Lake City, Utah