
The Oscar E. Hill / John Hoxer House
While the home was originally built for Thomas Whalen as a mirror image of his next-door residence at 2532 Jefferson, the home was first occupied by Oscar E. Hill, a cashier at Commercial National Bank. The house consists of pedimented gables with Queen Anne shingling and half timbering, turned porch posts, one-story, full-width porch with a gabled entry and a shingled second story bay.
Hill sold the house in 1893 to Commercial National Bank, which rented out the property. In 1903 the house was rented by Henry Conant, a former vice president for Commercial National Bank. Conant sold the home to W. R. Scott who later sold it to Martin Cullen in 1905. Cullen, a retired foreman for Southern Pacific Railroad and former Ogden City Councilman, owned the home for more than a decade. In 1915 the home was sold to John Hoxer. Mr. Hoxer became the principal owner and was a resident from 1918 until his death in 1944. Hoxer was a prominent manufacturer and supplier of canvas products in the Ogden area. He ran Ogden Tent and Awning Co. until he was 91 years old. The home was owned by the Hoxer Family until 1945 when it was sold to Emma H. Kent, widow of Harry Kent, who was a resident until the mid-1960’s. The home was split up into three apartments, had numerous owners, and finally restored as a single family home by Matthew & Angela Choberka.

2540 Jefferson Avenue in the Jefferson Avenue Historic District and in Ogden’s Central Bench Historic District in Ogden, Utah
- mentioned in Jefferson Avenue Historic District:
Abbott R. Heywood (2540 Jefferson) was a vice-president of Commercial National Bank.
also,
Abbott R. Heywood (2540 Jefferson) was the mayor of Ogden and also a vice-president of Commercial National Bank.
also,
John Hoxer (2540 Jefferson) manufactured and sold canvas products. He owned and operated Ogden Tent & Awning Company, a nationally known business in the canvas industry.
also,
Thomas Whalen (2532 Jefferson) was an active real estate man. He was also involved with the executive committee of Commercial National Bank, served for two years on the Ogden City Council, and was a tax appraiser. He also built the house located at 2540 Jefferson as the mirror twin of his own and in which John Hoxer resided.
























