Hurricane’s First Family

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Hurricane’s First Family

In March of 1906, Thomas Maurice Hinton with his wife, Wilhelmina Walker, moved to Hurricane, a town with a name but no permanent residents. This couple, along with their three small children, have the distinction of being Hurricane’s first citizens.

Thomas Maurice Hinton was born to John Nock and Emma Spendlove Hinton in Virgin, Utah, on April 26, 1872, almost ten years after his parents had voluntarily come to settle the Cotton Mission. John, his father, was a cabinet maker and the only member of his family to join The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter- day Saints (Mormon Church) and immigrate from England. Emma Spendlove, his mother, had joined the Mormon Church in England, along with most of her family. She sailed on the same ship as John, and they were married aboard ship before arriving in America.

Wilhelmina was born to Francis and Elizabeth Staheli Walker on October 18, 1873, in Little Spring Valley, Nevada. Her parents had immigrated from Germany and Switzerland. Her mother joined the Mormon Church before arriving in America, and her father joined the Church in 1862, following his arrival in Utah.

For the first few weeks, Thomas Maurice and his family lived in a tent on this lot until he completed building a lumber house/granary for Thomas and Annie Hinton Isom, his sister and brother-in-law. Because of sickness, the Isom family had to delay their arrival to Hurricane. The Hinton family then moved into the Isom home where they lived for several months while Thomas completed his own home at 200 North and 200 West, on property purchased a year earlier.

Maurice, an accomplished carpenter, built many of the first homes, cabinets, and furniture for the early residents of this town. He donated liberally of his carpentry skills in the building of the first social hall, Relief Society hall, the elementary and high schools, and the stake center. He also made caskets, refusing any pay for them. He passed away February 29, 1948, and is buried in the Hurricane Cemetery.

After the Hintons moved into their new home, the Isom family moved into their home/granary on this lot. By November 1906, ten families-Amos, Jacob, Nephi, and Charles Workman; Anthony Jepson; Erastus Lee; Ira E. Bradshaw; Frank Ashton; Thomas Isom; and Bernard Hinton-had joined the Thomas Maurice family to become the first settlers of Hurricane.

As a young woman, Wilhelmina taught school in Hinckley, Utah, for several years before moving to Virgin and then to Hurricane. Aunt Mina, as she was affectionately called, became a local legend as a midwife and attendant to the sick. From 1920 to 1944 she assisted the local doctors in their medical practice. She possessed the “healing touch.” As a midwife, her pay was meager, consisting mainly of chickens or produce. She walked to and from one patient’s home to another, covering many, many miles. Her gait was described as a “half lope.” Following the delivery of a baby, she often stayed in the home of a new mother for seven to ten days, caring for the mother and other family members. She helped deliver 448 babies during the early years of Hurricane. For many years, she was a main news correspondent for the Washington County News. Much of Hurricane’s history can be documented through the articles she wrote for the paper. She passed away October 10, 1968.

This First Family, the Hintons, were a faithful and noble couple. They were great contributors to the well-being, growth, and progress of Hurricane and represent the pioneering spirit and unselfish service needed to build the beautiful city of Hurricane.

The Isom home no longer exists. The house that you see before you was built by Thomas Maurice on his lot at 200 North 200 West in 1906. It is the oldest, still-standing house in Hurricane. In the fall of 1997, Cody Dennett, the new property owner of the lot and house, donated the old home to the Hurricane Valley Heritage Park Foundation. The house was moved to this location and set upon a rock-lined basement, using the rock from the original basement.

This house shows the simple and plain life of Hurricane’s pioneers, along with the many inconveniences and hardships that were endured. The Hintons lived in this house with their seven children until 1918 when a new brick home was built, on the same lot, directly in front of the old home. How grateful and joyful they were for the new home which provided ample room, water piped into the house, electricity, and an indoor bathroom to replace the “outhouse.” This old house became Maurice’s carpentry shop for many years. The rock-lined cellar was an integral part of the family’s living activities, even after completion of the new home. The cellar provided a constantly cool, dark place to store much of the family’s food supply…such as fresh and bottled fruit and vegetables, meat, milk, and cheese, etc.


George W. Thatcher Home

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This Victorian home was constructed by George W. Thatcher in 1878. His wife, Luna Angell Young, was a niece of the pioneer architect, Truman Angell, Jr. Materials were obtained from the Temple Sawmill in Logan Canyon. The foundation was built with Temple Quarry rock found at the mouth of Green Canyon in North Logan. It was constructed during the same period as the Logan Tabernacle.

For three years after its completion, the home was occupied by Apostle Brigham Young, Jr., while he supervised construction of Brigham Young College, now Logan High School. Following the 1912 fire that destroyed the nearby Opera House, the Thatchers built the Lyric Theatre, then in 1923 built the spectacular Capitol Theatre. The steam heating system of the Capitol Theatre was extended to the home.

In 1989, the Capitol Arts Alliance purchased the Thatcher home and the adjacent Spicker house. The Spicker home was moved in order to expand the newly renovated and renamed Ellen Eccles Theatre. In 1990, the LDS Foundation donated funds to renovate the Thatcher house. The restoration was completed in 2000. The 2½-story turret in the southeast corner exemplifies this component of the Victorian style. It is now an art gallery and offices.*

35 West 100 South in Logan, Utah

The Thatcher-Young Mansion was built in 1878 for banker and industrialist George W. Thatcher and his wife Eunice Caroline (Luna) Young Thatcher. Her brother Brigham Young Jr. lived in it from 1883-1885 while he supervised the Brigham Young College, now Logan High School. In 1923, George W. Thatcher Jr. and his brother Brigham Guy Thatcher constructed the grand theatre that stands directly behind it. The Cache Valley Center for the Arts purchased and restored the mansion with the help of the LDS Foundation. It was dedicated July 24, 2001 to house the Alliance for the Varied Arts. The Cache Valley Center for the Arts manages the mansion, the Ellen Eccles Theatre, and the Bullen Center for the City of Logan.

A LIGHTED PATHWAY TO MUSICAL PERFECTION….
in memory of Professor Samuel E. Clark (1883-1964); a nationally recognized teacher; promoter of civic pride and involvement and Logan Tabernacle Organist for 55 yrs.
Dedicated April 29, 1994

Victor and Faye Guercio Home

(from Preservation Utah‘s home tour)
Built in 1948 by Pioneer Building Company (which dissolved two years later), this home is a WWII Era Cottage with Minimal Traditional style that combined elements of traditional styles like gables with the unadorned quality of Modernism. This home features a hipped roof (typically less expensive to construct than a standard roof), a circular window, attached garage, and a small portico (covered) entry.

The first owners of the home were Victor and Faye Guercio. Victor was born into an Italian immigrant family in Carbon County. He met Faye in Provo after the family moved there. After high school, he joined the Army Air Corps. His eyesight was not good enough to become a pilot, so he became an aircraft mechanic and served through World War II. Faye and Victor married in 1944 while Victor was stationed on an airbase in Texas.

The Guercios eventually raised four children in their house. Victor worked as a sheet metal worker and was active in the local metal workers’ union, advocating for improved health care and retirement benefits for workers. He loved his Italian heritage, including wine and Italian food. He took the family to the annual Italian Day at Lagoon, and he and Faye took several trips to Italy. He reportedly took great pride in his yard and meticulously kept it up.

Victor and Faye lived in the home for about 55 years. After Faye passed away in 2003, Victor moved to live with children.

1042 West Signora Drive in the Rose Park neighborhood of Salt Lake City, Utah

Samuel H. Sharman Home

Samuel H. Sharman Home

1159 East Gilmer Drive in the Gilmer Park Historic District in Salt Lake City, Utah

  • mentioned in Gilmer Park Historic District:
    A number of residents were prominent in business. Earl F. Free (1205 Gilmer Drive) was the founder and manager of Carbo-Chemical Group and also Hygeia Ice Company. Harold H. Bennett lived at 1187 Harvard Avenue between 1930 and the 1980s and was the president of Zion Cooperative Mercantile Institution (ZCMI). Samuel H. Sharman (1159 Gilmer Drive, 1925-38) was vice-president and general manager of Sharman Automobile Company and was also a nationally famous trap-shooter. Between 1922-36, Simon Rosenblatt, vice-president of Eimco and founder of Grand Central Stores, lived at 1277 Yale Avenue.

    also,
    Sharman, Samuel H. – 1159 Gilmer Dr. (1925-38); President of Sharman Automobile Company, 1924 Olympic team member

Benjamin F. Riter Home

Benjamin F. Riter Home

The house was constructed by Benjamin F. Riter, a local druggist. The house has all the features of the Queen Anne style. It is very picturesque in design with an irregular floor plan and features a variety of wall surfaces. Riter owned a chain of pharmacies in northern Utah and southeastern Idaho and was the first vice president of the Utah Pharmaceutical Association. Mr. Riter was also a member of the Logan City Council. This beautiful home now serves as a bed and breakfast as well as a facility for parties and weddings.*

168 North 100 East in Logan, Utah

John L. and Elizabeth Dalton Home

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The John L. and Elizabeth Dalton Home

In 1886, Elizabeth Dalton purchased property and later that same year, took out a loan to begin construction of this house. Elizabeth and her husband, John were the parents of eleven children. John Dalton was a partner in the Dalton, Nye and Cannon Store, located at 2376 Washington Boulevard. The business sold books and music and later expanded to include furniture and stoves.

In 1890, John married a plural wife in Mexico, just shortly before the birth of his eleventh child with his first wife Elizabeth. In 1892, he left, taking along his second wife, Amy, to serve as the president of the California Mission for the LDS Church. John resided with Amy the remainder of his life in Pocatello, Idaho.
Elizabeth Dalton resided in the house until 1899, selling the house to James L. Porter. Mrs. Dalton moved to a slightly smaller house at 1153-24th Street, where she resided until a few years before her death in 1931.

The Dalton House is architecturally significant as one of the best of only a few extant examples of the Second Empire architectural style still standing in Utah. The style was typically associated with urban locations throughout the United States and was a popular style between 1870 and 1900 in the state. Elements of the Second Empire style contained in this house include the rectangular massing of the house, with its central pavilion, along with the concave mansard roof and dormer windows.

The Dalton House was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1986 and on the Ogden City Register of Historic Resources in 1989 and is located at 2622 Madison Avenue in Ogden’s Central Bench Historic District in Ogden, Utah.

Harold and Margaret Tomlinson Home

Harold “Hal” and Margaret Tomlinson Home

(from Preservation Utah‘s home tour)
This home was built in 1950 by Pioneer Homes in a variation of Minimal Traditional architecture. Some of its interesting architectural elements include the circular window, a hipped roof, and original decorative shutters with hearts. The attached garage and small portico (covered) entry are also elements of the Minimal Traditional design.

Harold “Hal” and Margaret Tomlinson purchased this new house in 1950. Hal later remembered paying about $10,000 for the home. The couple had two children at the time and added two additional children to their family in the next few years. Hal was born and raised in Montana and served in the Navy during World War II. Margaret was born in Idaho, but she came to Salt Lake to attend high school and met Hal here before he joined the military. In 1955, the Tomlinsons moved to a larger home on American Beauty Drive as their family grew.

The Tomlinsons sold the house to Marion and Florence Corbridge. Like other residents in the neighborhood, Marion had served in the Army during World War II and worked as a driver for the Greyhound Bus Company. The Corbridges apparently had no children at home when they lived in the house.

1026 West 800 North in the Rose Park neighborhood of Salt Lake City, Utah

Westminster College President’s House

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Westminster College President’s House

This one-and-one-half-story Arts & Crafts bungalow was designed and built by local contractor Ralph C. Holsclaw in 1915, probably using ideas from Craftsman pattern books of the period. Constructed of wood shingles and clinker brick, it is in excellent condition. Although the house has been modified over the years, it retains enough historic material and integrity to be a contributing historic resource of the neighborhood surrounding Westminster College and of Salt Lake City.

The house is also significant for its association with the development of Westminster College in the first half of the twentieth century. The construction and subsequent use of the house as a residence by four college presidents coincides with significant changes in the college’s policies and its relationship to the greater Utah community. During the historic period of the house, Westminster College grew from a small, financially insecure Presbyterian academy to a fully functioning, independent four-year college. Much of the credit for the progress is due to Herbert W. Reherd, the home’s first occupant, and his successor, Robert D. Steele.

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1733 South 1300 East in Salt Lake City, Utah

Joseph Fielding Smith House

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The Joseph Fielding Smith House

This house was constructed c.1925 for Joseph Fielding Smith and his second wife Ethel G. Reynolds. Dedicated to studying and gaining an understanding of LDS principles, Smith was ranked among the leading LDS church scholars. He began work in the Church Historian’s office in 1901 and was eventually named to the position of Church Historian in 1921. Smith was also chosen to fill a vacancy in the Quorum of Twelve in 1921. Thirty years later, he became president of the Council of Twelve and was later appointed the tenth LDS church president in 1970. Following the death of his wife Ethel, Smith married Jessie Evans in 1937. Jessie was most noted for her singing abilities as soloist with the Mormon Tabernacle Choir and her participation in many church and public events. The Smiths continued to live in this home until 1954.

This two-story brick house is an example of the Colonial Revival style popular in Utah during the early twentieth century. The design includes a centered main entry that incorporates side lights within a symmetrical façade. The hipped roof and multiple lights in the upper sashes of the windows also are typical design elements of the Colonial Revival style.

998 South Douglas Street in the Gilmer Park Historic District in Salt Lake City, Utah

  • mentioned in Gilmer Park Historic District:
    LDS Church leaders also made their home in Gilmer Park Historic District. Richard L. Evans lived at 1032 Douglas Street between 1936-71 and was best known as the radio announcer for the nationally broadcast radio program, “Music and the Spoken Word.” Sterling W. Sill who resided at 1264 Yale Avenue from 1935 through the 1980s was bishop of the Garden Park Ward and a member of the Quorum of the Seventy. Adam S. Bennion was a member of the Council of the Twelve and a United States Senate candidate who lived at 1183 Herbert Avenue between 1918-58. Joseph Fielding Smith (998 Douglas Street, 1926-53) was the tenth LDS Church president.

    also,
    Smith, Joseph Fielding – 998 Douglas St. (1926-53); Tenth L.D.S. Church President

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