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199 North Main Street on Historic Logan Main Street and part of the Logan Center Street Historic District in Logan, Utah











War Memorial




















26 Thursday Mar 2026
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199 North Main Street on Historic Logan Main Street and part of the Logan Center Street Historic District in Logan, Utah











War Memorial




















25 Wednesday Mar 2026
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Construction of this home began in December 1947 and would have been completed the following year. The house was constructed by Federal Homes Inc., a real estate development and construction company headed by Alan Brockbank, who was the lead developer behind the planning and creation of Rose Park. The home is designed in the Minimal Traditional style. The facing gables (flat triangle at the front roofline) are what give this house its “traditional” character, as do the original wrought-iron columns on the front porch and the original decorative shutters with squirrels.
After completion, the house was purchased by Franklin and Naomi Swenson. Franklin was a native of Salt Lake, and Naomi was originally from Wyoming. Frank had enlisted in the Marine Corps in 1942, and he and Naomi were married in San Diego before he was shipped overseas. The couple lived in Rose Park with their two young children for several years. Franklin worked as a salesman for ZCMI during that time. Franklin had a brother, Alf, who also purchased a home in Rose Park on Poinsettia Dr., also on the tour.
In about 1952, the Swensons sold their home to Myrel Payne. Mrs Payne, also a Salt Lake native, was a single parent and raised two daughters and a son in the home. She worked for the Newspaper Agency Corporation, printer of the Salt Lake Tribune and the Deseret News, for 22 years. She was very involved in the local LDS Ward, volunteering for years in the Relief Society and Primary organizations. Following Myrel’s death in 1987, her daughter Sharon has continued living in the house until now.
(above text from Preservation Utah‘s home tour)
715 North 1200 West in the Rose Park neighborhood of Salt Lake City, Utah

24 Tuesday Mar 2026
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Emma F. Daft House
Constructed in 1910, the house was built by Salt Lake City contractor H.F. O’Byrne for Emma F. Daft. Emma worked as a teacher at the Oquirrh School and lived in the house with her daughter, Marie Estelle. Architectural character-defining features of the Craftsman Bungalow home include its wood and masonry exterior, exposed rafters, bracketed eaves, stone foundation, large dentils in gable end, and tapered square columns.
463 South Douglas Street in the University Neighborhood Historic District in Salt Lake City, Utah

23 Monday Mar 2026
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The home was built in 1907 by John A. Henrickson, a prominent industrialist in northern Utah. Born in Norway, Henrickson came to Utah as a Mormon convert. He began the Cache Knitting Works and his company revolutionized the manufacture of underwear and hosiery in Utah. It was the first factory to manufacture “union suits,” one-piece long underwear with a trap door in the seat. The success of the Logan plant allowed him to build the Ogden Knitting Works.*
135 East Center Street in Logan, Utah
22 Sunday Mar 2026
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This wood Victorian home is in good condition. Though simpler than most Victorian homes in its use of synthesis, it nevertheless has many Victorian elements. The gables are each crowned with a plaster design. The chimney is an equally important element in the structure because of its prominent place and size. The front of the building features a beautiful portico, supported by four unfluted columns with Doric capitals and a plain entablature. This home is also part of the bed and breakfast.
Alvin H. Thompson, the original owner and a prominent businessman in Cache Valley, founded Utah Mortgage Logan in 1892. In 1903, he also helped found the Cache Valley Banking Company, whose landmark building later became the First Interstate Bank.
159 East Center Street in Logan, Utah

21 Saturday Mar 2026
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The Thatchers’ Victorian home was built in 1890 of brick and fronted by a large terrace and surrounded by a 2-foot brick wall. The home has all the characteristics of the Victorian style, such as an uneven roof and a variety of decorative works on the windows. The front portico is supported by two fluted columns with Doric capitals while the entablature is of Greek simplicity.
In 1877, at the request of townspeople, Oliver Ormsby came to Logan to be the first college-trained medical doctor in the city. After serving a mission for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, and establishing his practice, he built this home in 1890. In 1920, George Thatcher, a grandson of church leader Brigham Young, bought the house. While Mrs. Thatcher, the head of the music department at Utah State Agricultural College, held teas and musical parties, George and his brother, Brahman Guy Thatcher, built a business empire in Cache Valley. They were involved in mining, flour mills, banking, electric power, a music store, the Capitol and Lyric Theatres, and the Thatcher Opera House. The house is now a delightful bed and breakfast that is beautifully maintained and features themed rooms.*
169 East Center Street in Logan, Utah



20 Friday Mar 2026
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Fort Douglas Commanders House
First constructed at Fort Douglas in 1875 using native red sandstone from the nearby quarry in Red Butte Canyon, this building originally served as a barracks and storeroom. It was converted to the commanding officer’s quarters in 1930, providing a sizeable living room where the commander could entertain guests. Colonel Howard C. Price was the home’s first occupant. Today, it is a gathering place for university and community meetings, seminars, and special events.
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 #620 on the Fort Douglas Map, located on Fort Douglas in Salt Lake City, Utah.








19 Thursday Mar 2026
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1212 East Yale Avenue in the Gilmer Park Historic District in Salt Lake City, Utah

18 Wednesday Mar 2026
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Marriner S. Eccles, the eldest child of David and Ellen Eccles, built this 2½-story home in 1913. Carl Schaub designed the home. Architectural styles include Spanish Revival, Classical, Italianate, and Prairie. The arched front porch and the arbor to the south dominate the façade.
Virginia creeper adorns the front porch, east chimney, and arbor. Large French doors and windows allow sunlight in every room. Unique features include a formal as well as offkitchen stairway, Italian marble in the rotunda reception room, hardwood floors, brass and stencil tile, two fireplaces, original bathroom, and a sleeping porch. Marriner S. Eccles was placed at the head of the Logan family businesses when his father died and within 20 years had made the Eccles banking and sugar interests among the largest in the West. In 1934, he was appointed by President Franklin D. Roosevelt to serve as chairman of the Federal Reserve Board, a position he held until 1948. The Federal Reserve Building in Washington, D.C., was named after him.*
308 West Center Street in the Logan Center Street Historic District in Logan, Utah
17 Tuesday Mar 2026
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Built c.1906 by prominent Utah architect David C. Dart, this one and one-half story cottage is a type known as a central block with projecting bays. With Victorian, Arts and Crafts, and English Tudor architectural features, the house style was labeled “builder’s vernacular” in early tax documents and is a good representation of early twentieth-century eclecticism.
The house has many University of Utah ties. The first owners were William and Grace Ebaugh. William was chair of the Department of Chemistry. In 1918, Edward and Lillian Gaby purchased the house and completed an extensive renovation of the interior. The house then fell into disrepair and was abandoned during the Great Depression. Seville Flowers, a botany professor, and wife Emily, owners from 1937 to 1972, restored it to a livable condition. In 1951, the façade was covered with a brick-imprinted stucco; it was restored to its original appearance in 2001.
David Dart also built 206 Douglas St and 209 Douglas St.

208 South Douglas Street in the University Neighborhood and the University Neighborhood Historic District in Salt Lake City, Utah
