David Eccles Home

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David Eccles Home

Built 1907 of brick and white stone trim for David and Ellen Stoddard Eccles.

Architects: Monson & Schaub of Logan
Renovation: 1972 by S. Eugene and Christie Smith Needham

The David Eccles Home is located at 250 West Center Street in the Logan Center Street Historic District in Logan, Utah, it was added to the National Register of Historic Places (#76001811) on July 30, 1976.

David Eccles built this home in 1907 for his second wife, Ellen Stoddard. It has 24 rooms and 11,000 square feet of living space. Emigrating from Scotland with his family in 1863, David Eccles became successful with interests in sugar, lumber, coal, and banking. The architects for the house were J. Monson and Karl Schaub. The style includes late Victorian, Chateauesque, and Neoclassical elements. Two large turrets and colonnades and a neoclassical porch dominate the façade of the beautiful structure. Of particular interest is the scrollwork on the front porch and the embossed abbreviation “D.E.” for David Eccles.

Throughout the house, decorative oak woodwork is prominent. Other features include 19 cut glass windows, detailed plaster cornice work, a large archway entrance to the living room, and hardwood floors. The house has been a university dormitory and fraternity and sorority house. Christie and S. Eugene Needham purchased it in 1970 and their renovation included adding a carport, a children’s play area, a formal garden, an art studio, and bedrooms.*

The David Eccles home represents several important themes in Utah and American history. As a poor emigrant from Scotland, the home symbolizes the successful business career of David Eccles and the important contribution he made to the economic development of the West. As the home of David Eccles’ second family, it is a unique part of the Mormon polygamy story. The home f s construction coincided with the end of the polygamy controversy after David Eccles became convinced he would be able to maintain both families in Utah without any interference. The home of Marriner Eccles during his last boyhood years, the site is also an important part in the history of this important figure in America’s economic history.

Architecturally the David Eccles residence represents the finer achievements of architects and builders responsible for the construction of the many late-Victorian period homes in the West Center Street area of Logan. The home is perhaps the best surviving residence designed by Logan architects Joseph Monson and Karl C. Schaub, both of whom were distinguished in their careers.

The David Eccles Home in Logan was constructed in 1907 at a reported cost of $75,000. The architects were Joseph Monson and Karl C. Schaub. Born May 12, 1849, near Glasgow, Scotland, David Eccles was forced to begin his business career at an early age when his father, a wood turner by trade, suffered almost a complete loss of sight from double cataracts on his eyes. Supplied with kitchen utensils made by his father and resin sticks used to ignite coal fires, the eleven year old David journeyed to neighboring towns to peddle his wares. In 1863, at the age of fourteen, David Eccles and his family emigrated to Utah with help from the LDS Church Perpetual Emigration Fund. After working in Utah and Oregon sawmills, and the Almy Wyoming coal mine, David took a contract in 1872 to supply logs to a portable sawmill. This venture led to further investment in the lumber industry first in Utah then Idaho, and by 1887 in Oregon. His success in the lumber industry made possible other investments in railroads, beet sugar refineries, food processing enterprises, construction, coal, land, livestock, banks, and insurance companies. After his death in 1912, his estate was valued at over six million dollars. During his business career he had founded 54 different enterprises. Because of his respect among both the Mormon and non-Mormon business communities, he was a leader in the secularization of business in the Mormon cultural region. His biographer, Leonard Arrington wrote:

To a poorly educated person from a family with no savings or social status, the only way out of poverty was hard work and careful use of time and resources. Eccles therefore concentrated his efforts toward the goal of accumulation. He did not expend his energies in “church activities,” nor in striving for social recognition, nor in unproductive political debate, nor in the pursuit of pleasure. Every moment, every ounce of energy, every expenditure had to count toward the goal of accumulation and profit. This was not a driving preoccupation but a a pattern of life he knew was right. He was neither tense nor humorless; he enjoyed his work and his endeavors to turn a profit. He worked with gusto, relished the attempt to make business succeed, found pleasure in investing in new enterprises. But he was careful, prudent, and shrewd. This was habitual with him and not just a “show” to induce a spirit of economy among his employees.
Leonard J. Arrington, David Eccles, pp. 126-127.

In keeping with the standard set by prominent men of good standing in the Mormon Church before 1890, David Eccles married two women. His first wife and her family lived in Ogden and their home, now known as the Bertha Eccles Art Center has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

David married his first wife, Bertha Jensen, in 1875. Ten years later, in 1885, he married Ellen Stoddard a young girl eighteen years of age. Because of the pressure by federal officials to arrest Mormon men guilty of unlawful cohabitation, the marriage to Ellen was kept a secret. Ellen was well aware of the necessity for secrecy especially when her own father, a polygamist with four wives, was arrested and forced to spend several months in prison. During the late 1880’s, Eccles moved Ellen, her mother, sister and two brothers to North Powder, Oregon, near a sawmill built by John Stoddard, but then owned by his son-in-law David Eccles. In 1890, Ellen returned to her family in Logan where she gave birth to her first child, Marriner. With the fear of arrest for unlawful cohabitation still a threat to her husband, Ellen continued to keep her marriage a secret and while in Logan, carefully hung drying diapers under sheets on the clothesline in an effort to maintain her secret. Ellen remained in Utah and Southern Idaho until late 1894 when she returned to Oregon with her three children, Marriner born in 1890, Marie born in 1892, and Spencer born in 1894. Her father, a business associate of David Eccles in the lumber industry had made his home in Oregon and Ellen remained there until 1907. During her sojourn in Oregon, five more children were born.

After Ellen’s return to Logan in 1907, David’s relationship between his Ogden and Logan families settled into a comfortable routine. Leonard Arrington writes:

Eccles necessarily divided what time he had for domestic matters between his two families, so the responsibility for rearing their nine children necessarily fell to their mother Ellen. The oldest son of this family, Marriner, recalled, “she reared us all to share her own view of David as a man who was to be respected and loved, and not to be annoyed by noise and tumults on the occasions when he was home with us.” And his sister Nora concurred, adding that, even though Eccles kept unorthodox hours–in his later years he often came home as late as ten o’clock in the evening–her mother would attempt to have a full dinner for him, and a family of happy, if tired, children to greet him. The children loved to wait for his arrival. He would play games with them, such as dropping nickels and dimes on the sofa for them to find. When they would bring the lost coins to him, he would reply in his Scottish burr, “Losers weepers, finders keepers!” and laugh heartily.
Leonard J. Arrington, David Eccles, p. 155. Marriner S. Eccles, Beckoning Frontiers: Public and Personal’ Recollections, (New York, 1951), p. 22.

Leslie and Viola Paul Home

Leslie and Viola Paul constructed this house in 1923. Leslie was a physician and served on the volunteer clinical faculty of the U of U College of Medicine. He helped establish the Intermountain Red Cross Blood Bank and served on the board of the Odyssey House, a drug treatment center. In 1944 he was sent to Iran to serve as commanding officer of a U.S. Army field hospital.

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

  • mentioned in University Neighborhood Historic District:
    Dr. Leslie Paul (258 South Douglas) was a volunteer clinical faculty member at the University of Utah College of Medicine who helped establish the Intermountain Red Cross Blood Bank and served as commanding officer of a U.S. Army field hospital in Iran in 1944.

James G. McAllister House

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The James G. McAllister house, built in 1915, was identified in a comprehensive survey of Salt Lake City’s central-southern area as one of several excellent examples of the Prairie School style. Others in this portion of the city include: the Hyrum T. and Almon A. Covey houses (listed in the National Register); 962 Windsor St.; Elmer Pett House, 627 East 900 South; and the Niels Christensen House, 631 East 900 South, (all potentially eligible for the Register). As Salt Lake City grew, around the turn of the twentieth century, new neighborhoods developed to the east and south of the city center. Architecturally, the Prairie Style became popular with examples found in the Avenues Historic District (listed in the National Register), the Federal Heights area (east of the Avenues and a potential source for future Prairie style nominations to the Register), and the central-southern region. These neighborhoods represented distinctive periods of growth, and within them the Prairie Style became an important feature of their landscapes. The McAllister house is significant for its Prairie Style architecture. It possesses the composite massing, low hipped roof, horizontal banding of windows, and the pronounced shelf roof between the upper and lower stories that characterizes the style. In comparison to other examples, the James G. McAllister house remains in excellent original condition, thus retaining its historic integrity.

Located at 306 South Douglas Street in the University Neighborhood and the University Neighborhood Historic District in Salt Lake City, Utah and added to the National Register of Historic Places (#82001751)

The turn of the twentieth century found the young State of Utah in an era of rapid change. The LDS Church’s long battle with the Federal government had, in historical terms,; only recently been resolved, and Utah was just beginning to enter the mainstream of American political and economic life. During the early years of the new century the state saw a series of periods of rapid growth, with concomitant surges in building activity.

The early years of the new century saw the development of a new American school of architectural thought: ,SullIvan, Spencer,; Wright, Maher, Griffin, Drummond, Mahoney, and others associated with Chicago’s Steinway Hall and Wright’s Chicago Studio sought a new architectural expression based on simplicity of form, functional design, and the horizontal emphasis of the prairie from which it arose. What would come to be called the “Prairie School” in fact represented a family of related designs springing from a group of architects, and proved to be a popular style in Salt Lake,City during this period.

Home Beautiful, Craftsman, and other architectural magazines that were available to the Utah building community enthusiastically proselytized the new Midwestern style in their pages. Salt Lake City architectural firms (including Ware & Treganza, and Pope & Burton) soon were beginning to experiment with the new style in their own designs. The Prairie Style movement was near its height in 1914 when construction began on the James G. McAllister home. The original building permit, issued on October 26, 1914, lists “Builders Loan and Trust company” as both the owner and the builder of the property (the “architect” entry on the permit is unfortunately left blank but other evidence points out that it was probably the firm of Ware and Treganza). A survey of the surrounding University of Utah/Federal Heights neighborhood reveals at least two other houses of apparently identical internal and external design (with the exception of cosmetic and remodeling differences) located at 24 Virginia Avenue and 1417 Butler Avenue. Both list “Builders Loan and Trust Company” on their building permits as both owner and builder, while listing no architect. It seems possible that all three homes were built speculatively for an upper income market. Only the McAllister house retains its original historic appearance.

The James G. McAllister home was completed on August 24, 1915 and Mr. McAllister was known to have moved from 351 Earls Court to his new residence in the same year. Additionally, a building permit for the garage associated with the home was issued in the name of “J.G. McCallister” on September 24 1915, indicating that if McAllister did not commission the house, he at least was closely associated with it before or very shortly after its completion.

John D. T. McAllister (James G. McAllister’s father) converted to the Mormon faith in his native Delaware. He soon became a close companion of Brigham Young and, after the death of Joseph Smith, came to have positions of importance both within the church and in the secular state which grew up following the move to Utah. McAllister was a carpenter and is credited with the construction of many buildings in the valley and mills in the surrounding canyons. He served as president of the St. George Temple, president of the newly constructed Manti temple, and finally as a president of the First Quorum of Seventies. At his death John McAllister could claim nine wives, the second of whom was Angeline Sophrina Goforth.

James G. McAllister, born in 1860 in Salt Lake City, was one of thirty-two children. He served a carpenter’s apprenticeship and worked on the tabernacle, helping to build the famous pipe-organ. He also followed farming, teaming, and carpenter contracting. As he grew older and the metal mines opened in Park City, he became actively engaged in teaming and freighting, having a contract to haul the machinery for the Marsac mill, which was one of the first mills built in Park City. He served an apprenticeship as a wagonmaker and blacksmith, and during 1887-88 he engaged in mining in Marysvale, Utah, going from there to Ophir and then to Bingham Canyon. He became head salesman and assistant manager of the Studebaker Bros. Co., 1897-1906, and in 1902 organized the McAllister Bros. Sheep Co. (John D. H. and James G. McAllister), which in 1911 was incorporated as the McAllister Land and Live Stock Company, of which he was the president. In 1907 he associated with Frank Esshom in the beginning of the history of the “Pioneers and Prominent Men of Utah,” being the first president and director of the company, and a director until the completion of the work. He and C. B. Stewart were the originators, promoters and the organizers of the Fanners and Stockgrowers Bank, which was incorporated Jan. 20, 1913, when he was elected director and member of the executive board. As one of the members of the board, he purchased the ground and arranged for the construction of their banking house at 123-125 South Main Street. He was director and chairman of the executive board of the Bird’s Eye Marble Company and director and adviser in other manufacturing, mercantile and industrial companies. McAllister was a member of the committee that organized the first Republican party in the state, and remained constantly with the party.

Official records currently indicate only that James G. McAllister married Emily Marinda Chase on October 15, 1889. Emily Chase was at the time a widow of ten years with two young children, having previously been married to H. W. McKee. Family records, however, also note a marriage to Minnie Erwin on September 7, 1879. John D. T. McAllister recorded in his journal that he performed a “sealing” ceremony for his son James on the stated date. It is noteworthy that John D. T. McAllister was an active polygamist, and that he presided over the Salt Lake Endowment House at the time of his son’s purported first marriage.

In about August, 1915, James G. McAllister moved with his wife Emily and son James G. McAllister, Jr. from 351 Earls Court to his new home on Douglas Street. The property was recorded in the name of Emily M. McAllister under an original mortgage of $6000.00. On July 14, 1920 the home was sold to F. L. Cowan, an “engineer for the Denver and Rio Grande Railroad”, with a mortgage for $9000.00 at 7 percent per annum interest. At that time the McAllisters moved to Los Angeles, California where James was prominent in real estate and served as a Los Angeles city councilman up to the time of his death on September 9, 1933.

Mr. Cowan retained the property for only two years, transferring it on April 4, 1922 to John V. Dawson and his wife Flora. John V. Dawson, “whose Activities. ..placed him among the leaders of the lumber business in the west”, died July 16, 1924 from appendicitis in a Salt Lake hospital. He was vice-president of the Overland Lumber Company and treasurer of the George E. Merrill Company. His widow Flora continued to occupy the house until January 25, 1937, when it was sold to Jedediah F. Woolley, Jr. Mr. Woolley and his family lived in the house until Mr. Woolley’s death in 1979. The house was sold on July 1, 1980 to Dr. Brent C. and Karen S. James, who are its present tenants.

The James G. McAllister House, constructed in 1915, is a fine Utah example of the Prairie Style of architectural design. H. Alien Brooks’ description of the Prairie Style in 1972 provides an excellent starting point for describing the McAllister house:

… it affected virtually every aspect of the residential design — the disposition of the single mass or composite massing, the shape of the low, long hipped or gable roof, the horizontal banding of the windows, the emphatic belt course or shelf roof between the storeys — which often continued oh one side as a lateral porch and the broad, often forward-set foundation upon which the building was securely placed. The continuity of line, edge, and surface an inheritance from the earlier Shingle Style lent horizontal unity to the design, and against these horizontals a spirited interplay was established with short vertical accents, such as piers, mullions, and subsidiary masses.

The home consists of a central rectangular mass, 40 feet wide by 28 feet deep and two stories high, topped with a low-pitched hip roof with wide overhanging eaves. The lower one and one-half stories of triple-course red brick are capped by a wide band of grey cast stone which runs horizontally around the entire house, forming the sill of the second storey windows. These windows are of the sliding casement type, reaching from the cement sill to the hip roof. They are symmetrically grouped in twos and threes to further emphasize the horizontal nature of the entire building, while the intervening wall space between the sill and the roof is covered with textured stucco over metal lathe. Flat three inch wood slats are imbedded in the stucco to form a simple decorative rectangular pattern, again emphasizing the horizontal theme of the exterior.

The ground floor of the home is asymmetrically extended northward by a single story sun porch. The porch mimics the second story: a cast stone band, capping the brick exterior wall, runs at the lower window sill level entirely around the porch’s circumference, while a low-pitched hip roof caps the extension. It differs, however, in that casement windows fill all available space between the sill line and the eaves. The resulting southward view of the house typifies the entire design: a broad horizontal line at ground level is provided by the light-colored foundation. A dark masonry wall rises from the foundation only to quickly end in another light-colored horizontal band at thy level of the porch window sill. The vertically of the casement windows is balanced by their wide horizontal expanse, which is again topped by the horizontal line of the porch roof. This roof slopes slowly upward to yet another horizontal band of cast stone, while the final horizontal eave line caps the upper casement windows.

Daniel and Estella Shields House

In 1908 Daniel and Estella Shields built this house. Daniel practiced law in Park City where he also served as city councilman and city attorney. He served in the House of Representatives from 1915 to 1921 and was elected to the State Senate in 1931. Other political endeavors included his participation as the Utah attorney general, a district attorney, and involvement in the Democratic party. Also active in business, he became president of the Utah-Wyoming Consolidated Oil Co., co-owner of a Logan radio station, and director of First Security Bank. Delia and Daniel (1878- 1970) Shields lived in this house until their deaths.

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

Sand Island Petroglyphs

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Sand Island Petroglyphs

The sandstone cliff before you has hundreds of petroglyphs (pecked and carved images) on it. These images are estimated to be between 300 and 3,000 years old. This rock art site is listed on the National Register of Historic Places, and is a place of ancestral importance to Native Americans.

The Sand Island Petroglyph Panel is located in San Juan County, Utah and was added to the National Register of Historic Places (#81000585) on July 11, 1981.

Building 55, The Post Commander’s House

Building 55, The Post Commander’s House

Welcome to Building 55, a living time capsule of early life at Camp (and later Fort) Douglas. Building 55 is the Post Commander’s House and has stood for over 160 years.

We invite you to tour this building on your own or with the help of one of the guides from Preservation Utah and the Utah State Historic Preservation Office. And be sure to visit the Military Museum and archaeological excavation on Stilwell Field.

The oldest building on Fort Douglas, constructed in 1863 of wood and adobe. Originally built as Post Commander’s Quarters it served as housing for Officer and Enlisted families until 1979.

This building is #655 on the Fort Douglas Map, located on Fort Douglas in Salt Lake City, Utah.

Out of the Blue

Stephen J. Kesler
Out of the Blue, 2022 Fiberglass and steel

This full-size sculpture of a humpback whale breaching out from the roundabout is designed to complement and augment the unique and welcoming identity of the 9th and 9th area. Kesler-who was introduced to the neighborhood as a teenager and spent nearly two decades in this community working on art, music, and eventually starting a family-describes 9th and 9th as “unexpected and out of the blue. A community where people from all backgrounds, beliefs and ideas migrate and feel a sense of belonging. A community that bursts through expectations; that commands respect for nature, and varied ideas and identities…” Out of the Blue is a symbol of community, resilience, and harmony.

This project is made possible through the Salt Lake City Public Art Program, a service of the Salt Lake City Arts Council, and with support from the Salt Lake Art Design Board, Salt Lake City’s Engineering and Transportation departments, the East Liberty Park Community Organization, and the 9th and 9th community.

Located at the intersection of 900 South and 1100 East in Salt Lake City, Utah

saltlakepublicart.org

Out of the Blue reflects the dynamism of the 9th and 9th community by hosting a rotating mural that changes every several years. This allows the artwork to be transformed and be re-interpreted over time.

Current mural:
Mike Murdock
Point of Reference, 2022
This mural is an abstract interpretation of the sunrises and sunsets the artist experienced from this intersection over a period of 11 years.

James W. Quayle House

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James W. Quayle House

The house was constructed circa 1898 for James W. Quayle. He was the son of James Quayle, a successful local rancher, businessman, and vice president of First National Bank. James W. managed his father’s store on Main Street, James Quayle and Company, which carried dry goods, guns, and ammunition. The home’s architecture is a good example of a 2 1⁄2-story cross-wing type house, with Victorian Eclecticism detailing. Elements of this style are evident in the asymmetrical plan, ornamental brickwork, variety of arches over the windows, and wood gable and porch trim. The home retains its historic character and is a contributing building within the Logan Center Street Historic District.

123 North 200 West in the Logan Center Street Historic District in Logan, Utah

James W. Quayle – Keith and Elizabeth Mott Home
123 North 200 West
This two story Victorian home was constructed by James W. Quayle in 1898-1900. The Quayle family had a large store on Main Street and carried dry goods, guns, and ammunition. Keith and Elizabeth Mott purchased this home in 1992 and have carefully rescued it from many years of apart- ments, abuse, and neglect. The front Courtyard and elaborate landscape in the back of the house set the stage for the beautiful interior of this brick home.

This is a contributory home to the historic district because of age, architectural style and because of the original owner who was a prominent businessman, James W. Quayle was the son of James Quayle, a successful rancher and businessman and vice president of First National Bank. James W. managed his father’s store on Main Street, James Quayle and Co. which carried dry goods, guns and ammunition, according to the 1904 Polk Directory.