• About JacobBarlow.com
  • Cemeteries in Utah
  • D.U.P. Markers
  • Doors
  • Exploring Utah Email List
  • Geocaching
  • Historic Marker Map
  • Links
  • Movie/TV Show Filming Locations
  • Oldest in Utah
  • Other Travels
  • Photos Then and Now
  • S.U.P. Markers
  • U.P.T.L.A. Markers
  • Utah Cities and Places.
  • Utah Homes for Sale
  • Utah Treasure Hunt

JacobBarlow.com

~ Exploring with Jacob Barlow

JacobBarlow.com

Monthly Archives: May 2018

Converse Hall

30 Wednesday May 2018

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Colleges, Historic Buildings, Historic Markers, NRHP, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Sugar House, utah

2018-01-13 13.12.51

Converse Hall

Although the origins of Westminster College date back to the establishment of the Salt Lake Collegiate Institute on April 12, 1875, Converse Hall, constructed in 1906, was the first building erected on the campus of Westminster College. The building was designed by architect Walter E. Ware and named for John Converse, president of the Baldwin Locomotive Works in Philadelphia, who donated 20,000 dollars of the 27,000 dollar costs of the building. As the first building on campus, it served many functions including the boys dormitory, administration offices, assembly hall, chemistry lab, lecture hall, classrooms and library. It currently houses administrative and faculty offices, classrooms and a lounge theater.

It is one of the oldest and central buildings on the campus of Westminster College in Sugar House.

https://youtube.com/shorts/6-NzCztUw7k

Related Posts:

  • NRHP #78002685
2018-01-13 13.12.22
2018-01-13 13.12.48
2018-01-13 13.12.40
2018-01-13 13.13.03
2018-01-13 13.13.06

Converse Hall was the first building to be erected on the campus of Westminster College, the only Protestant institution of higher education in the state of Utah and the only private liberal arts college “for a million square miles.” The hall was built in 1906 at a cost of $27,000 and was designed by Walter E. Ware, a prolific Salt Lake City architect whose best known works include First Presbyterian Church, First Church of Christ, Scientist, the Chamber of Commerce Building, and a number of outstanding residences. Architecturally, Converse Hall is significant as a rare example of the seventeenth century J English-inspired Jacobean Revival Style. Built of sandstone and brick, it displays the same “strictness as to detail” that characterized similar revival buildings in the East where the style was popular after 1890.

Converse Hall is perhaps the purest and best preserved of the few Jacobethan Revival. Built of sandstone in 1906, the three and one half story structure was during a period “Educational Gothic”, a movement within the late Gothic Revival. A coincident trend, the English inspired Jacobethan Revival, was never widespread in Utah but was occasionally used by well-traveled architects as Walter E. Ware.

Ware, the son of Elijah Ware, whose 1865 invention, ,a combination steam carriage and engine is recognized as a forerunner of the automobile, was born in Needham, Massachusetts, August 26, 1861. He gained his architectural training while employed by the Union Pacific Railroad in Omaha, Nebraska and later worked in Laramie, Wyoming and Denver, Colorado before settling in Salt Lake City in 1889. He quickly became one of the City’s leading architects. Among Ware’s best known extant buildings are the First Presbyterian Church (1903), First Church of Christ,Scientist (1898), Matthew H. Walker Home (1903) and Henderson Block (1897).

After a successful independent practice, Ware took on Albert O. Treganza as a partner in 1901, forming the firm of Ware and Treganza. Treganza, born in Denver in 1876, graduated in architecture from Cornell University and later worked in the office of Hubbard and Gill of San Diego, California. Treganza was a skillful designer and became responsible for the firm’s design department. Ware became responsible for the supervision of the projects and did little designing until the partnership was dissolved in 1926. Due to Treganza’s eccentric tastes, the firm produced designs in a wide variety of styles, including Neo-Classical Revival, Prairie Style, and the Arts and Crafts Style. That a Jacobethan design should be proposed by Ware and Treganza comes as no surprise, though it is uncertain who created the design for Converse Hall. Ware is given official credit although it was more likely Treganza who authored the design. In any event, Converse Hall is a very literal translation of the turn-of-the-century Jacobethan architecture developed in the Eastern U.S. and may have been patterned after a specific model.

Typical Jacobethan characteristics found in Converse Hall are the steep pedimented gables with cut stone copings, Gothic, Tudor Gothic, rectangular and segmented windows with stone mullions and label arches, crenellated parapets, octagonal turrets, tabernacle-framed dor bays and extensive stone ornamentation. The exterior of Converse Hall is well preserved, though the original polychrome brick and stone walls have been painted. The interior has been remodeled extensively, though some original features have been retained. Still used by Westminster College, the college administration has expressed a desire to restore Converse Hall.

Westminster College

30 Wednesday May 2018

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Historic Buildings, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Sugar House, utah

2018-01-13 13.12.51

Westminster College

The school was founded in 1875 as the Salt Lake Collegiate Institute, a prep school under the supervision of the First Presbyterian Church of Salt Lake City.  The church’s first building was the college until the congregation grew to 500 members and that building was moved (see this page).

The college changed its name to “Westminster College” in 1902 to better reflect a more general Protestant education. The name is derived from the Westminster Confession of Faith, a Presbyterian confession of faith, which, in turn, was named for the district of London where it was devised. The University of Westminster, London is a separate higher education institution in the United Kingdom and is not affiliated with Westminster College.

Related posts:

  • Converse Hall
  • Westminster College President’s House

1840 South 1300 East in Salt Lake City, Utah

Granite Stone from Nauvoo Temple

24 Thursday May 2018

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

2017-11-25 15.19.26

Granite Stone from Nauvoo Temple.

Donated by John Huntsman, June 1978.

This is located in Pioneer Park in Pleasant Grove, Utah.

2017-11-25 15.19.31

Jeppa and Anna Nelson Granary

24 Thursday May 2018

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

2017-11-25 15.20.02

Jeppa and Anna Nelson Granary

Built c 1874 at 200 W. 100 N. over what is thought to be their original rock-lined dugout. This granary is representative of many granaries built by all Pleasant Grove farmers for grain storage. Root vegetables and apples were stored in cellars, some of which were originally dugouts. Jeppa liberally shared his harvest with those in need. The granary was moved from the Leon Hatch property to the present site March 2, 1993.

Jeppa and Anna Nelson arrived in Pleasant Grove in 1873. ‘They lived in a dugout until spring when a one room house was built:’ “I remember the old cellar on the farm when I was a child, and Dad told us this was his first home.” (History of Swen John Nelson written by his daughter, Zelda Nelson Freeman.)

In addition to Jeppa’s regular granary, this smaller one, thought to be the one-room house built over his original house, a dugout, was set right by the street. One day a fellow Scandanavian commented, ” Bro. Nelson, that is a poor place to have a granary, and besides you are liable to have your grain stolen.” Jeppa replied, “the purpose of putting the granary there and having it unlocked is so people who need the grain may take it with no embarrassment. They are welcome to it.” The friend concluded, “now that is what I call a trusting good man.” (Memories of Grandpa and Grandma Nelson, by Zelda Freeman.)

Years after the Nelson family arrived in Pleasant Grove, Jeppa looked back and wrote of his settlement here.

And as fast as I was somewhat acquainted I received work. But there was no money to be had, but I earned wheat and other things which I could use in the family. I could do many different kinds of work and I took on anything they wanted me to do. I rented a couple of rooms until I had dug out a basement (dugout). I bought 10 acres of land, and in between working for other people, I dug the dugout, and lined it with brick and rock inside. So I had a good room ready at Christmas so I could move in – Then I went around during the winter and did some slaughtering, made wooden shoes, went to the mountains for timber for a chicken coop. I had no timber the first year. I didn’t have much of my land tilled, but worked for others most of the time – then I bought a pair of oxen, an old wagon, and 10 acres more land and leased 5 acres. Then it started to go well for me in working on the land, and I harvested wheat and potatoes and lucerne, and I bought until I had 30 acres. Then I had all I could do to take care of it…” (Journal of Jeppa Nelson)

2017-11-25 15.20.12
2017-11-25 15.20.22

This is located in Pioneer Park in Pleasant Grove, Utah.

South High School

13 Sunday May 2018

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

historic, Historic Buildings, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Schools, utah

  • 2018-01-13 12.21.29

South High School was a high school in Salt Lake City, Utah, which operated from 1931 to 1988. The school was located on the southern end of Salt Lake City proper, at 1575 S. State Street. The school is now a campus of Salt Lake Community College.

  • 2018-01-13 12.21.35
  • 2018-01-13 12.22.07
  • 2018-01-13 12.22.42
  • 2018-01-13 12.23.07
  • 2018-01-13 12.23.15
  • 2018-01-13 12.23.20
  • 2018-01-13 12.23.41
  • 2018-01-13 12.29.35
  • 2018-01-13 12.29.57
  • 2018-01-13 12.30.18
  • 2018-01-13 12.30.38

Other historic buildings in Salt Lake are listed here.

Follow Jacob

Follow Jacob

Come wander with me on Youtube.

Blog Stats

  • 2,093,135 hits

Social and Other Links

BarlowLinks.com

Recent Posts

  • Scout Monument
  • Provo High School Seminary Building
  • 821 E 100 S
  • 820 E 100 S
  • 817-819 E 100 S

Archives

Loading Comments...