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Thomas Frazer

Thomas Frazer was the most prolific stonemason in Beaver and the excellent quality of both craftsmanship and design found in his buildings has earned him the title of vernacular architect. He was the only builder in Beaver to make
a full-time living from his construction skills, but like most people in town, he also had a farm to cultivate as well.

Frazer was born a mile from Blairgowrie, Scotland in 1821 and lived the first 40 years of his life there. He acquired his skills as a stonemason in Scotland, a craft which was much in demand when he immigrated to Utah in 1861 as a convert to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Mormon church authorities asked Frazer and his family to move to Beaver in 1869 to help initiate an aggressive building campaign there and Frazer immediately began to build commercial, industrial, institutional and residential architecture. Unfortunately, only his residential structures are still extant today, but they are more than enough to explain Frazer’s style of architecture.

In his buildings, Frazer commonly employed one or more of six architectural elements:

  1. ashlar stonework;
  2. beaded or recessed mortar joints that were painted white;
  3. cornice-line dormer windows;
  4. bay windows;
  5. a Greek Revival style cornice or decorative barge board;
  6. a center gable.

These six architectural elements not only help to identify Frazer’s work, but they combine to help create his architectural style.

Frazer worked almost exclusively with the local black basalt for about 12 years. He occasionally incorporated pieces of native green or brown granite in his buildings and even less frequently, some red sandstone. The basalt is a very hard stone and was fractured, or chipped, to create the flat surfaces. Circa 1881, the pink tuff quarry was opened near the mouth of Beaver River Canyon, and because it was so easy to carve, it replaced the black rock as the most popular building stone.

A list of extant buildings that Frazer built in Beaver is as follows:

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