345 S Moffat Ct

345 South Moffatt Court in Salt Lake City, Utah

32 H Street

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Constructed c. 1898, this two-story brick house has elements of the Foursquare type of architecture and features a hip roof with dormers, four chimneys, arched front door opening, and segmental arched windows. Although the original owner and builder are unknown, by 1900 the home was owned by Sereno B. Tuttle. Mr. Tuttle, a native of Ohio, came to Utah at the turn of the century and established a large real estate company, Tuttle Brothers. In 1909 he sold the house to Julius Rosenberg, a leader in Salt Lake City’s Jewish community and a prominent real estate investor in Utah and Idaho. In 1932 Mr. Rosenberg moved to another house in the Avenues and converted this into a rental.

32 North H Street in the Avenues Historic District in Salt Lake City, Utah.

350 Almond St

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350 Almond St

Constructed in 1884, this Victorian cottage is fairly typical of residences built in Salt Lake City and other urban areas of the state during the late 19th century. The house form is a type known as a central block with projecting bays. The main portion of the house is augmented with one or more large bay windows. The property title suggests the house was constructed for James Fowler. Fowler, a convert to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, immigrated from Yorkshire England in 1872. Fowler worked as a stone cutter for Watson Brothers, Elias Morris Sons Co., and also independently. Fowler’s first wife, Elizabeth died in 1901, and he married Sarah Dansey in 1904. The house was sold in 1903 to Lorenzo Snow, Jr., son of Church of Jesus Christ President, Lorenzo Snow.

350 Almond Street in the Capitol Hill Historic District in Salt Lake City, Utah

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William Claud Clive House

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William Claud Clive House

This historical, one-story, vernacular T-shaped, stuccoed adobe home was constructed circa 1883 for William Claud Clive. Clive was a grocer, book binder, and notable musician. He was musically trained in Boston and in Salt Lake City. He taught the violin and piano, made violins, composed for the violin, played with the Tabernacle Choir, and conducted the Salt Lake and Grand Theater orchestras. Retaining its architectural integrity, the home has been in the Earl/Anderson family since 1933 as the result of a depression-era bank failure.

349 Almond Street in the Capitol Hill Historic District in Salt Lake City, Utah

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