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Tag Archives: Historic Homes

John George and Susette Bosshard Hafen Home

29 Saturday Aug 2020

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

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Historic Homes, Santa Clara, utah, Washington County

John George and Susette Bosshard Hafen Home

This 1 1/2 story Victorian, eclectic crosswing home is believed to have been built in 1881. The adobe bricks that form the walls were made on the property from sand and clay from the backyard and the nearby hill to the north. Some of the other materials in the home were previously used and came from the mining town of Silver Reef. Silver Reef is located approximately 30 miles north of Santa Clara on Interstate 15 and had been a silver mining boomtown in the 1860s. By the 1880s, the town was being phased out and both materials and entire buildings were up for sale. The Hafens took advantage of this opportunity by purchasing lumber and possibly other materials to build the home. It has received only one addition, a room on the rear, since it was finished.

The home quickly became an integral part of Santa Clara’s early history. It served as Santa Clara’s first official post office, and it also housed the beginning of Santa Clara’s merchandise cooperative. After Zion’s Cooperative Mercantile Institution (ZCMI) was founded in Salt lake City, other cooperative stores were founded throughout Utah. One of these was started in Santa Clara. John George Hafen became its first manager, and he stored the merchandise stock in one of the rooms in the house.

John George Hafen was born in Switzerland in 1838. His mother died a few years later. In 1861, he and his father and sister Barbara traveled from Switzerland to Salt Lake City. Upon arriving at their destination, John George was married to Susette Bosshard, a young woman he had met before leaving Switzerland. They were all new converts to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and had traveled with other new members who came to Salt Lake City to reside with the main body of the Church. Soon after arriving, however, this group of Swiss settlers was called by Church President Brigham Young to travel on to the southern part of Utah. President Young assigned them the task of establishing a town on the Santa Clara River. Within weeks of their arrival, the town site was surveyed, and on December 22, 1861, it was dedicated.

The new Santa Clara residents intended to establish a grape-growing industry. Residential lots and vineyard plots were assigned through drawings from a hat. John George Hafen, his father Hans George Hafen, and his sister Barbara and her husband drew adjoining lots and vineyard plots. John George Hafen built a small log cabin for himself and Susette on their lot, and Hans George Hafen built a small shanty on his property. Eventually, they built and moved into the large home on Santa Clara Drive that is pictured here.

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  • Santa Clara, Utah

Thomas Mendenhall Home

25 Tuesday Aug 2020

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

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Historic Homes, Springville, utah, utah county

Located at 117 E 200 N in Springville, this 1876 home was formerly owned by Thomas Mendenhall, the co-owner of Deal Bro’s and Mendenhall Mercantile and the owner of the first bank. His family was one of the 8 original families to settle Springville.

See other historic homes in Springville here.

Crossgrove House

21 Friday Aug 2020

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Draper, Historic Homes, NRHP, Salt Lake Couty, utah

Crossgrove House

The Crossgrove House, built circa 1885 and later expanded, is a two-story brick vernacular classical residence. The Crossgrove House represents a multi-generational family’s contributions to the Draper community. Three generations of the Crossgrove family lived together through the most important decades of Draper’s development. The first owners, James and Martha Crossgrove, were notable farmers and ranchers; James also started a brickyard and was a brick mason during the late 1800s. The second owners, Baynard and Matilda Crossgrove, lived in the house and oversaw the transformation of the family holdings into a large-scale poultry farm. Their daughter, Hulda, was the third owner of the property. Hulda was an educator at the Draper Park School for many years. The house remained in the family for over 100 years, until 1999.

Related posts:

  • Draper, Utah
  • Historic Homes in Draper

Niels P. Hjort House

19 Wednesday Aug 2020

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Fairview, Historic Homes, NRHP, oolite limestone, Sanpete County, utah

The Niels P. Hjort house is architecturally significant as an example of a modified temple-form, gable-facade cross-wing type, which was one of the basic residential building types implemented by early Utah settlers. The vernacular classical design of the house, with subtle Greek Revival influence and stone construction, is in many ways typical of early Sanpete Valley dwellings, where oolite limestone was a common building material. This particular type of limestone was used not only in swellings but in larger commercial, public, and religious buildings including there prominent Manti LDS Temple. It was even exported for out-of-state construction projects.

Sanpete Valley had an ethnically diverse population, drawing immigrants from all parts of northern Europe. Neils P. Hjort, as a Norwegian immigrant, was a member of the Scandinavian population in the valley. Although some Scandinavian immigrants constructed houses after the traditions of their homelands, Hjort, perhaps feeling the need to acculurate with other Mormon converts, chose to build his house in a traditional American form.

Related Posts:

  • Fairview, Utah
  • National Register Form
  • Niels P. Hjort House

1035 N Harrisville Road

14 Friday Aug 2020

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Harrisville, Historic Homes, utah, Weber County

This 1889 home is said to be one of, if not the oldest home in Harrisville.

A few photos I saw online on this home’s real estate listing.

George Henry Cottrell – Heber J. Smith Home

13 Thursday Aug 2020

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Draper, Historic Homes, Salt Lake City, utah

George Henry Cottrell – Heber J. Smith Home

George Henry Cottrell built this five room, one and one half story, straw colored brick home circa 1905.

It was built on a give foot high granite rock foudation to prevent the house from sinking into a swampy area.

He lived in the home until 1908 when he had a farm accident and died a few days later. The home was then rented for twelve years.

In 1920, Heber J. and Matilda Smith and their three children purchased the home and four acres. The Smith family lived there from 1920 to 1958. Two more children joined the family and a multitude of blessings were poured down upon them.

In 1958, Heber built a new home to the north, and once again this home became a rental home. In 1983, Pete and Terese Larkin bought the home and did extensive remodeling to the interior, made a roof conversion and two additional rooms were added. In 1991, Clyde and Kelly Anderson purchased the home and lived here until 1995 when Brent and Jane Tucker became the present owners.

Related Posts:

  • Draper, Utah
  • Historic Homes in Draper

Judge Jacob Johnson House

07 Friday Aug 2020

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

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Historic Homes, NRHP, Sanpete County, Spring City, utah

(not my photo, someone shared it on facebook)

Judge Jacob Johnson House

The south section of this house, built of stone in about 1875, is a Classical two-story hall-parlor building. In 1892, the large Victorian addition on the north was completed. The stone walls of the house have been stuccoed and scored to simulate ashlar masonry. Jacob Johnson (1847-1925) built the original section of the house when he opened his law office in Spring City and lived here with his wives, Margaret Anderson (1844-1885) and Matilda Justesen (1866-1930). It is the largest house in Spring City, and was the first house in town to have a bathroom and running water.(*)

The oolitic limestone building just to the north, with cement block addition, served as his office and library. later, when Johnson became judge for the 7th Judicial of Utah, the building became his court.

A fine stone barn is situated north of the house and office.

As a circuit judge, Johnson held court in Manti, Price, Castledale, Moab, and Monticello for a number of years after 1895. He was also a United States Congressman for 2 years.

The current owners are the Anderson’s who have done the restoration on the home.

390 South 100 West in Spring City, Utah

Little Free Libraries

Henry and Juliett Bohne Home

07 Friday Aug 2020

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

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Historic Homes, Mt Pleasant, oolite limestone, Sanpete County, utah

Located at 2783 N State Street in Mt Pleasant, Utah – the Henry Martin Bohne and Juiett Day Bohne home stands out as one of the few on the highway between Mt Pleasant and Fairview. It was built in 1896 from hand chipped white oolite stone.

Related Posts:

  • Historic Homes in Mt Pleasant
  • More history of this home
  • Mt Pleasant, Utah

Todd – Hicken Home

07 Friday Aug 2020

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

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Heber City, Historic Homes, NRHP, utah, Wasatch County

Built in 1876-1879 of native red sandstone by Thomas Todd, an 1854 emigrant from Scotland.
Marker placed December 1974 by owners, Mr. and Mrs. Grant M. Hicken.

411 East 400 North in Heber City, Utah

553 4th Avenue

04 Tuesday Aug 2020

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

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Avenues, Historic Homes, NRHP, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, utah

Constructed in 1890 for Vashi and Agnes Pease, this house is a good example of a Victorian Eclectic home. Mr. Pease worked as a U.S. Mail contractor in Salt Lake City until 1908, when he retired and moved to San Francisco. After Mr. Pease’s death in 1913, Agnes Pease continued to own this property as a rental until 1925. Then the house was sold to Charles and Rose Turton, the proprietor’s of the Lion Drug Store located at 564 Third Avenue.

The home is of an L-shaped cross-wing Victorian. It retains its historic integrity, featuring the bay window, cornice finishes, a mansard roof, and an old style transom above the front door. other original features of the house include original window glass, front porch, and an attractive inlaid ceramic tile mantelpiece. This home is a contributing structure to the Avenues Historic District.

Located at 553 East Fourth Avenue in the Avenues Historic District in Salt Lake City, Utah.

(from county records)
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