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Tag Archives: NRHP

654 3rd Avenue

14 Friday Nov 2025

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Avenues Historic District, NRHP

654 3rd Avenue

This home is one of two neighboring houses built in 1890 by Samuel Woolf, a Jewish merchant. His brother lived at 658 3rd Avenue. Ownership of the house changed several times between 1899 and 1924 when it was purchased by Mary E. Nuslein. She lived here until her death in the mid-1930s and the home remained in the Nuslein family until the late 1960s. This building is an excellent example of a two story frame Victorian eclectic style home.

654 East Third Avenue in the Avenues Historic District in Salt Lake City, Utah.

653 3rd Avenue

13 Thursday Nov 2025

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Avenues Historic District, NRHP

653 3rd Avenue

This house was constructed c. 1906 for metallurgical engineer J. Fewson Smith, Jr. Mr. Smith worked for the U.S. Smelting, Mining, and Refining Company for 38 years. He also designed Salt Lake City’s first sewage system in the early-1900s, and was water commissioner in charge of canals entering the Salt Lake Valley. Mr. Smith owned the home until 1924, when it was then sold to Oregon Shortline Railroad conductor Harry W. Logan.

Architecturally, the house has a two-story foursquare design with a hip roof, a wide one-story front porch with a second floor balustrade with turned lintels, and on the west façade it features a two-story brick projecting bay, In the late-1930s the house was converted into apartments, and in the early-1990s Richard and June Bickerton bought the home and restored it back to a single-family dwelling.

653 East Third Avenue in the Avenues Historic District in Salt Lake City, Utah.

Mary Smith House

13 Thursday Nov 2025

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Historic Homes, NRHP, utah

Mary Smith House

The Mary Smith House, a brick cross-wing Victorian, built c. 1883, is historically significant as one of the few houses in Draper built to accommodate a polygamous family and is the only known house in the community built specifically to comply with the 1882 Edmunds Act, which outlawed “cohabitation”. one man sharing his house with more than one wife. The Edmunds Act was one of the major steps taken by the federal government to force the Mormon Church into giving up polygamy. The house was likely built to protect Lauritz Smith, Mary’s husband, from prosecution. Mary, Lauritz’s first wife, moved into this house, while Hannah, the second wife, remained in the family home less than a quarter-mile away.

12423 South Relation Street (1565 East) in Draper, Utah

Mary Smith Home

This home was built c. 1883 for Mary Smith, the first wife of Lauritz Smith, Draper’s first blacksmith. Married in 1854, the young Danish couple arrived in Draper in 1855. Their first log home was replaced by a new brick home built c. 1865-1867 located about 1/4th mile west of this site on Pioneer Ave. and still standing. Lauritz took a 2nd wife, Hannah Jensen, in 1867.

With the passage of the Edmunds Act in 1882, it became unlawful for a man to “cohabitate”. Lauritz and his son, Joseph, built this house for Mary. This is the only known house in Draper built specifically to comply with the Edmunds Act. The home is presently owned by a descendant, Karen Smith.

328 M Street

11 Tuesday Nov 2025

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Avenues Historic District, NRHP

328 M Street

This transitional bungalow with Victorian architectural details was constructed in 1903 for Charles and Alice Dangerfield. Charles was a tinsmith from England. Following his death in 1913, Alice lived here until about 1930, and rented the home until 1945. She then sold the house to Albert T. Shepherd who was a well-known violinist in Utah. Born in Paris, Idaho. Shepherd moved to Utah for early music training and was then accepted into the New England Conservatory of Music. He trained there for six years, receiving instruction from Felix Winternitx. Following his music training, Shepherd performed extensively in New York and throughout the Northeast. He then returned to Utah to become a music teacher. Shepherd married Alice Anderson in 1934. Alice was also an accomplished violinist, who taught music in Salt Lake City, Phoenix, Arizona, and Idaho. She played with the Salt Lake and Phoenix symphonies and for KSL Radio.

328 North M Street in The Avenues in Salt Lake City, Utah

Dr. Ellen B. Ferguson House

07 Friday Nov 2025

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Avenues Historic District, NRHP

Dr. Ellen B. Ferguson House
121 B Street

This one-and-one-half-story Victorian-eclectic house was constructed in 1887 for Dr. Ellen B. Ferguson. Ellen was the house physician at Deseret Hospital. She was also involved in the suffrage movement, organized the Women’s Democratic Club, and was the only female delegate to the 1896 Democratic National Convention. Also in 1896, Ellen became the first female deputy sheriff in the United States. In 1900, the year she moved to New York, she sold the house to Jane Robbins, a restaurateur who owned restaurants throughout Utah.

121 North B Street in The Avenues in Salt Lake City, Utah

(county records)

32 H Street

02 Sunday Nov 2025

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Avenues Historic District, NRHP

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

02 Sunday Nov 2025

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Capitol Hill Historic District, NRHP


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

a

(county records)

William Claud Clive House

02 Sunday Nov 2025

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Capitol Hill Historic District, NRHP

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

a

(county records)

William A. Byers Home

30 Thursday Oct 2025

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NRHP, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, utah

William A. Byers Home

Home built 1891 for William A. Byers. Frame construction with mansard roof. Registered October 3, 1973 by Messrs Randall K. Jensen and Lamont B. Vail.

256 North Vine Street in Salt Lake City, Utah

(county records)

Chamberlain/Groshell House

27 Monday Oct 2025

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Avenues Historic District, NRHP

Chamberlain/Groshell House

This finely crafted one-story brick bungalow was constructed in 1914 by local builder Charles A. Newton for Herbert Chamberlain, a prominent Salt Lake City banker. Chamberlain sold the home in 1915 to Fremont and Belle Groshell. Mr. Groshell worked with his brother Oscar operating the National Cash Register Company in Salt Lake City. The Groshell family owned the home until Fremont’s death in 1921, when the home was then sold to Art Davies, a banker for the Banker’s Trust Company of Salt Lake City. The home is a contributing building to the Avenues Historic District.

1083 East First Avenue in The Avenues of Salt Lake City, Utah

(from county records)
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