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Tag Archives: Pleasant Grove

Pleasant Grove’s First Fire Station

25 Thursday Jan 2018

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Fire Stations, Firefighters, Historic Buildings, Pleasant Grove, utah, utah county

2017-11-25 14.52.25

Pleasant Grove’s First Fire Station

Pleasant Grove’s Fire Department was first organized in 1906. A hand drawn hose cart with 300 feet of hose, and one nozzle was purchased from ZCMI for the price of $210.75. After unsuccessfully recruiting citizens to man the hose cart, the city council appointed Josiah “Si” Kemp on February 21, 1910 to oversee the Fire Department with Hans Williamson, Assistant Fire Chief, and Henry Jeppson, Chris Williamson, Anton Hecker, Clarence Christiansen and Ole Christiansen as charter firemen. In 1910, three chemical fire extinguishers, and an up-to-date nozzle were purchased and the original hose cart was reconstructed to carry these new items. In 1912 Chief Kemp recommended to the City Fathers that the hose cart be moved from a warehouse to a more convenient location. The City Council approved construction of the fire station in 1912, and directed that it be built near the city hall. Two years later the city purchased the Old Bell School from the Pleasant Grove School District. The south door of the building was enlarged so fire fighting apparatus could be stored in the old school. The school bell was rung to summon firemen. On October 19, 1914 the City declared the building surplus and sold it to Chris and Delilah Fugal. The Fugals moved this little fire station to their property and used it as a storage shed for the next 85 years. Mary Fugal Howes, daughter of Chris and Delilah Fugal, donated the little fire station to the Pleasant Grove Fire Department, and in 1999, members of the Pleasant Grove Fire Department transported it to their facility for restoration. Fireman Lyman Smith spent many hours restoring the original wood to exact historic specifications. After restoration, this little fire station was placed in Pioneer Park near it’s original site.

This marker was made possible by the Pleasant Grove Volunteer Fire Department and the Pleasant Grove Historic Preservation Commission.

This historic marker is located in Rose Garden Park/Pioneer Park at 107 South 100 East in Pleasant Grove, Utah

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Old Pleasant Grove Fort

23 Tuesday Jan 2018

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Forts, Pleasant Grove, SUP, utah, utah county

2017-11-25 14.48.38

U.P.T.L.A. Marker #133 – Old Pleasant Grove Fort

Located at 300 South 300 East in Pleasant Grove, Utah

See also Pleasant Grove Fort.

In 1853 because of Indian troubles, Brigham Young instructed the people to build forts for protection. A two foot six inch rock wall from three to five feet high, four city blocks square, was built here.

Private homes faced the center of the Fort. In the center four blocks were situated the barns and a community corral. The culinary water was flumed in.

This monument stands at the southeast corner of the Fort. The other corners are also marked.

See other U.P.T.L.A./S.U.P. Markers here.

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Pleasant Grove Fort – Northeast Corner

23 Tuesday Jan 2018

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

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Tags

Forts, Pleasant Grove, utah, utah county

2017-11-25 14.45.28

Pleasant Grove Fort – Northeast Corner

The old Pleasant Grove Fort was located here, this was the site of the northeast corner.

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Pleasant Grove Fort

23 Tuesday Jan 2018

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Forts, Pleasant Grove, utah, utah county

2017-11-25 14.48.43

The old Pleasant Grove Fort.

U.P.T.L.A. Marker #133 – Old Pleasant Grove Fort gives some details about the fort and is located at the southeast corner.

The corners of the fort were located at:

 

  • (Southeast) 300 South 300 East
  • (Southwest) 300 South 100 West
  • (Northwest) 100 North 100 West
  • (Northeast) 100 North 300 East

 

 

Pleasant Grove, Utah

12 Monday Sep 2016

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 34 Comments

Tags

Pleasant Grove, utah, utah county

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Pleasant Grove Related Posts:

  • Historic Buildings in Pleasant Grove
  • Historic Homes in Pleasant Grove
  • Historic Main Street – Pleasant Grove
  • Parks in Pleasant Grove
  • Neighborhoods of Pleasant Grove
  • Pleasant Grove Posts Sorted by Address
  • Former Pleasant Grove Canning Co. (in Orem)
  • The “G” and the meaning of the “G”
  • The Old Bell School
  • Pleasant Grove Historic District

Historic Markers in Pleasant Grove:

  • Ginkgo
  • Pioneer Flour Mill
  • Pioneer Relic Hall
  • Pleasant Grove’s First Fire Station
  • Pleasant Grove Fort
  • Site of Battle Between U.S. Army Soldiers and Ute Indians
  • Site of the First Settlement of Pleasant Grove
  • Soft-Rock
  • Ten Commandments
  • Train Station Sign

On July 19, 1850, William H. Adams, John Mercer and Philo T. Farnsworth, Mormon pioneers sent by Brigham Young, arrived at the area now known as Pleasant Grove and staked out farms in what is now the southwest corner of the city. A small community was established September 13, 1850, consisting of George S. Clark and his wife, Susannah Dalley Clark, Richard and Ann Elizabeth Sheffer Clark, John Greenleaf Holman and Nancy Clark Holman, Lewis Harvey and his wife Lucinda Clark Harvey, Johnathan Harvey and Sarah Herbert Harvey, Charles Price and wife and child, Widow Harriet Marler and children, John Wilson, Ezekiel Holman, and possibly one or two others, relatives of those mentioned. Pleasant Grove was officially incorporated as a town January 18, 1855, by which time the settlement had grown to 623 people.

The original name of the city was Battle Creek. It was named for a battle which took place there in 1849 between Mormon settlers and a small band of Ute Indians. The settlers later decided they needed a more uplifting name and began calling their town Pleasant Grove after a grove of cottonwood trees located between Battle Creek and Grove Creek, near the current-day intersection of Locust Avenue and Battle Creek Drive. A monument with a plaque describing this battle is located at Kiwanis Park, at the mouth of Battle Creek Canyon.

During the Walker Indian War in the 1850s, citizens built a fort with walls two or three feet thick and six feet tall that occupied an area the size of sixteen city blocks. The settlers in the area at the time built homes inside the fort. While the fort no longer stands, memorial cornerstones were erected by local historians. The northeast monument was erected near the intersection of 100 North and 300 East streets. The northwest monument was erected four blocks west of that point at 100 West Street and the southeast monument erected four blocks south at 300 South Street. The southwest monument would have been located near 300 South 100 West, the area is now occupied by a large parking lot and retail store.

This city was one of the filming locations for Universal’s 1995 film Gold Diggers: The Secret of Bear Mountain. Also some filming of Stephen King’s “The Stand”.

Orpheus Hall/High School Gymnasium

02 Sunday Aug 2015

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Historic Buildings, NRHP, Pleasant Grove, utah, utah county

Orpheus Hall/High School Gymnasium

Joseph Clark built this dance hall during 1908-9 with a spring floor. Alpine School District purchased the building in 1920, building onto the back and remodeling the inside front for a high school gymnasium, Pleasant Grove City purchased the building in 1965 for the recreation department.

An anonymous comment sheds a little more light, ” Jacob, the old high school and gymnasium in PG, which I attended, was still owned and operated by Alpine School District as late as 1975 as I remember. My last year in that school was 1973 and I know of two other classes younger than myself also went there. It would be nice to see some accurate dates if you could and update your information. Once again this is only my recollection of the time period.“

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Built in 1909, this one and one-half story brick masonry building has the classical characteristics of arched pediments displayed in Beaux Arts Classicism. During the first decade of the century this decorative styling was used on public and commercial buildings with spacious interiors. In 1921, dressing rooms were added to the front interior of the building and a smaller addition was built to the rear of the building some time later.*

Highland, Utah

13 Friday Feb 2015

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Alpine, Highland, Lehi, Pleasant Grove, utah, utah county

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Highland was settled by homesteaders in the 1870s. It was named by Scottish Mormon immigrants who felt the area resembled the highlands of Scotland.

Highland was incorporated on July 13, 1977.

Related:

  • Highland posts sorted by address

Lindon Ward Chapel

29 Monday Dec 2014

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

historic, Historic Buildings, Lindon, Orem, Pleasant Grove, utah, utah county

Lindon Ward Chapel
400 North and Main Street in Lindon

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The Lindon Ward Chapel, originally built for the Pleasant Grove 2nd Ward of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, was dedicated by Reed Smoot of the Council of the Twelve Apostles in 1891.

Construction of the chapel was a community effort. The property was donated by Joseph Wm. Ash. Every able-bodied man and boy contributed labor to the construction. Horses hauled clay from the foothills and pulled the mill to make adobes for the walls of the chapel.

In December 1890, construction was far enough along for a dance to be held. Proceeds from the dance were turned over to the building fund. Alfred E. Culmer, architect and project director, passed away before the final completion of the building. His funeral was the first to be held in the chapel.

The main hall contained two potbellied stoves— one in each corner. The benches ran the full width of the chapel with isles on each side. An upper gallery above the front door could be converted into a classroom by closing a set of curtains.

The chapel was torn down in 1941 with plans to build a new one. The iron fence on the north side of the property and several large pine trees remain.

Walker’s Service Station

12 Friday Dec 2014

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Lindon, Orem, Pleasant Grove, utah, utah county

Walker’s Service Station
370 North State Street in Lindon

The first service station in Lindon was built by Bill Cobbley. In 1930 he sold it to Richard L. Walker, who remodeled the building, added a retail location for groceries and hardware, and renamed the business “Walker’s Service.” Richard’s son Ivan became heavily involved in the family business in the early 1950s and has guided the company’s growth ever since. Beginning in the early 1970s, Ivan began adding additional service station locations. As time passed, carwash bays and convenience stores became an integral part of the business. Recently,
the development of fast-food franchises in conjunction with the stores has been highly successful. At the present time there are 20 Walker’s locations in 17 communities throughout Utah. The Walker’s mission is to provide quality gasoline at competitive prices, fast friendly services, and a good future for its employees.

In 2007 the Walker’s franchise was sold to Tetco, and a few years later it was bought by 7-Eleven.

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The Amusement Hall

10 Wednesday Dec 2014

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

historic, Historic Buildings, Lindon, Orem, Pleasant Grove, utah, utah county

The Amusement Hall
150 North State Street in Lindon

The Lindon Amusement Hall once occupied this site. Constructed in 1900, it was built in a shape resembling a “T,” with overall dimensions of 70 feet by 30 feet. The exterior walls were made of rustic lumber, and the interior was lined with ceiling lumber.

On the east end, a stage was situated about three feet above the hall floor. The curtain was canvas, handpainted with an outdoor scene of a girl sitting beside a standing boy playing a violin. The curtain would roll up on a large roller and lights would rise up through holes in the floor, giving the effect of floodlights. The hall was the setting for three-act plays, one produced each month of the winter. Silent films were shown on Thursdays, and often three dances were held per week.

Even though the hall was not elaborate, it was a place for people from all over Utah County to gather and have good time.

Around 1940, the hall was converted into a cannery. Many different types of produce were canned, tomatoes being the most common.

Related Posts:

  • Utah Social Halls, Opera Houses, and Amusement Halls
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