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Tag Archives: Sanpete County

Indiana Hall

19 Friday May 2023

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Mt Pleasant, NRHP, Sanpete County, utah

Indiana Hall, built in 1900. It is a two-story brick residence; Victorian style; it features stone trim, Roman-arched window and door bays with rusticated stone voussoirs, art glass transom windows; other windows are straight-arched with rusticated stone sills and lintels; fancy interior stairway, moldings and fireplace are intact; the upper section of the front porch is now enclosed.

It is located on the Southeast corner of 100 South and 200 West in Mt Pleasant, Utah and is part of Wasatch Academy.

Wasatch Academy Commons Area

18 Thursday May 2023

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Mt Pleasant, NRHP, Sanpete County, utah

The Commons Area at Wasatch Academy in Mt Pleasant, Utah

Zoe Frost Bonderman Hall

17 Wednesday May 2023

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Mt Pleasant, Sanpete County, utah

Zoe Frost Bonderman Hall, built in 2012 is located at 162 West 100 South in Mt Pleasant, Utah and is part of Wasatch Academy. The Craighead Cottage was located here before.

Craighead Cottage

16 Tuesday May 2023

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Mt Pleasant, NRHP, Sanpete County, utah

Craighead Cottage, built in 1918; a one-story brick residence; bungaloid style; rectangular plan; it features stone and concrete trim, a columned porch, square window bays and a standing seam metal roof.

It was located where the current Zoe Frost Bonderman Hall is, at approximately ~162 West 100 South in Mt Pleasant, Utah and is part of Wasatch Academy.

Alice Dormitory

16 Tuesday May 2023

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Mt Pleasant, NRHP, Sanpete County, utah

Alice Craighead Dormitory, built in 1938; It is a two-story brick and cast stone trim building; rectangular plan; shows subtle influence of the Georgian Revival Style. The building features square bays with eight-over-eight double hung sash windows, a hip roof and modest detailing.

Located on Wasatch Academy at ~90 South 100 West in Mt Pleasant, Utah

Wasatch Academy Manse

16 Tuesday May 2023

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Mt Pleasant, NRHP, Sanpete County, utah

The Manse at Wasatch Academy, built in 1938, it is a one-and-a-half story brick home; Tudor bungalow style; rectangular plan. It features square window bays, stepped chimney with a high-pitched roof and shed dormers.

Located at ~67 South 100 West in Mt Pleasant, Utah

Hans Peter Olsen House

05 Wednesday Apr 2023

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Fountain Green, Historic Homes, NRHP, Sanpete County, utah

Hans Peter Olsen House

The Hans Peter Olsen home was constructed in 1877, nineteen years after Mr. Olsen came to Utah from Denmark. Born May 30, 1833, in Jutland, Denmark, Hans Peter Olsen grew up on his father’s farm, In 1853 he joined the Mormon Church and spent the next four years as a traveling elder in his native country, In 1858 he sailed from Denmark on board the John Bright. Although the Utah War forced most of the European emigrants remain at Iowa City and Florence, Nebraska, until the following year, a group of fourteen “Danish Fellows” of which Hans Peter was a member, was allowed to journey to Utah with a group of missionaries returning to Utah in the Eldredge company. In November 1858 he settled in Manti and the following spring moved to Moroni as one of the first settlers of that community. In 1867 he moved to Fountain Green and ten years later constructed the lovely brick home. He returned to Denmark on two missions for the LDS Church first in 1869 and again in 1891, While living in Fountain Green, he was a farmer and director of the local co-op store.

The significance of the Hans Peter Olsen home is that it is one of the finest pioneer brick homes in Sanpete Valley.

Located at 211 South State Street in Fountain Green, Utah and added to the National Historic Register (#76001834) on April 22, 1976.

The Hans Peter Olsen home is significant architecturally as an outstanding example of pioneer industry, design and craftsmanship. The well preserved residence embodies the best elements of representative pioneer building during the transitional period of vernacular to “high-style” architecture. Late pioneer features such as the symmetrical 3-bay front façade, four-over-four plan, end wall chimneys and Federal entry bay are combined with less typical decorative embellishments such as Roman-arched upper windows and an unusual corbeled brick cornice with dentil band where a wooden frieze would ordinarily appear. In an area of predominantly white limestone homes, the Olsen home stands out as being unique to the region. Craftsmanship throughout the structure is excellent, a fit compliment to the stateliness and utility of the design. Qualities of permanence and beauty in the building reflect Olsen’s philosophic commitment to Mormon concepts of Kingdom-building in the Sanpete County community of Fountain Green.

The First Presbyterian Church of Manti

20 Friday Jan 2023

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Greek Revival style, Historic Churches, Manti, NRHP, oolite limestone, Presbyterian, Presbyterian Churches, Sanpete County, utah

The First Presbyterian Church of Manti

This mission church and school constructed in 1881 of native oolite limestone in the Greek Revival style was designed by architect Peter Van Houghton of Salt Lake City. The church was constructed under the supervision of Reverend G.W. Martin who arrived in Manti in 1879 and remained in Manti until his death forty years later. The church was one of several Presbyterian churches built in central Utah’s Sanpete and Sevier Valleys under the direction of Reverend Duncan McMillan, Presbyterian Mission Superintendent in Utah from 1875 to 1917.

Located at 165 South Main Street in Manti, Utah and added to the national register of historic places (#80003951) on March 27, 1980.

From the national register’s nomination form:
The First Presbyterian Church of Manti is significant because it documents the important role of a non-Mormon religious organization in stimulating improved educational opportunities in Utah and because the circumstances surrounding its being brought into existence place aspects of Mormon settlement into a new perspective. The building is a distinguished addition to the built environment of Manti.

Presbyterianism was established in Utah on June 11, 1869, with the arrival of the Reverend Melancthon Hughes to begin a pastorate in Corinne, Utah. Although begun with work in a Gentile boom town, Presbyterianism in Utah quickly became a determined missionary and youth education program aimed principally at converting Mormons.

As a religion whose own beliefs demanded an educated understanding of Christian doctrine, and whose style of religious organization was democratic, Presbyterians perceived Mormonism as a perversion, “a sort of cross between Roman Catholicism and Protestantism with vestigal marks of paganism, too eclectic to be evangelical and yet too evangelical to be wholly non-Christian.”1 Similarly, the authoritarian nature of the Mormon Church and its internal discipline was seen as “despotic suppression of liberty among its votaries and victims.” Convinced that Mormonism was both false and un-American, and, strengthened by the resolve that “Christianity and patriotism are natural allies … the Presbyterian Church discovered that it had mission work in Utah requiring intellectual strength, fervent piety, and executive ability.”

The missionary who epitomized these qualities, the Reverend Duncan McMillan, was also the man who brought into being the Presbyterian missionary strategy in Utah of offering superior educational facilities that would in time create an educated populace who would turn away from Mormonism. McMillan’s first venture demonstrated his ability to capitalize on available opportunities. Hearing of a group of disaffected Mormons in Sanpete County, he received permission from the Presbytery of Utah to proceed to Mt. Pleasant.

When he arrived on March 3, 1875, the Reverend McMillan found a group of potential converts in the Mt. Pleasant Liberal Club. These people were former members of the Mormon Church, either apostate or excommunicated, who had been growing in number since 1862 when a rift in the local Mormon Church organization had produced the defection of a sizeable number of Swedes. They had been joined over the years by others, Anglo-American and from the other Scandinavian groups, whose common bond was that they were now no longer Mormon. Politically they supported the Liberal Party against the People’s (Mormon) Party in territorial politics, but religiously they were adrift.

Since they had progressed far enough in organization to have completed a Liberal Hall just the year before, the situation for the Reverend McMillan was well-nigh perfect … to have both a congregation and a meeting place.

The other situation from which the Reverend McMillan was able to profit was the poor quality of public schools in Utah. While Mormon communities had generally established schools as among their settlement priorities, the nature and product of this schooling left much to be desired. Lack of trained teachers and an irregular and often-interrupted school year meant that most children received an indifferent education at best, but often, none at all. Fashioning benches with his own hands, McMillan opened his first school in Mt. Pleasant on April 20, 1875, with 35 students in attendance.

After overcoming some initial financial problems and with the help of other ministers and a corp of dedicated female Presbyterian missionary teachers, McMillan would establish congregations or schools throughout Sanpete and Sevier counties and in other parts of Utah territory. His school at Mt. Pleasant would become the Wasatch Academy, still operating and listed on the National Register.

In 1877 two former Mormon missionaries, Andrew Jenson and Andrew Nelson, called on McMillan and invited him to start a school in Manti. McMillan quickly called upon his brother and sister-in-law to undertake the project The school grew to 122 pupils, the largest of any school in Sanpete County,’ and a congregation was begun with twelve new Presbyterian converts. The most active elder of the new church was Andrew Nelson, a polygamist with four wives, 24 children, and 118 grandchildren. In order to accommodate to his new Presbyterian sensibilities, Nelson abandoned three of the wives.

McMillan, always sensitive to charges levelled by other Presbyterians that the Utah mission to the Mormons was inordinately expensive, triumphantly reported:

there are more converted Mormons in that one church than in all the churches of Salt Lake City put together …. Now I should like those pious economists to know that our noble, wealthy, Presbyterian Church has “wasted” only $75.00 in the conversion of those ten families, and the planting of Presbyterianism in the midst of this wilderness of sin.

The First Presbyterian Church of Manti had been firmly established by the time the Reverend G. W. Martin and family arrived in 1879 to take up the post of minister. The Reverend Martin would remain at his post in Manti for over forty years, and during that time would witness both the first flush of success as Presbyterian schools and churches sprang up in Sanpete and Sevier county under the prodding of the dynamic McMillan and, sadly, he also witnessed the gradual stagnation of Presbyterian effort. Because the Presbyterian schools had offered solid curricula and able, well qualified teachers, Mormon parents had rarely hesitated to take advantage of this educational opportunity for their children. But by the mid-1890s Mormon Stake Academies and the improved public education system made the Presbyterian schools less attractive, and gradually with the exception of Wasatch Academy the mission schools went out of existence. Proselyting, after the first harvest of Mormon dissidents, became increasingly difficult and conversions were slow. The Manti congregation dwindled through migration and reconversion to Mormonism, and when the Reverend McMillan died in 1917 the Presbyterian Church in Manti died with him. However, unlike some of his firey colleagues, the Reverend Martin was held in considerable esteem by the Mormon community of Manti. They valued his educated (a B.A. from the University of Ohio and a B.D. from Union Theological College) commitment to civic affairs in their community, and his consistently friendly and broad-minded attitude toward Mormonism. His funeral, in the church he had built and served for forty years, was attended by dignitaries of the Mormon Church who had offered the Manti Tabernacle to accommodate the large crowd who attended the service.

Subsequently the First Presbyterian Church of Manti, with its bell that had once rung for city curfews as well as church services, fell into disuse and disrepair. It is currently operated as a lodge hall.

Crawford / Dyreng home

08 Thursday Dec 2022

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

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Historic Homes, Manti, Sanpete County, utah

Crawford / Dyreng home

The Victorian influenced home was built in 1894 for James Crawford. It includes an oak staircase, stained glass and etched windows and carved fireplaces. Each room has an outside door with its own private balcony. Crawford was a successful sheep rancher and hired the work done for ten cents an hour. A man and his team were paid $2 for a ten-hour day. Behind the house is a well-preserved barn and carriage house. The home has been in the Dyreng family since the 1930s.

Located at 202 South Main Street in Manti, Utah

Fountain Green Theatre

01 Monday Aug 2022

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Dance Halls, Fountain Green, Historic Buildings, historic theaters, Sanpete County, Theaters

Built in 1917 by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints as a recreation hall with a theater and dance hall, it has been beautifully restored.

Located at 74 South State Street in Fountain Green, Utah.

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