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Tag Archives: St. George

The Sandstone Building

27 Sunday Nov 2016

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Historic Buildings, Historic Homes, Historic Markers, St. George, utah, Washington County

2013-04-06-19-24-13

The Sandstone Building

It is difficult to establish an exact date of construction of this building.  It is one of a half-dozen structures build in St. George from leftover rock from the Tabernacle during the 1860’s/  George Brooks is thought to have built the building, as he did his own similar home up Main Street.

The building was scheduled for demolition when it was discovered to be historic.  Ancestor Square was redesigned to save this gem.

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Erastus Fairbanks Snow

27 Sunday Nov 2016

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

historic, Historic Markers, St. George, utah, Washington County

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Erastus Fairbanks Snow

Missionary, Founder of St. George,
President of the Cotton Mission

Erastus Snow was born in St. Johnsbury, Vermont in 1818.  He entered the Salt Lake Valley on July 21, 1847, in advance of the first company of Mormon Pioneers.  He was ordained an Apostle at the age of thirty.  As a missionary for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, he crossed the Great Plains seven times and published the first foreign translation of the Book of Mormon in Denmark in 1850.  Elder Snow presided over the Cotton Mission from 1861 to 1888 and supervised the construction of the St. George Temple and Tabernacle.

This monument is dedicated to Elder Snow’s leadership and the great sacrifice of the Cotton Mission Pioneers.

May 24, 1997

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Woolley – Foster Home

27 Sunday Nov 2016

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Bed and Breakfasts, Historic Buildings, Historic Homes, St. George, utah, Washington County

2013-04-06-19-01-50

Woolley – Foster Home

Built around 1873 by Edwin G. Woolley, this structure was one of the largest and finest in the city for that period.  A prominent judge and merchant, Woolley owned the house until 1907 when he moved his family to Salt Lake City and sold the house to Charles F. Foster.  The Fosters were in possession until 1952.  In 1981 it became Seven Wives Inn, Southern Utah’s first bed and breakfast inn.

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The Jail House

27 Sunday Nov 2016

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Historic Buildings, jails, St. George, utah, Washington County

2013-04-06-19-24-49

The Jail House

The jail is a small one room building constructed from black lava rock gathered in the nearby foothills.  The exact date of construction is not known, however, it is assumed to be built by Sheriff Hardy around 1880.  Though used as a granary after the new County Jail was built in the late 19th century, it was apparent that it at one time was a jail in that the original bars are still in the windows.

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Anthony W. Ivins Home

26 Saturday Nov 2016

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Historic Homes, St. George, utah, Washington County

2013-04-06-19-18-41

Anthony W. Ivins Home

Anthony W. Ivins was a prominent church and civic leader in early St. George.  He served twice in the Presidency of the St. George Stake and Mayor of the City from 1890-1894 in 1895 he was elected as a Washington County representative to the Utah Territorial Constitutional Convention.

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The Jones Adobe Home

13 Sunday Nov 2016

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

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Tags

historic, Historic Homes, St. George, utah, Washington County

20130406_185119

Dedicated to the memory of Clarence Amos Jones & Madaline Empey Jones

Donated by their children Boyd Grant Jones and Sulvia Jones Chamberlain, Wayne Hyrum Jones to the Washington County Historical Society.

This one room home, with a partition, was moved from 306 West 300 North to this location in 1996.  It was funded and restored by the generous donation from the George S. and Delores Dore Eccles Foundation.

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Gardeners Club

07 Monday Nov 2016

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

historic, Historic Buildings, St. George, utah, Washington

2013-04-06-19-22-45

(*)This building was built in 1863 by J. E. Johnson, St. George’s first horticulturist, and members of the Gardeners’ Club. It served as a meeting place for the club and was never used as a home. It is one of the oldest public buildings still in use in St. George.

Around 1869, advanced or special courses were given by Richard Horton in the Gardener’s Club Hall.

The Gardeners’ Club is said to be the oldest pioneer building still standing in St. George. It was built in 1867 on land reported to have been donated by Joseph E. Johnson, whose property it adjoined. Members of the club made their own adobes and took their own teams and wagons to the Pine Valley sawmill to secure the lumber for building the small structure for their meeting place.

When the first settlers came to St. George in 1861, they were instructed by Brigham Young to explore the region’s agricultural possibilities so that the colony might become self-sufficient. Noted horticulturist Walter E. Dodge of Santa Clara was joined by Luther Hemenway, J. E. Johnson and others in cooperative efforts to establish and improve Dixie’s crops. Johnson published a newspaper, The Pomologist, to encourage horticulture, and the club staged displays of agricultural products, giving ribbons to the winners, in what must have been the forerunner of the county fair.

It is difficult for us to visualize this small building as the center of the village’s social and civic life until the completion of the Social Hall across the street. However, plays were held here, as were receptions, meetings and fairs. It even welcomed dances, but since space was so limited, a young man purchasing a ticket received a number and was only allowed to take his partner onto the floor when his number was called.

Eventually the building was deeded to James Pace and then to Sheriff Hardy, in whose family it remained until the Pace family secured it again and began the restoration of the corner.

The Gardeners’ Club stands today in the complex known as Ancestor Square and is used for a boutiqe shop. It remains much as it was at the time of its construction. It is a lasting memorial to the workmanship our ancestors believed in doing.

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The Electric Theatre

02 Wednesday Nov 2016

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

historic, St. George, Theaters, utah, Washington County

2013-04-06-19-54-13

The Electric Theatre was built in 1911 by the St. George Amusement Company at a cost of $7,500. Builders include Charlie Whipple, Johnnie Pymm, and Sherman Hardy. The walls of the 220-seat theatre are adobe and are nearly three feet thick. It was the first air-conditioned building in St. George. The theatre opened on September 6, 1911.

R. M. Reber purchased the Electric Theatre in 1930 for $10,000. He remodeled it. A contest offered five dollars to the person who could come up with the best name for the theatre after which it was renamed the Gaiety Theatre.

The Electric Theatre was totally renovated in 1991 by R. M. Reber. The name Electric Theatre was restored.

The Electric Theatre stopped showing movies after 1999.

In April 2003, the Flowers family reopened the Electric for music, bands, and live entertainment. 143 seats are available to the public on the main floor of the auditorium. The balcony is reserved for bands and their guests and includes 50 seats, couches, tables, and a buffet table.

In February of 2013, the city purchased the Electric Theatre and three other parcels surrounding the theatre for $950,000 from Craig & Linda Flowers.

The property was renovated.

The new Electric Theatre Complex had a grand opening on August 28-29, 2015 with a dedication ceremony on the 28th.

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City Centre Corner Stone

23 Sunday Oct 2016

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Benchmarks, St. George, utah, Washington County

2013-04-06-19-46-50

The City Centre Corner Stone at the Center of St. George, Utah.

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The Burgess House

19 Wednesday Oct 2016

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

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Tags

historic, Historic Homes, St. George, utah, Washington County

2013-04-06-19-14-56

The Burgess House

The house was built in 1916 by Joe Burgess.  He hauled lava rock from the nearby black hill for the foundation stones and constructed the home out of formed cement blocks made by Lim Canfield.  These formed cement blocks became popular in the early part of the 20th century when the stone masons, who had brought their trade from the old country, started becoming extinct.  The forms were made so the blocks had the exterior texture of handcut sandstone blocks.

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