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Tag Archives: Uintah County

Vernal Auto Company

24 Friday Jun 2022

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Historic Markers, Uintah County, utah, Vernal

Vernal Auto Company

Herbert M. Snyder operated the Cobble Rock Station for one year, 1927-1928. During his tenure, he changed the name from Vernal Auto Company to Snyder Service, moved the gas pumps so they were more visible, and uniformed all the station employees.

A well-known Vernal family changed the business name again, and, with Howard Woolley as manager, operated Ashton Service from 1928 until 1930. They finished the “car wash room,” complete with pressure washing machines, and became a leading local seller of Goodyear tires.

Lawrence Carter and Mick Batty ran the station briefly before Tom Karren took over in January 1931. They gave the place its final name: Conoco Service. The station’s Triangle CafĂ© was then a major attraction. Chuck Henderson purchased Karren’s lease the next year and continued as manager until 1936, when Claude Banks took over. Banks stayed with the business for the next twenty years, including a break for military service during World War II.

After Banks quit Conoco to become Vernal City Police Chief in 1956, the station sat empty until Herb Snyder, one of its first operators, leased the building to use as headquarters for his Vernal Cab Company. By the time he retired, the old community gathering spot was in poor condition. It sat empty and boarded up until 1970, when owner N. J. Meagher razed it to pave a parking lot.

This is #9 of the 21 stop history walking tour in downtown Vernal, Utah. See the other stops on this page:

  • Vernal’s Walking History Tour

This marker is located at Cobble Rock Park, which is at 25 South Vernal Avenue in Vernal, Utah.

Shipped Another 12,000 Hen Fruit by Parcel Post

24 Friday Jun 2022

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The first business to occupy the corner across from you was Acorn Mercantile, a leading grocery and dry goods store. In 1915 Acorn boasted a shipment to Salt Lake City of 12,000 fresh eggs, which provided a solid market for the Ashley Valley poultry industry. The industry began to falter in 1918 when egg shipments of poor quality were refused by Salt Lake produce companies and returned to the U.S. Post Office for holding, forcing the postal service into the produce storage business.

In 1926 J.C. Penney Company, Inc., which originated in Kemmerer, Wyoming, and was formerly known to customers as The Golden Rule Store, opened a department store at this location. A year later the company celebrated its silver anniversary with a special sale to local patrons.

Hotel Service Station, owned by Lewis Motor Company, occupied the building in 1933. Its name came from its close proximity to the Gibson Hotel to the west and the Commercial Hotel across the street, just east of where you are standing. The original building was torn down in 1954 and replaced with a more modern structure which has been home to Uintah Rexall Drug, the Unique Shop, and MarElla Fashions.

This is #2 of the 21 stop history walking tour in downtown Vernal, Utah. See the other stops on this page:

  • Vernal’s Walking History Tour

Related:

  • JCPenney

2021 and 2025, The plaque is missing:

A Splendid Specimen of Architecture

24 Friday Jun 2022

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Historic Markers, Uintah County, utah, Vernal

A Splendid Specimen of Architecture

The first building erected on this site was considered “a splendid specimen of architecture” for its time and housed general mercantile stores. Jim Mease operated a store briefly, then Lycurgus Johnson moved his business here from its original Ashley Town location, four miles north. Named L. Johnson and Sons, the mercantile sold a little bit of everything for the pioneer farmer and rancher, from dry goods to “Queensware,” gent’ furnishings, and notions.

After Johnson relocated his business directly north across the street in the 1890s, Joseph W. and Annie Blythe Pieronnet opened the East End Saloon in the building. They cut in a corner door, perhaps hoping to lure some of the nearby Exchange Saloon’s patrons into their establishment.

In 1903 partners L. H. Woodard and Walter McCoy took over the saloon and they ran it for about three years. Then they made a major career move, selling all their saloon fixtures and opening a furniture store. In 1909 Woodard and McCoy consolidated their business with E. W. Davis and moved into Davis’ building a few doors down South Vernal Avenue.

By August 1910, Uintah State Bank had opened in the building, the first competition the Bank of Vernal had. Four years later, Uintah State moved into new quarters across the street. Soon afterward, Vernal Auto Company opened a garage in the old building. It was in continuous operation until 1925 when the foundations were poured for the Cobble Rock Station.

This is #8 of the 21 stop history walking tour in downtown Vernal, Utah. See the other stops on this page:

  • Vernal’s Walking History Tour

This marker is located at Cobble Rock Park, which is at 25 South Vernal Avenue in Vernal, Utah.

First Log House

24 Friday Jun 2022

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DUP, Historic Markers, Maeser, Uintah Basin, Uintah County, utah, Vernal

First Log House

In 1861, President Abraham Lincoln established by proclamation the Uintah Indian Agency, Brigham Young held the office of Supt. Indian Affairs. Lieut. Pardon Dodds, Civil War veteran, came to Utah Sept. 7, 1866 and in 1867 was appointed first Indian Agent for the Uintah Basin by President Andrew Johnson. After posting a $20,000 bond, he arrived at Whiterocks Christmas day and served until 1873 when he came to Ashley Valley as a stockman with Evans and Huffaker, east of this monument they erected the first log cabin built by white men in Uintah Basin, it served as a home for the Dodds family until 1897.

This is Daughters of Utah Pioneers historic marker #283 located at 2424 North 1500 West in Vernal, Utah. It was erected in 1963.

Cobble Rock Station

23 Thursday Jun 2022

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Historic Markers, Uintah County, utah, Vernal

As manager of Vernal Auto Company, T. G. Alexander was responsible for constructing the Cobble Rock Station, a complement to the company’s new showroom, garage, and automobile storage facility, two doors down South Vernal Avenue. It was situated on this corner of the city’s main intersection.

The drive-in station, which first went by the same name as its parent company, was equipped with every modern convenience its builders could devise. Diagonal driveways ran past gasoline pumps which were fronted by three beautiful cobblestone arches. Air, water, and oil were conveniently available. On the Main Street side of the station, grease and wash racks were built. A tire room, accessory storage, vulcanizing and battery shop were located in the back of the building. Even a lunch counter graced the business. Perhaps the most revolutionary feature in the station, however, was the ladies room, touted as being the only public restroom for women between Salt Lake and Denver.

In the days when providing superior customer service was of upmost importance, station operators also supplied the motoring public with free tourist information and continuously updated road condition reports.

When it opened in April 1926, the Vernal Auto Company service station was declared to be one of the finest in the state. Although there were many changes in subsequent ownership, the Cobble Rock Station, located in the heart of Vernal, attracted residents and travelers alike for over thirty years.

This is #7 of the 21 stop history walking tour in downtown Vernal, Utah. See the other stops on this page:

  • Vernal’s Walking History Tour

This marker is located at Cobble Rock Park, which is at 25 South Vernal Avenue in Vernal, Utah.

Why Did Women Love this Place?

20 Monday Jun 2022

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Historic Markers, Uintah County, utah, Vernal

Why Did Women Love this Place?

What is now a vacant lot, located diagonally from you, was in 1930 the premium in elegance and service to the traveler. The Cobble Rock Gas Station offered friendly service to your road-beaten auto and was touted to be the only women’s restroom between the long and rutted road from Craig, Colorado, to the mountain valley town of Heber, Utah.

In 1890, the corner originally housed a general store, but over the next twenty-nine years as Vernal continued to change, so did the building. When it was a furniture store, immigrants thriftily bought their first handmade bed-frames there. When it was a saloon, tired coal and Gilsonite miners drank heavily and told colorful stories over cool Utah beer. When it was car dealership selling vehicles with strange sounding names like Nash, Essex, Buick, Hudson and Oakland, proud new owners paraded their vehicles home down Vernal’s dusty streets. The early cars were hard to start due to the persistent -20° winter mornings, so owners would rent heated storage next door, to the south. This large building provided enough room upstairs to be used as a National Guard Armory in 1939. Five trucks, clothing, bedding, technical equipment, tools, and lockers were efficiently stored on its second floor.

This is #17 of the 21 stop history walking tour in downtown Vernal, Utah. See the other stops on this page:

  • Vernal’s Walking History Tour

This marker is located at 4 West Main Street in Vernal, talking about the location across the street at 25 South Vernal Avenue.

Cobble Rock Park

20 Monday Jun 2022

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Parks, Uintah County, utah, Vernal

These historic marker/plaques are located here:

  • “Biggest Little City off the Railroad“
  • “Cobble Rock Station“
  • “Fort Scared-to-Death“
  • “One of the Top 50 Small Cities in the U.S.“
  • “Splendid Specimen of Architecture“
  • “Vernal Auto Company“

And this historic marker/plaque across the intersection talking about this place:

  • “Why Did Women Love This Place?“

Located at 25 South Vernal Avenue in Vernal, Utah

Predator or Prey by Arnie Gray:

Mural by Melanie Cook, Nichole Stratton, Deena Aillecom, Becca Summers (2018) :

Vernal’s Walking History Tour

20 Monday Jun 2022

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History, Tours, Uintah County, utah, Vernal, Walking Tours

Welcome to Vernal’s Walking History Tour

Adjacent to you, as well as within ten minutes walking time from here, are located a total of 21 plaques looking similar to this one in color, size and shape. Mounted on three-foot-tall metal posts and typically located along the street-side of the sidewalk, these plaques illustrate historical events as they occurred over 100 years ago. These plaques reference locations on the opposite side of the street so you can see what the old establishments looked like in their day.

In addition to the six displayed within this, Cobble Rock Park, you can find the remaining plaques by following the map shown here.

What the plaques describe are sometimes the colorful, tragic, humorous, and anecdotal short stories of how Vernal settlers endured, preserved, and creatively entrepreneured to make Ashley Valley their home.

It is by history that we understand the challenges of the past. By our present that we protect it, and by our future that we learn from it. – Anonymous

There is properly no history; only biography. – Ralph Waldo Emmerson

Below are the titles of the plaques located along the walking tour. Click on the title to go to a page about that location/plaque and see photos and descriptions.

  1. “They Didn’t Have a Lot of Money, but They Didn’t Know They Were Poor“
  2. “…shipped another 12,000 hen fruit by Parcel Post“
  3. “If the Gable End of Old Hell Would Blow Out, it Wouldn’t Melt the Snow in Six Months!“
  4. “Do Religion and Money Mix? A Tale of Two Banks“
  5. “If You Were an Outlaw, Where Would You Shop?“
  6. “Where Can You Get an Iron Port, Phosphate, or Suicide?“
  7. “Cobble Rock Station“
  8. “Splendid Specimen of Architecture“
  9. “Vernal Auto Company“
  10. “Fort Scared-to-Death“
  11. “One of the Top 50 Small Cities in the U.S.“
  12. “Biggest Little City off the Railroad“
  13. “What Do You Get With a Cow, a Jug of Whiskey, and the City’s Cat?“
  14. “Horse Dies of Automobilitis – Scared to Death by Model A Ford”
  15. “Now Playing at the Vernal Theater“
  16. “How Far Would You Carry a Brick for Seven Cents“
  17. “Why Did Women Love This Place?“
  18. “Where the Dollar Has More Cents“
  19. “Railway Depot Built, But No Train Arrived!“
  20. “Lycurgus Johnson Memorial Park“
  21. “Uintah – You Say it ‘You-in-tah’ “

This walking tour is located in downtown Vernal, Utah

Fort Ashley Center

19 Sunday Jun 2022

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DUP, Historic Markers, Uintah County, utah, Vernal

Jeremiah Hatch came to Ashley Valley in 1878 as an Indian agent. Following the Meeker, Colorado massacre of 1879 he was instructed to build a fort as protection for white settlers. Their cabins, with cedar post buttresses between, formed part of the wall. Water was hauled from Ashley Creek. In 1881 first schoolhouse built on this site, C.C. Bartlett, teacher. The fort, called Ashley Center, Jericho, Hatchtown, later named Vernal was abandoned in 1882.

This is Daughters of Utah Pioneers historic marker #340, located at 92 West Main Street in Vernal, Utah

Related:

  • D.U.P. Historic Markers
  • If the gable end of old Hell would blow out, it wouldn’t melt the snow in six months!

Reynolds’ Flour Mill

27 Friday May 2022

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DUP, Historic Markers, Maeser, Uintah County, utah

Reynolds’ Flour Mill

In 1880 Wm. G. (Bill) Reynolds and Moroni Taylor cut and faced two rough stone burrs which were set up in the “Old Fort” for mill purposes. They were turned by a horse attached to a sweep. Later these burrs were used to grind feed for livestock. In 1881 the first mill in Ashley Valley was built on this site. The land was given by Robert Bodily and the mill, equipped with machinery, was run by water power flumed to the mill. Wm. P. Reynolds and son Wm. G. (Bill) operated the mill for over forty years. It was destroyed by fire in 1934.

This is Daughters of Utah Pioneers historic marker #233 located in Maeser, Utah

Related:

  • D.U.P. Historic Markers
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