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Tag Archives: utah

Lydia Puzey House

30 Saturday Nov 2024

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NRHP, utah

Lydia Puzey House

Built c. 1909 for Lydia Puzey, this 1 1/2-story, brick, asymmetrical, Single Cell house, with a later side addition, is a charming example of early construction in Sanpete County. Lydia emigrated from England as a child and crossed the plains in 1857 with the Jacob Hofheins handcart company. In 1874, she married William Henry Puzey and settled in Spring City. Before William’s death at age 39, he owned a wagon shop on the corner of Center and Main. Lydia lived to be 88 years old, Spring City’s oldest resident at the time of her death.

59 West Center Street in Spring City, Utah

Thomas Frazer House

29 Friday Nov 2024

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Beaver, Beaver County, Historic Homes, NRHP, utah

Thomas Frazer House

The oldest section of the Thomas Frazer House (the middle part) was built in 1870 while an addition to the east was completed in 1872. Both of these portions of the house are constructed of a basalt-like black rock. The third section of the house was completed c. 1890 and was constructed of a pink tufa rock. All facades, except the north, display well cut and finished stone masonry.

The house was built by and for Thomas Frazer, a Scotch immigrant and convert to the Mormon church. Frazer was a stonemason by trade and worked in this capacity both in Scotland and Utah. In 1868 his mason’s skills were requested in Beaver, and Frazer initiated a vigorous building campaign in that pioneer town.

The Thomas Frazer House is one of the earliest permanent homes in Beaver, a town that was originally settled with log cabins and dugouts some 20 years prior to Frazer’s arrival. As the town gradually acquired prosperity, people desired more permanent, comfortable houses and these were mostly built by Frazer and his apprentices.

In his own home Frazer paid attention to special details, such as an inscription plaque of sandstone, bearing the date (1872) and the initials of Frazer and his wife Annie. Another example would be the bas-relief portraits, in green granite, of Frazer and Annie that enfrom the south door.

Besides such details, the house also displays several of the characteristics of Frazer’s style of building. These characteristics include: 1) stone bay windows, 2) dormer windows, 3) fancy work along the cornice, and 4) exacting treatment of both the cut stone and the mortar work. In summary, the Thomas Frazer House is significant not only as a fine example of pioneer architecture, but also as the residence of the architect/building who profoundly shaped the character of the town of Beaver.

The Thomas Frazer House is located at 590 North 300 West in Beaver, Utah and was added to the National Historic Register (#78002650) on November 16, 1978. The text on this page is from the nomination form from when the home was added to the national register.

The Thomas Frazer House still retains its original appearance and is in excellent condition. It is a one story stone house, and due to later additions, it has a low, linear character. The two oldest parts of the house display Greek Revival and Federalist Revival elements in the partial boxed return cornice (with fancy brackets) and the door surrounded by transom and side lights. The gabled roof is of medium pitch and is topped by three chimneys.

The nature of the stonework is very fine and exacting and this contributes to the rather formal character of the house. The stones are laid up in broken courses, and each block is nicely squared and finished. The mortar is beaded and originally stained white. The house contains two stone bay windows and one dormer window that used to give light to the attic/loft.

There are four types of rock used in the Thomas Frazer House. The first and most prevalent is a basalt-like black rock. The two earliest sections of the house were constructed out of this stone. The second type of rock is a pink tufa, which is much softer, and therefore easier to work with than the black rock. The third and last section of the house is built with this pink rock. Red sandstone and green granite are used a lintels and decorative motifs throughout the exterior.

The decorative elements and the care lavished on the construction of the house emphasize the fact that the house was built by Thomas Frazer, the town stonemason, as his own home. While Frazer’s workmanship was always excellent no matter what he was building, his own home displays extra small decorative motifs and items of interest.

Rochester-Muddy Creek Petroglyph Site

21 Thursday Nov 2024

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Emery County, NRHP, Petroglyphs, Rock Art, utah

Rochester-Muddy Creek Petroglyph Site

The Rochester-Muddy Creek Petroglyph Site / Rochester Rock Art Panel is located near Emery, Utah in Emery County. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places (#75001803) on June 26, 1975.

Provo Downtown Historic District

15 Friday Nov 2024

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Historic Districts, NRHP, Provo, Provo Downtown Historic District, utah, utah county

The Provo Downtown Historic District was added to the National Historic Register (#80003980) on May 1, 1980.

Related posts:

  • Downtown Provo
  • Provo, Utah

The text below is from the nomination form for the National Historic Register:

A central business district conveys the image for a city. The Provo Downtown, Historic District’s “attractive and substantial buildings,” built bylocal craftsmen and builders, reflect business and building booms in the cityin the 1880’s, 1900’s and 1950’s. The structures document the history of thearea and its residents, some prominent (T.N. Taylor, Jesse Knight, O.K. Berg, Alex Hedquist, Ercanbach and Sons, and the Hoover Brothers), some infamous (S.S. Jones, Russel S. Hines), some obscure. The buildings remain as resources to exploit for their visual beauty, style, craftsmanship and as reminders of the past out of which the present is created.

Following Provo’s development in the 1850’s of a commercial center at the corner of 5th West Street and Center Street, business activity moved east to the present Downtown Historic District in the late 19th Century. The earlies buildings in the District, two-story brick Victorian commercial structures, date from the late 1870’s and the 1880’s, the documents of a boom in the rich Tintic mining district to the west. Other commercial and public structures, one to three stories tall in the Victorian, Renaissance and Classical Revival styles, illustrate eras of business prosperity in the 1900’s. Buildings from the 1950’s and 60’s, along with extensive “modernization” of most of the earlier structures, reflects the development of the nearby Geneva Steel mills and the rapid expansion of Provo’s Brigham Young University in the period.

Provo’s downtown historic district is one of the two or three most intact and architecturally significant Main Streets of Utah’s middle-sized cities. Provo’s commercial district is probably the most architecturally legible of these. While most of Utah’s Main Streets developed loosely around a central block with a Mormon tabernacle as the focal point, Provo’s commercial district presents a very distinctive “crossroads” at the intersection of Center and University Streets. Two large Victorian commercial blocks, one with a clock tower, mark the two northern corners of the intersection, the Classical Revival City and County Building and the Gothic Revival Provo Tabernacle (National Register) prominently occupy the southeast and southwest corners. Almost a dozen of the commercial structures on the north side of Center Street are now owned by a partnership who have announced plans to renovate the buildings and restore the facades.

The History:

In March 1849, John S. Highbee led a company of about 150 persons, bringing their goods, cattle, equipment and provisions into the Utah Valley. They formed the nucleus of the tour of Provo City. The company had been sent by Brigham Young, President of the L.D.S. (Mormon) Church, and as part of an effort to secure a territory in which to establish a theocratic hegemony.

In keeping with the ideals of Jeffersonion agrarianism which infused Mormon philosophy and practice, and the necessities of producing food and feed, Provo was surveyed (1850) as a plot one mile square surrounded by several acres of land put into eight lots. This grid pattern was the “Plat of Zion” pattern used repeatedly by the Mormon settlers.

Brigham Young had instructed the settlers, particularly the church and city officials, to establish their homes and farms in the town site. When many chose to build outside the city, those on the townsite petitioned Brigham Young (1852) to appoint church leader George A. Smith to move to Provo and regulate the affairs of Utah County. Smith did so, and with his encouragement the frontier town with its accompanying industrial and commercial enterprises began to emerge.

The first merchant in Provo was Andrew J. Stewart who operated a general store out of his home on what is now 5th West. He later moved his business into a building he had erected on what is now Center Street the street which would become the center of Provo’s commercial district.

By the end of 1852, Provo had several industries and businesses – a pottery for brown ware, two grist mills, one sash factory, three cabinet shops, one wooden bowl factory, three shoe shops, two tailor’s shops, one meat market, two store houses, and two lime kilns. The Deseret Manufacturing Company organized by John Taylor had brought in sugar refining machinery from England and had obtained land for raising sugar beets. Provo also had two hotels.

The hotels and most of the businesses were clustered at 5th West and Center Street. However, other businesses followed and established themselves east along Center Street. These two streets had been surveyed eight rods wide, with other streets five rods. As the demand for city lots increased, Plat 13 of Provo city was surveyed (1856) on the Mormon Tabernacle. It is obvious from the additional placement of the tithing yard diagonally across the street from the Tabernacle, that the city organizers planned for this east end of Center Street to be used for religious activities rather than commercial. Eventually even the county and city governmental buildings were located at this end.

However, commercial establishments did not remain clustered on the west side, but rather pushed into the east – even including on the LDS blocks. The two streets – 5th West and University – were to become the focal point of the west-east commercial development in the City and the conflicts between the west and the east side merchants which would spill over into politics.

The arrival in Utah of the United States Army (1857) in an effort to control the seemingly rebellious Mormons was a stimulation to the economy of Utah and particularly Provo. The several thousand Mormons from Salt Lake City significantly, the soldiers from Camp Floyd needed materials and supplies.
When the army finally left the area in July of 1861, more than $4,000,000 worth of Government property was sold at a public auction for about $100,000.

One of the merchants who had prospered because of the residence of the soldiers was Samuel S. Jones. He had begun his mercantile business in Camp Floyd, first by making adobe bricks for the fort and then in partnership with William Daley by selling vegetables to the men. After the army left, Jones who had bought some of the government property, established a business with a Jewish merchant Benjamin Buchman.

This partnership and its later dissolution are symbolic of the sometimes cooperation, more often competition, between the Mormon and non-Mormon merchants in Provo. The competition intensified with the Mormon cooperative effort.

In a 1867 church meeting, Brigham Young exhorted the Mormons to maintain economic self-sufficiency and to trade only among themselves. He soon afterward suggested cooperative merchandising. Late in 1868, the ever enterprising S. S. Jones organized a group of Mormon merchants including David John and A. O. Smoot, at the “Provo Co-Operative Institution.” Utah’s first cooperative store – the “West Co-Op” was established on Center Street in the building built by Andrew Stewart. S. S. Jones became the manager.

A flood of “Gentile” business never did come into Provo as it did Ogden. Although Provo Canyon was examined as a possible route for the Pacific railroad, the “iron horse” found its way to Ogden rather than to Provo. After 1869, Ogden’s population and commerce increased rapidly in comparison to Provo’s. Provo, as the W.P.A. writers put it, “maintained its identity as a solid Mormon town.”9 There were non-Mormons who came to Provo. Some were successful businessmen – such as the Bee brothers whose twin buildings which housed their harness and mercantile businesses still stand. The entire Bee family – Jane Bee, Jennie Bee Jones, Fred Bee, Cal Bee – was involved in Provo commerce. Earlier than the Bee family was the Freshwater family who began business in Provo in 1871 and continued successful through the 1920’s. Samuel Schwab developed a clothing business which attracted customers from throughout the state.

There was a building boom in Provo in the late 1860’s. Several businesses – many substantial brick buildings of two or more stories – locate along Center Street. The quagmire in the street was eliminated by grading in 1865.10 The Provo Woolen Mills was begun in 1869 on a block just north of Center Street. It would become one of Provo’s major industries.

Some of the early commercial buildings in Provo were built of wood. Man} others, in accordance with advice given by Brigham Young, were made of adobe. Adobe yards were located in what is now North Park. In 1866, Philander Corton built Provo’s first kiln, and by 1874, W. Alien’s brickyard was employing ten people.11 Many of Provo’s commercial buildings built in the 1850’s boom, suet as the West Co-Op, were constructed of adobe and brick.

Samuel Liddiard established a cement business in Provo in 1865. His son – the Liddiard Brothers – continued the operation, building many of the commercial structures on Center Street. (The Cal Bee building). Later, S. H. Belvant established a stone work business (1890) examples of which are still standing (Smoot building). E. J. Ward and Sons (1889) became the Central Lumber Co. (1904), competing with the Beebe and Smooth Lumber Companies (1870). The Provo Foundry and Machine Company (1885) produced much of the heating and plumbing systems included in Provo’s buildings.

The building boom of the 1860’s included the establishment on West Center Street in 1866 of the Taylor Furniture Company.13 Members of the George Taylor family established a number of successful Provo businesses – the West Side Business District.

However, the Provo commercial district had continued to move east along Center Street, and in 1883, Samuel S. Jones erected a handsome store (demolished) on J Street, now University Avenue. The next year the first bank in Provo, the First National Bank of Provo (1882), moved into its own building just down the street from Jones. Although businesses would continue to prosper and new ones would continue to be established on West Center Street, the next years would see the shift in Provo’s Commercial District to the east. The impressive buildings on either side of University Avenue (the Excelsio, the Union Block, the Knight Block) remain as evidence of this shift.

Part of the impetus for new businesses and new buildings in the 1880’s was the spinoff from the mining boom which had been going on in the Tintic mining district since the late 1870’s. Many who made their fortunes in Tintic came to Provo and established businesses and residences, building substantial homes and often extravagant buildings. Russel S. Hines who built the Palace Drug Store and Saloon which is still standing, was but one example. The relationship between Tintic and Provo would continue as other businesses and buildings were established and built in Provo with capital made in Tintic.

Charles E. Loose used his Tintic-made fortune to buy up much of Provo’s commercial property. The Loose Block, though fairly modest, remains as part of that legacy.

Jesse Knight who attempted to establish “clean” mining towns built one of the most impressive of Provo’s buildings – the Knight Block on east center where the East Co-Op had stood in the Mormon tithing yard. He became the symbol and the power of Provo’s east-side in the way Thomas N. Taylor became that for the west side.

for the west side. In 1883, construction began on a new LDS Tabernacle on the same block as the older one, a massive structure of brick and stone. Though the structure was not completed until 1896, its beginnings were part of a new building boom.

In 1888, the Provo Enquirer ran headlines that read, “Boom, Boom, Boom.” Entrepreneurs and real estate investors from the East and the West came to Provo and began paying exorbitant prices for real estate. The Provo Chamber I of Commerce which had been organized the year before to stimulate the growth in the community, published a 50-page pamphlet describing the “Garden City” of Utah.

In 1889, the Rocky Mountain Bell Telephone Company secured a twenty-year franchise and eventually built a building on the east side. The North American Asphalt Company began paving sidewalks, North and University Avenue (then called Academy Avenue). The Provo Lake Resort was established on Utah Lake.

The “Boom” did not last long, however. During the winter of 1891-92, only a few of the new real estate dealers renewed their licenses. The national panic of 1893 further aggravated the situation. Many businesses failed including Samuel S. Jones.

There were those able to rise out of the panic. One was George Startup who began his candy business in 1895. By 1897, the business had grown so much that he and his brother Walter built a little factory on 3rd West which still remains. The large factory built in 1900 on the south side is on the National Register of Historic Places. Candy-making was a popular business in Provo at the turn of the century, with enterprises so numerous, Provo could have been called the “Candy City”, a situation made possible by the large sugar beet industry in the area.

The turn of the century saw a continuation of the West-East side controversy, a culmination in the 1905-11 fight over the location of the railroad depot and the conclusion in favor of the east side as more businesses continued to locate there and north along University Avenue.

The prominence of this section of town was even more emphasized by the building of the public library (1907, since greatly remodeled), the Provo Post Office (1909, since demolished) and finally, the replacement of the Utah County Courthouse (1873, demolished) with an impressive new City and County Building (1902-26). In 1976, Provo City Offices were moved out of this building into a new complex built on block 63, replacing the Provo High School Building and part of a reversing trend of the commercial and public interests building on the west end.

The 1920’s saw the rise of the automobile industry in Provo and brought about one of the last major changes in the commercial district, as automobile repair and service shops established themselves along the south side of Center Street replacing several residences and filling up what had been vacant land. Some of these businesses were the descendants of earlier harness and wagon businesses.

nesses. The post World War II economic boom had a major impact on the business section of Provo. With the completion of the General Steel Plant in 1946, the rapid expansion of Brigham Young University which was only recently leveled, the proliferation of new housing developments to accommodate the many new families which moved into the area, the downtown merchants responded with effort to “modernize” their buildings. These efforts, suing sheet metal and stucco, were the most destructive changes to the architectural character of the district. However, recently there is evident a realization that restoration of the architectural heritage may now be a way to revitalize the downtown whose vitality is being sapped by the development of suburban malls.

Boundaries:

The northwest corner of the Provo Downtown Historic District begins approximately 180 north of the intersection of Center Street and 300 West along the East curb of 300 West. The boundary follows east along the back property lines of the buildings facing south on Center Street (buildings 58-20) to a point at the northeast corner of building # 20 where it turns north to follow along the back property lines of buildings which face east on University Avenue (buildings 16-12).

At the northwest corner of building 12, the boundary turns east again across University Avenue to the northeast corner of building 11 where it turns south along the back property lines of buildings 11 and 10, then east along the back property lines of the buildings facing south on Center Street (building 8-1) to the west curb of 100 East where it turns south following the west to the corner of 100 East and 100 South were it turns west, following the north curb along 100 South to 100 West where it turns north along the east curb of 100 West approximately 200 feet where it turns west and follows the back property line of the buildings facing north on Center Street (buildings 76-59) to 300 West where it turns north along the east curb back to the point of beginning.

Included Sites listed here: Provo Center Street

Caleb Baldwin House

10 Sunday Nov 2024

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Beaver, Beaver County, Historic Homes, NRHP, utah

Caleb Baldwin House

The Caleb Baldwin home is significant because its age and architectural design represent the first major period of Beaver’s growth and development. As permanence and prosperity arrived, small one and two room homes of logs were replaced by small two and three room homes of stone and brick. During this rebuilding phase, the two room hall and parlor house form (with or without rear extensions) was the most common in Beaver. The Baldwin house is one of a number of such houses which continue to stand and which in their typical nature contribute to a full understanding of Beaver’s 19th Century architecture.

Located at 195 South 400 East in Beaver, Utah and added to the National Historic Register (#83003834) on November 30, 1983. The text on this page is from the nomination form for the historic register.

This hall and parlor house was constructed of pink rock c. 1885 for Caleb Baldwin and his family. It has four windows and a central door arranged symmetrically across the front facade and end wall chimneys. It displays a broad Greek Revival style cornice around the eaves and above each window and door is a large pink rock lentel. The home rests upon a foundation of black rubble rock and the stonework on the front facade is well squared. On the gable ends, the rock has been roughly cut and layed at random, while facade displays coursed ashlar masonry. The home has an original rear extension that forms a T-plan. At a later date, probably c. 1900, a pink rock addition was built on to the rear of the house, giving it its current elongated T-plan. All the pink rock walls are 18 inches in thickness and all the windows in the house are splayed, being wider on the interior than the exterior. A deteriorated shed roof frame addition, c. 1910, stands on the west side of the house but does not detract from its historic integrity.

Deseret Telegraph and Post Office

21 Monday Oct 2024

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NRHP, Rockville, Telegraph, utah

Deseret Telegraph and Post Office

Communication in early Utah was a difficult and time-consuming task, With the completion of the Transcontinental Telegraph line in Salt Lake City, October 23, 1861, the Mormons had instantaneous contact with the outside world. They desired next to put the miracle to use in Utah.

Almost immediately plans were made to build a telegraph line from Logan in the north to St. George in the south. However, the shortages of material occasioned by the Civil War forced postponement of the line. Later it was built with “war surplus” purchased from the federal government.

During the winter of 1865- 1S66 plans for its construction were revived Cash tithing was accumulated to purchase wire and insulators for the 500 miles of line. A telegraphers 1 school, taught by John C. Clawes, was opened in Salt Lake City to train operators. Each area serviced by the line was asked to send an operator to the school. In many instances young men and women were “called” to this assignment. Their salaries, later, came from donations collected for that purpose.

The Deseret Telegraph and Post Office is located at 91 West Main Street in Rockville, Utah and was added to the National Historic Register (#72001263) on February 23, 1972. The text on this page is from the historic register’s nomination form.

To finance construction, the Deseret Telegraph Company was organized March 21, 1867 with a stock issue of $100,000. In addition, each valley was expected to provide labor organized and directed by the L.D.S. Church Priesthood. Poles were cut, hauled and set, so that by the time Horace D. Height’s ox teams arrived in October 1866 with supplies, the lines were ready for them. By January 10, 1867, the St. George office was open. When completed, the system was appraised at about $500,000.

Soon after this branch telegraph lines were opened. One of these led from Toquerville in southern Utah, southeast to Rockville and then south and east to Windsor Castle (Pipe Springs) by December 1871. This was Arizona’s first telegraph office. The line continued north to Kanab and on to Long Valley. The ^Rockville Station became an important link in the telegraph extension to the east Pipe Springs and Kanab where the Navajo Indian raiders were first intercepted when raiding the Mormon communities.

Although one reference suggests that Erastus Snow, in St. George, received a “telegram” from Rockville as early as November 22, 1868, it is believed that the “express” actually came from Toquerville, on the main southern line, that someone rode from Rockville to Toquerville to send the telegram.

The Deseret News (December 20, 1871) records that the telegraph office was first opened in mid-December, 1871, in “Brother Charles N. Smith’s Parlor. Messrs. Scipio Kenner and Gerana Bebee. Operators. The citizens of course are much pleased.” Smith’s home seems to have been a sawed-log structure.

A few years later a telegraph office was built and attached to the west end of the old rock house that Edward Huber (or Hubert) had built in 1864. Both structures are included in the site designation. The little building was used as a Telegraph and Post Office for several decades. In 1903 the Deseret Telegraph Company had discontinued its services in southern Utah.

Most of the company had been sold to Western Union earlier. At its height, the church owned Deseret Telegraph Company, served all of Utah, and interlocked with Mormon settlements in Arizona, Nevada, and Idaho, Its more than 1,000 miles of lines were built primarily to serve as a communications medium for the Mormon people. Only where it served “gentiles” did it “turn a profit.” This little office and rock house at Rockville recall this distinctive part of western and Mormon history.

Memorial Lake Hills Mortuary and Cemetery

25 Wednesday Sep 2024

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Cemeteries, Sandy, utah

Memorial Lake Hills Mortuary and Cemetery
10055 South State Street in Sandy, Utah

Orchard Cove Park

24 Tuesday Sep 2024

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Parks, Santaquin, utah

Orchard Cove Park

750 North 280 West in Santaquin, Utah

  • Parks in Santaquin

Camp Floyd Site

24 Tuesday Sep 2024

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Fairfield, NRHP, utah, utah county

Camp Floyd Site is the National Register of Historic Places listed site which is now part of Camp Floyd / Stagecoach Inn State Park. It was added to the register (#74001939) November 11, 1974 and is located in Fairfield, Utah.

Related posts:

  • Camp Floyd Pony Express Stop
  • Camp Floyd / Stagecoach Inn State Park
  • Fairfield – Camp Floyd – Fort Crittenden

Text from the nomination form:

When reports of Mormon disloyalty were received by President James Buchanan, his solution was to send an army of 2,500 men along with approximately 1,000 civilian employees to Utah to put down the “Mormon Rebellion.”

A lack of efficient organization, Mormon guerilla tactics, winter, and finally arbitration between Mormon and Federal authorities delayed the army’s arrival in the Salt Lake Valley until June 26, 1858. The army, commanded by Colonel Albert Sidney Johnston, marched through an abandoned Salt Lake City to Cedar Valley about forty miles southwest of the city. The site was chosen because it supposedly offered an ample supply of water, wood and pasture. Perhaps of prime importance was that it was close enough to the two major Mormon settlements, Salt Lake City and Provo, that troops could be dispatched in either direction with little problem. The camp was named in honor of John B. Floyd, Secretary of War, under Buchanan.

Economically the camp was important to the Mormon economy. Mormons furnished building materials and food stuffs to the large force. Mormon employed in the construction of the camp received from $3.00 to $7.00 a day plus board.

Despite the economic advantages of the camp to Mormons, the problems which the soldiers and camp followers created were of great concern to church authorities. It seems a constant state of hostility existed between the two groups.

With the outbreak of the Civil War in 1860, the number of soldiers dropped from 2,500 to 400. When Secretary of War John B. Floyd left his cabinet post to join the Southern cause, Colonel Phillip St. George Cooke changed the name of the establishment to Camp Crittenden. The camp did not live long under its new name and was abandoned in July 1861.

Although the only visible remains of the camp is the cemetery, the site is significant as a reminder of the confrontation between Mormons and the Federal Army.

For Mormons the establishment of Camp Floyd signaled the end of their cherished isolation in Utah.

Levi Richards Home

16 Monday Sep 2024

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Avenues, Duplexes, Historic Homes, NRHP, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, utah

Large two story stucco structure with a two-story double gabled wing with unusual tapered pilasters.

Some of this structure may be part of the adobe and frame dwelling built about 1873 by Levi Richards, although no nineteenth century elements are visible.

Levi Richards (1799-1877) came to Utah in 1853. He had studied medicine and served on the Utah “Board of Examination” for physicians. Richards only son, Levi W. ( -1914) inherited this property upon the former’s death and lived here until his own death.

Levi W. was a real estate and business entrepreneur. In keeping with the religion, of which he was an active practitioner, Richards had more than one wife. He married Louise Lula Greene in 1873 and her niece Persis Louiza Young in 1884. The women remained close “sister” wives until their deaths, living together in this house and other dwellings.

Located at 305 Third Avenue in the Avenues Historic District in Salt Lake City, Utah.

Related:

  • How to spot a “polygamy house” apartment in Utah
  • https://collections.lib.utah.edu
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