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Tag Archives: utah

29 South Main

23 Friday Nov 2018

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Cache County, Historic Buildings, Logan, NRHP, utah

2018-10-20 11.14.22

29 South Main

This building was built in 1914 by one of Cache Valley’s leading merchants and prominent citizens, George W. Thatcher. It is a large, two-story, dark red brick building with typically large, rectangular windows of a very regular pattern. The cornice is prominent but not dominant. It originally housed one of the valley’s most distinctive women’s department stores, Shamhart and Christensen’s. The land upon which the building is situated was originally owned by Luna Young, daughter of Brigham Young, wo married George W. Thatcher.

29 South Main Street on historic Main Street in Logan, Utah

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75 South Main

23 Friday Nov 2018

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Cache County, Historic Buildings, Logan, NRHP, utah

2018-10-20 11.09.35

75 South Main

This property was owned in the late 1800’s and early 1900’s by Luna Young Thatcher, a daughter of Brigham Young by his first wife. Luna Young Thatcher owned the entire corner and, by all reports, had the area beautifully landscaped. In 1912 the Logan Rapid Transit Company, which was created by David Eccles, was in need of additional space for their Main Street depot. In 1915 L. Y. Thatcher sold this corner of the block to the Ogden-Logan-Idaho Railroad for $12,000. The Ogden-Logan-Idaho Railroad became the Utah-Idaho-Central Railroad in 1919. Shortly after World War I, the railroad company began to decline, though it took 20 years to dissolve completely. The previous railroad depot is still standing, although with some façade alterations, and now houses three separate businesses.

Located at 75 South Main Street on historic Main Street in Logan, Utah

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37 South Main

23 Friday Nov 2018

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Cache County, Historic Buildings, Logan, NRHP, utah

2018-10-20 11.08.55

37 South Main

This large, two-story, brick building is one of Logan’s early examples of commercial architecture, with some Victorian embellishments added.  The building was constructed in 1902 by George W. Thatcher.  KVNU, the first radio station in Logan, got its start in the area above the entrance to the theatre; this is also where the local Republican Party held its first meetings.  The building was originally build to house the Studebaker Wagon Company.  George W. Thatcher and some associates  decided that Logan needed a grand theater; eleven years later the Capitol Theatre was completed.  In its day, it was used for grand performances and was one of the finest facilities of its kind.  After the 1950’s it was primarily used for movies.   A $6.4 million renovation has restored the ornate interior in spectacular fashion.  The theatre now presents musical, theatrical and world-class opera performances.

Located at 37 South Main Street on historic Main Street in Logan, Utah

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26 South Main

23 Friday Nov 2018

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Cache County, Historic Buildings, Logan, NRHP, utah

2018-10-20 11.07.27

26 South Main

This furniture store is the oldest one in Cache Valley. It began in the 1880’s under the name of Enoch Lewis & Sons, but in 1890 this family business went into partnership with William Edwards who later became the sole owner and whose name the business bears today. The local newspaper carried this report about the owners on December 25, 1892, “These gentlemen… have the latest improved furniture, picture frames and moldings. They can handle plate and window glass of all kinds and sizes and put them in at reasonable figures…” The original facade is now covered with siding but the building has been nicely redecorated. The building still advertises a sign saying “Fine Home Furnishings Since 1880”.

26 South Main Street on historic Main Street in Logan, Utah

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Historic Logan Main Street

23 Friday Nov 2018

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 9 Comments

Tags

Cache County, Historic Buildings, Logan, NRHP, utah

2018-10-20 11.07.11

Historic Main Street, Logan, Utah

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Spanish Fork D.U.P. Museum

19 Monday Nov 2018

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

DUP, museums, spanish fork, utah, utah county

2018-10-29 11.46.34

Spanish Fork D.U.P. Museum

The D.U.P. Museum in the Veterans Memorial Building.

380 North Main Street in Spanish Fork, Utah

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Superintendent’s Residence

19 Monday Nov 2018

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Historic Buildings, Historic Homes, New Deal Funded, NRHP, Provo, utah, utah county

2018-10-27 17.49.49

Superintendent’s Residence

1079 East Center Street

Built in 1934, this residence is a one-and-a-half story, brick Colonial Revival style house. The Superintendent’s Residence is historically significant because it helps document the impact of New Deal programs in Utah. The Superintendent’s House is one of 232 buildings constructed in Utah during the 1930s and early 1940s under the Works Progress Administration (WPA) and other New Deal programs. In 1933 Utah had an unemployment rate of 36 percent, the fourth highest in the country. For the period between 1932-40, Utah’s unemployment rate averaged 25 percent. Because the depression hit Utah so hard, federal spending in Utah during the 1930s was ninth among the 48 states, and the percentage of workers on federal works projects was far above the national average. During the 1930s virtually every public building constructed in Utah, including courthouses, city halls, fire stations, and a variety of others, were built under the direction of federal programs.

  • Utah State Hospital
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Recreation Center for the Utah State Hospital

17 Saturday Nov 2018

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Historic Buildings, New Deal Funded, Provo, utah, utah county

2018-10-27 17.38.38

Recreation Center for the Utah State Hospital

Built in 1936–1937, the Recreation Center (sometimes called the Castle Amphitheatre) is significant because it also helps document the impact of New Deal programs in Utah during the 1930s and 1940s. This structure is the second public works project built at the Utah State Hospital, the first being the Superintendent’s Residence. The Recreation Center is a three-acre facility consisting of an 800-seat stone amphitheater with attached interior rooms and an accompanying grass-covered play area. The towers and the “battlements” of various sections give the structure a castle-like appearance.

Originally, the center was significant for its important role in providing therapy through play and recreation for the patients at the Utah State Hospital. It was the first such facility constructed at the hospital. This facility is also believed to be one of the earliest and largest amphitheaters built in the state.

Recreation Center – Utah State Hospital

Built in 1936-37, the Recreation Center at the Utah State Hospital is one of over 230 public works buildings constructed in Utah under various New Deal programs during the Depression years of the 1930s and ’40s. The construction of public works buildings, of which only 130 are extant and well preserved, not only offered temporary work relief, but also provided long-term benefits in the form of improved facilities for a variety of local public programs. The types of buildings constructed included public schools, county courthouses, city halls, libraries, National Guard armories, and a variety of others. Plans for the Recreation Center were worked up by Lavar S. Morris, professor in landscape architecture at BYU, who also supervised the construction by WPA workers. The center was to be the nucleus of an extensive recreational area for patients at the hospital, but the creation of such a facility never advanced beyond the completion of this structure.

Related Posts:

  • New Deal Funded Projects
  • Provo, Utah
  • Johnny Jerusalem’s Grave – Don Verdean Filming Location
  • Utah State Hospital
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The Claimjumper Hotel

13 Tuesday Nov 2018

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

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Tags

Historic Buildings, Hotels, park city, Park City Main Street, summit county, utah

2018-09-04 11.52.20

The Claimjumper Hotel

The Park City Hotel was built on this site after the Great Fire of 1898.  It was managed by a well-liked and respected Park City resident, Mrs. Marie Hethke O’Keefe, who also owned the furnishings.  After it was destroyed in another fore in 1912, a great community fund-raising effort produced $22,000 to pay for the construction of a fine brick building to be called the New Park Hotel.  On November 3, 1913, Mrs. O’Keefe opened the new hotel and it quickly became a favorite stopping place for travelers.  It was described as a “beautiful and commodious hostelry with a dinning room decorated in patriotic red, white, and blue.”  All meals, including Sunday dinner, were 50 cents each.  Guest lists, which were published in the Park Record, indicated that business was flourishing.  Mrs. O’Keefe operated the New Park Hotel until 1952 when depressed economics times forced its closure.  She died in 1958.  After extensive remodeling and modernization in the mid-1960s, the building reopened as The Claimjumper, a hotel, restaurant, and private club.  The hotel rooms were converted into offices after a fire in 1992.

Located at 573 Main Street on historic Park City Main Street in Park City, Utah.

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The Mortuary

13 Tuesday Nov 2018

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

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Tags

Historic Buildings, Mortuaries, park city, Park City Main Street, summit county, utah

2018-09-04 11.53.30

The Mortuary

This two-story frame structure was built just after the 1898 fire which burned most of the buildings on Main Street. Among the first occupants was the Salvation Army, which moved in in 1900. By 1902 it was the funeral parlor of Bill Fennemore, whose sign was a miniature casket.

When the Daly West Mine explosion of 1902 claimed the lives of 32 men, morticians from Salt Lake City were called to help with the emergency. Jacob Franklin Richardson, one of those who answered the call for aid, purchased the business from Fennemore, and later built a one-story addition to the south of this building. George Archer bought out Richardson in 1921, and from Archer it passed to Joseph Olpin.

This was the only local mortuary until the late 1960s, when the Olpins relocated to a newer building. This structure then served as an interior design showcase, a real estate office, and a sportswear store. The addition which for many years housed a children’s ski shop, was demolished in 1983.

This is a typical example of the vernacular commercial style of Park City buildings in he (sic) early 1900s. It features a bracketed wood cornice on the upper facade, and two entryways flanking two large display windows. The building has had only minor alterations since it was constructed.

Located at 586 Main Street on historic Park City Main Street in Park City, Utah.

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