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Tag Archives: utah

Thomas & Margaret Brandon House

17 Wednesday Dec 2025

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Centerville, Davis County, NRHP, utah

Thomas & Margaret Brandon House

This bungalow was built c.1900 by Thomas Jefferson Brandon and Margaret Cherry Brandon. The home incorporates a hipped roof with wide overhanging eaves, a small shed dormer on the faƧade, a full wrap-around porch, leaded glass transom windows, a pair of small windows flanking the fireplace, and a frame addition to the rear.

Thomas was born in Tennessee in 1835. He crossed the plains in 1852 with the Thomas Williams Handcart Company and immediately settled in Centerville. He was a farmer, served eight years as Davis County probate judge, and was the postmaster of Centerville for sixteen years.

Margaret (Maggie) was one of the seventeen members of the Cherry family who, in 1847, were the first to settle along Cherry Creek, one of Centerville’s first names. Maggie ran the general store connected to the east side of their house. She was also involved with Wilkes Theater. Thomas and Maggie lived here until their deaths in 1916 and 1925, respectively.

185 East Center Street inĀ Centerville, Utah

Centerville Pioneer Memorial Cabin

17 Wednesday Dec 2025

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Cabins, Centerville, Davis County, DUP, Historic cabins, utah

Centerville Pioneer Memorial Cabin on the site of the Centerville 1879 Church.

110 South 300 East inĀ Centerville, Utah

Donner Party Route

16 Tuesday Dec 2025

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DUP, Historic Markers, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, utah

The Donner Party established this route in 1846. The first Mormon Pioneer Company came through July 22, 1847. Brigham Young and party followed on July 24, 1847.

Finding Emigration Canyon blocked, the Donner Party climbed Donner Hill. The Mormon company chose to clear the mouth of the canyon. These parties followed Emigration Creek on a southwesterly course into the valley.

“After issuing from the mountains among which we had been shut up for many days, and beholding in a moment such an extensive scenery open before us, we could not refrain from a shout of joy which almost involuntarily escaped from our lips the moment this grand and lovely scenery was within our view.” – Orson Pratt

Area Marker Placed October 21, 2000 By the Leona G. Holbrook D.U.P. Camp

Located at 2045 East 1300 South in Salt Lake City, Utah

  • DUP Historic Markers
(county records)

Eden Park

14 Sunday Dec 2025

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Eden, Parks, utah, Weber County

Eden Park

  • David Eccles Memorial
  • Settlement of Eden (historic marker located here)

5510 East 2100 North in Eden, Utah

Eden World War II Memorial

Holland-Smith House

13 Saturday Dec 2025

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Centerville, Davis County, Historic Homes, NRHP, utah

Holland-Smith House

The front section of this house, a one-story hall-parlor house type with Classical detailing, was probably constructed by John and Mary Holland c.1872. John was born in 1836 in England, and Mary, born in 1844, died in 1874. John then married Julia Woods in 1884. They lived here until 1886.

The rear, one-and-one-half story Victorian Eclectic style portion of the house was probably built by Charles L. and Pamela Thompson Smith c.1890. Charles was born in Centerville in 1862. He and Pamela raised six children in this house. Both were active LDS church members-Charles as a member of the South Davis Stake High Council and Pamela in the Relief Society and as president of the Primary Association.

In 1908 the house was sold to Benjamin Brown. Born in Nauvoo, Illinois, in 1845, he married Jane Goheen in 1865, and they had nine children. In 1899 he married Ellen Rigby with whom he had seven children.

The addition to the south of the historic house was built by Dan and Amber Stephens c.1987 and incorporates many of the same stylistic features.

19 South 200 East inĀ Centerville, Utah

A. N. Tanner House

12 Friday Dec 2025

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Box Elder County, Grouse Creek, NRHP, utah

The A. N. Tanner House

From the national register’s nomination form:
Once undoubtedly the most substantial residence in Grouse Creek, the A.N. Tanner house, built in 1899, is significant as a late example of the central hall house type. In size and proportion the home demonstrates a confidence in the vernacular building genre, and because of its late date documents the enduring strength of the folk vocabulary in rural locales. The home must be seen as a function of its remote location, of the isolation and rural nature of the Grouse Creek area, of the isolation of the Tanner family there and of the builders who participated in the construction. A tradition, a continuum in the minds of builder and patron is expressed in the home. When viewed in this manner the Tanner house becomes a significant site in the history of architecture in Utah.

Allen N. Tanner was born March 27, 1862, in Tooele, Utah to Thomas and Elizabeth Ann Newbury Tanner. Thomas, a shoemaker, had emigrated from England, a Mormon convert. A hard life in Tooele sometimes “living on dandelion greens, pig weed greens, sego lily roots and rabbits,” left little time for schooling and Tanner soon went to Grouse Creek to work for a brother berding horses and cutting posts. He was eventually able to buy a small tract of land, upon which he built a three-room log cabin, to which he brought his widowed mother. In 1894, he married Mary Emily Barlow by whom he had nine children.

Tanner successfully built his holdings into a farm of over 2,000 acres. In 1899 he began the construction of this substantial brick house, completed in 1900. In 1906, he was called on a three-year mission to New Zealand for the LDS Church. Because of Tanner’s generosity and the size of the house, many social gatherings were held there. Tanner died in 1935 and the house has remained in the hands of his descendants. The house and its outbuildings are being renovated by Robert W. and Eilene Tanner Torrey, leasing from Tanner and Tanner Enterprises.

A.N. Tanner’s home in Grouse Creek illustrates the persistence of the folk tradition in rural Utah. The two story brick home is a late variation of the “central hall” house form. In Utah this form signaled the integration of the folk vernacular of the earliest years of settlement in the United States with Georgian formality. The rectangular, central hall plan with rear extensions, the gable roof, end chimneys and symmetrical main faƧade piercing, point to a highly evolved house type which had predominated in England and the eastern United States for several centuries. The result was a formula which pervaded early Utah settlements but which was subsequently replaced in favor of the more exuberant and usually larger, “modern” Victorian styles. Thus, the date 1899 is late for such an “old fashioned” scheme, since by this time even interest in the Victorian forms was waning in favor of turn-of-the-century styles.

The home is a two story brick structure, with a 1 1/2 story rear extension. The foundation is stone. The main part of the home has the rectangular plan, gable roof and symmetrical organization linking it to the Georgian/Vernacular tradition. A gabled pavilion is centered on the main elevation. The pavilion is incorporated into the basic three over three scheme, not breaking the bilateral symmetry of the vernacular tradition. Chimneys are located on the gable end of the two story portion, also staying within the folk vocabulary. Also of brick is the rear portion of the home. This extension has a rectangular shape and a hipped roof. Centered on the rear of the extension is a gable-roofed dormer. Ornament of the house is in the form of molded cornice, and segmental brick openings which are corbelled out and have drops. Though it has suffered the effects of many years of vacancy, the home is structurally intact and the present owners, descendants of A.N. Tanner, have plans for renovation.

A stone granary belonging to the house is also on the site. It is a single story rectangular structure with a gable roof. On one gable end the door and a window are located. Granaries were common structures in rural Utah even until the 1930s. Most were built of frame and have since disappeared. The stone examples, though fewer, survived because of the permanent nature of their materials.

11490 Grouse Creek Road in Grouse Creek, Utah

From preservationutah.org:
Allen N. Tanner was born March 27, 1862, in Tooele, Utah, where he lived a hard-scrabble adolescence. Eventually, Tanner moved to Grouse Creek to work for his brother, who was herding horses and cutting posts. He ultimately bought a small parcel of land, on which he built a three-room log cabin. In 1894, he married Mary Emily Barlow, with whom he eventually had nine children. Over time, Tanner consolidated his assets into a farm of over 2,000 acres. In 1899, he began the construction of this substantial brick house, which was completed in 1900. After his death in 1935, the home was passed on to his descendants, but was eventually vacated due to its extreme remoteness.

Despite its remote location, the building remains an important example of architectural significance and rural life in Utah. According to the home’s National Register of Historic Places form, ā€œ [its] size and proportion… demonstrates a confidence in the vernacular building genre, and because of its late date documents the enduring strength of the folk vocabulary in rural locales. The home must be seen as a function of its remote location, of the isolation and rural nature of the Grouse Creek area, of the isolation of the Tanner family there, and of the builders who participated in the construction. A tradition, a continuum in the minds of builder and patron, is expressed in the home. When viewed this way, the Tanner house becomes a significant site in Utah’s architectural history.ā€

Grouse Creek, Utah

12 Friday Dec 2025

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Box Elder County, Grouse Creek, utah

Grouse Creek in Box Elder County, Utah

  • A. N. Tanner House

J.M. Wilbur Company Blacksmith Shop

10 Wednesday Dec 2025

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Eden, NRHP, utah, Weber County

J.M. Wilbur Company Blacksmith Shop

The J.M. Wilbur Company Blacksmith Shop, built in 1895 by Jesse Wilbur and restored 2011-2014, is a brick, one-part block commercial building with a stepped gable parapet and Late Victorian Commercial details. The building is historically significant because of the essential blacksmith and related services the shop provided to local farmers and others in the Ogden Valley. Following Jesse Wilbur’s death in 1951, his son Glenn carried on the business for two more decades. The building was originally designed and constructed to be a blacksmith shop – a once very common and necessary business in frontier life – and is the only known continuously functioning blacksmith shop remaining in the region. Following a recent careful restoration, the building continues to operate as a blacksmith shop today.

2143 North 5500 East in Eden, Utah

Eden, Utah

09 Tuesday Dec 2025

Posted by Jacob Barlow in Uncategorized

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Eden, utah, Weber County

Eden, Utah

  • David Eccles Memorial
  • Eden Park
  • General Store
  • J.M. Wilbur Company Blacksmith Shop
  • Settlement of Eden
  • Eden posts sorted by address

Lauritz H. and Emma Smith House

08 Monday Dec 2025

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Draper, NRHP, utah

Lauritz H. and Emma Smith House

The Lauritz H. and Emma Smith House, built in phases between 1884 and 1947, is a Victorian cross wing of brick construction. The house and its contributing buildings are significant for their history and architecture. The original owner and primary builder of the house was Lauritz Heber Smith, a second-generation Draper resident. His father was Lauritz Smith Sr., one of Draper’s earliest residents. The home Lauritz H. Smith built for his wife, Emma Wright Shipley Smith, and their ten children, was part of the original Lauritz Smith Sr. homestead. The first patent to the homestead was provided in 1872 for 160 acres on the west side of the Draper town site. Lauritz H. Smith was a notable local farmer, poultry-man, canal superintendent, and fruit grower. Subsequent owners of the historic Smith home have been family members.”

12423 South Relation Street inĀ Draper, Utah

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