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Eden, Utah
09 Tuesday Dec 2025
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09 Tuesday Dec 2025
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08 Monday Dec 2025
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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 in Draper, Utah


07 Sunday Dec 2025
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Nelson Wheeler Whipple House
This substantial two-story adobe house was built in 1854 by Nelson Wheeler Whipple at a cost of approximately $2,000. Whipple was a Mormon immigrant from New York who arrived in Salt Lake City in 1850. During his long career in Utah he worked as a policeman, gunsmith, carpenter, and cabinet maker. He also operated a successful shingle mill, supplying shingles for the Tabernacle and many other public and ecclesiastical structures. His detailed journals provide excellent insight into the early settlement of the valley and were serialized in the 1930s in the Improvement Era, an LDS church publication.
A central-passage type house, the Nelson Wheeler Whipple House has careful, classically-inspired details in the roof cornice and frieze, window hoods, and the main door with sidelights. It is one of the oldest surviving residences in the Salt Lake Valley. Since its construction was carefully documented by Whipple, it is especially valuable as a “textbook” of early Utah building practices.
564 West 400 North in Salt Lake City, Utah.


04 Thursday Dec 2025
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Hatch Park – A Brief History
The Town of North Salt Lake was incorporated on September 3, 1946 and the first Town officials were appointed. In 1949 Ray C. Hatch was elected Town President with Alton L. Boggess, Jack Cummings, Julius Edleman, and Freda Wood as the first Town Board. Ray Hatch served two four-year terms as president, from 1949 to 1957.
On July 5, 1955 Town President Ray C. Hatch and the Town Board purchased this land from the Bamberger Railroad. Citizens donated their time and efforts in changing the burned-out area from the Bamberger Fire into a baseball park. Later the park was expanded to include a playground, pavilion, and restrooms. These great tasks were performed with a minimum amount of money and a maximum amount of effort.
North Salt Lake
Ray C. Hatch, Town President
Town Board Members
Alton L. Boggess
Jack Cummings
Julius Edleman
Freda Wood
50 West Center Street in North Salt Lake, Utah
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29 Saturday Nov 2025
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20 Thursday Nov 2025
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The McIntyre House, located at 259 East Seventh Avenue in The Avenues in Salt Lake City, Utah was added to the National Register of Historic Places (#78002677).
The property on which the McIntyre House sits was registered to C. J. Sandbech on June 27, 1874, as lot 2, Block 101, Plat D. The lot was purchased by Gill S. Peyton on January 26, 1894, for a price of $2,500.00.
The structure was designed by architect Fredrich Hale and was first inhabited in 1898 and was called Payton Hall. The property, house, and carriage house was sold to Henry w. Brown on July 18, 1900, for a price of $15,000.00.
William H. McIntyre acquired the house on December 5, 1901 for a price of $19,000.00 and the adjacent lot (Lot #2) for a price of $2,000.00. From this date on the structure has been known as the Mclntyre House.
Service connections are recorded as being made on April 17, 1906 and additional services and repairs were made August 8, 1910.
William H. Mclntyre died on August 20, 1926. Mrs. Phoebe McIntyre resided in the house until her death in 1945. William H. McIntyre came to Utah as a boy from Texas and his adventurous life was bound up with the development of the Utah cattle business. In later life Mr. McIntyre developed large holdings in Alberta, Canada, where he established the McIntyre Ranch but he retained many interests in Utah and spent his last years there; dying in Salt Lake City in 1926 at ‘the age of ‘seventy-eight.
He was born in Grimes County, Texas about forty miles, north of what is now the city of Houston, in the year 1848, the son of William McIntyre who was of Scotch-Irish descent.
William’s brother, Samuel, along with William traveled to Texas about 1870 to sell some property owned by, t;heir father. After the sell was completed they bought cattle and made the long trek back to Utah. In the spring of the next year, they sold the cattle for more than five times what they had paid. This gave them enough money to buy more cattle in Omaha and drive them to Utah. This partnership continued until sometime in the 1880s and gave the two brothers enough money to enter into several ventures, including the Mammoth Mine at Mammoth, Utah which then developed into a successful operation.
During the 1880s, William had hard times in the cattle business losing almost an entire herd in the winter of 1886-87. In 1891 to 1894 William began investigating the possibility of purchasing land and in 1894 he purchased a full section of land near Cardston in Alberta, Canada. Ranching began shortly after the purchase.
William H. McIntyre was married to Phoebe, Ogden Chase. She was the granddaughter of Isaac Chase, the first flour miller in Utah. Liberty Park was once the Isaac Chase farm, later passing to Brigham Young. Phoebe Chase was torn at the caretaker’s house which still stands on Liberty Park.

Mentioned in the national register’s nomination form:
While they account for less than one percent of all residences, the very large, often architect-designed homes in the Eastlake, Queen Anne and Shingle styles, and later the Prairie and Craftsman styles greatly influence the visual character of the Avenues. Some of the state’s best examples of residential architectural styles were built there, including the William Barton house, 231 B Street, (vernacular/Gothic); the Jeremiah Beattie house, 30 J Street, (Eastlake); the David Murdock house, 73 G Street, (Queen Anne); the E.G. Coffin house, 1037 First Avenue, (Queen Anne); the N.H. Beeman house, 1007 First Avenue, (Shingle style); the Vto. Mclntyre house, 257 Seventh Avenue, (Classical Revival); the James Sharp house, 157 D Street, (Craftsman); and the W.E. Ware house, 1184 First Avenue, (Colonial Revival).





18 Tuesday Nov 2025
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16 Sunday Nov 2025
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Settlement of Eden
The town of Eden was named after the biblical Garden of Eden. Before Eden was surveyed and laid out in 1865, the valley was the summer hunting grounds for Shoshone Indians. As early as 1825, trappers of the Hudson Bay Fur Company, led by Peter Skene Ogden, followed Indian trails throughout the valley, then known as Ogden’s Hole.
Brigham Young, president and leader of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, sent a group of cattlemen to the valley in 1854. They found the valley excellent for their cattle, corralled naturally by the mountains with plenty of feed and water. Erastus Bingham and Joseph Hardy built cabins in 1857 on the slopes below what was later called Geertsen Canyon. Sydney Teeples built a cabin on the North Fork, and Stephen K. Wilbur settled in the area that later became Eden. The first permanent settlers came over North Ogden Pass in 1859. The winters were long and harsh, with the snow reaching six feet deep in places and the temperature as low as 46 degrees below zero.
The Utah Black Hawk War in 1865 caused the pioneers to move closer together. They settled into the area between the Middle Fork and the North Fork rivers and named their new town Eden. The center block was the public square. The population soon grew to 250 people.
A one-room log school house was built across from the square in 1866. It was used until 1884 when a larger frame building was built. A bell called the children to school, announced the noon hour and the end of recess, and also warned the people of fires or other emergencies. When a new yellow brick school replaced the smaller structure, the bell was mounted on the roof. The bell is now mounted on this monument.

Daughters of Utah Pioneers historic marker #538, located in Eden Park at 5509 East 2200 North in Eden, Utah.

13 Thursday Nov 2025
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Mary Smith House
The Mary Smith House, a brick cross-wing Victorian, built c. 1883, is historically significant as one of the few houses in Draper built to accommodate a polygamous family and is the only known house in the community built specifically to comply with the 1882 Edmunds Act, which outlawed “cohabitation”. one man sharing his house with more than one wife. The Edmunds Act was one of the major steps taken by the federal government to force the Mormon Church into giving up polygamy. The house was likely built to protect Lauritz Smith, Mary’s husband, from prosecution. Mary, Lauritz’s first wife, moved into this house, while Hannah, the second wife, remained in the family home less than a quarter-mile away.

12423 South Relation Street (1565 East) in Draper, Utah

Mary Smith Home
This home was built c. 1883 for Mary Smith, the first wife of Lauritz Smith, Draper’s first blacksmith. Married in 1854, the young Danish couple arrived in Draper in 1855. Their first log home was replaced by a new brick home built c. 1865-1867 located about 1/4th mile west of this site on Pioneer Ave. and still standing. Lauritz took a 2nd wife, Hannah Jensen, in 1867.
With the passage of the Edmunds Act in 1882, it became unlawful for a man to “cohabitate”. Lauritz and his son, Joseph, built this house for Mary. This is the only known house in Draper built specifically to comply with the Edmunds Act. The home is presently owned by a descendant, Karen Smith.

30 Thursday Oct 2025
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William A. Byers Home
Home built 1891 for William A. Byers. Frame construction with mansard roof. Registered October 3, 1973 by Messrs Randall K. Jensen and Lamont B. Vail.
256 North Vine Street in Salt Lake City, Utah





