Walking Tour Saturday, Oct. 12

K.E.E.P. Yalecrest is hosting an educational neighborhood walk Saturday, Oct. 12 from 1-3 p.m. to highlight the architectural styles and historicity of some notable homes located on the 1300-1500 East blocks of Harvard and Yale Avenues.

We’ll meet at Harvard Ave. and 13th East and walk east to 15th East, then down Yale Avenue and back to the start.

We will be viewing a variety of exterior architectural elements from the sidewalk in small groups and giving a brief synopsis of notable people or events related to certain houses.

The tour is open to the public and we’re suggesting a $5 donation for participants who are not current members of our organization. A $25 per person or $50 per family annual membership is also available.

This is our first tour event and we’re very excited about the wonderful bits of history we’ve uncovered in our preparations.  We hope to see you Saturday!

If you don’t make the tour, here’s the program: Yalecrest Notable Homes Tour Oct 12 2013

HarvardYale_tour_map

The Match Prowler

Only a few homeowners were living on the 1700 block of Harvard Ave in early 1929.  Gaskell Romney (Mitt Romney’s grandfather) had built the earliest homes on the west end.  Residents had moved in while nearby homes were still under construction.  It was during this time, on a Thursday night according to the Salt Lake Telegram, that the “Match Prowler” struck…

Czar Winters (1709 Harvard) was a lawyer who worked downtown in the Walker Building.  He was the first to call and report to the police that something was amiss.  Not only did he notice burnt matches on the floor of his new home, but items were missing too.

The match prowler had stolen a suit, a flashlight, and MONEY!   75 cents, to be exact.

Across the street, M.Ross Richards (1710 Harvard) had to work a bit late Thursday night.  He didn’t make it home until 11pm.  He was the Manager at Richards-Barlow Motor Company.   It was a great industry to be working in.  The rise of the private automobile was giving way to a transportation revolution.  Everybody wanted to own a car.  When Ross finally got home he didn’t notice anything missing, but he did find “evidence of prowling.”

Ross remembered that his friend, Ben Richie, had asked Ross to keep an eye on his house for him while he was out of town.  Ben was the Managing Director for the Great Western Film Library.  His home was conveniently located right nextdoor (1716 Harvard).  Investigation showed the Richie home had also been entered, but nothing was taken.   (Could the police and Ross really know nothing was taken from Ben’s?)

The police felt confident it was the same prowler.  All three homes had a trail of burnt matches.

Reading the Telegram, I wondered about the wives.  Where were Margaret Winters and Algie Richards while their husbands were at work and their homes were being burglarized?  The newspaper doesn’t mention them at all.  I imagine Grace Richie was traveling with her husband.  Wonder if they ever went to Hollywood?  Or knew any famous cowboy actors?

Well, it seems almost cartoonish now– the image or a burglar using matches to make his way through a dark house.  But what I like about this story is that this is the first documented evidence (and not the last) that I’ve found of  “neighbors looking out for each other” on this one little block in Yalecrest.  Nice.

 –Kelly MarinanJan 1929 ad

Wall Dormers

wall dormers

Wall dormers are an interesting and unique architectural feature seen on some Period Revival Style homes in Yalecrest.  They are essentially a continuation of the wall above the roof eaves, breaking the line of the eaves.

Wall dormers are less commonly seen than roof dormers.  And unlike roof dormers, they generally offer little or no increase in floor space or head room.

–Kelly Marinan

Recently Restored Old World Tudor

Tudor for Sale flyer Tudor for Sale

We saw this flyer and cheered! Yes, you can restore a Yalecrest home and make money selling it —you don’t have to demo it! This is the way to care for our Yalecrest homes and hand them off to the next loving owners.

1445 E. 900 South

Open houses:
Thursday, Sept. 5, 5-7 p.m.
Friday, Sept. 6, 5-7 p.m.

Download PDF: Tudor for Sale

State History Conference

Do you enjoy learning about Salt Lake City history and Utah history?

If so, then don’t forget to mark your calendar for the upcoming 61st Annual State History Conference. This year’s theme is titled “The Making of Place.”

Conference to be held: Thursday Sept 5th through Sunday Sept 8th.

It is FREE and open to the public.
You don’t have to register for the workshops or the regular sessions.
(The field trip is a little different. You do need to register for that.)

The workshops/sessions will be held at the historic Rio Grande Depot.

For the complete schedule (including details on topics, time and location info) please visit the Utah Division of State History website.

Hope to see you there!

–Kelly MarinanMaking of Place

A Look Back

Godbe Home

Every Friday The Salt Lake Tribune publishes photos in a series called “A Look Back“. This week they displayed interesting old photos of “mansions and modest homes” belonging to Utah’s early settlers. The photo above immediately caught my eye because it belonged to William S. Godbe. Godbe arrived here in 1851 as an LDS convert. He was a familiar face in early SLC history, a mover and a shaker.

But did you know William S. Godbe was a Yalecrest landowner? Yes, he had 10 acres. He owned the southeast corner of Yalecrest!

William S. Godbe spoke out opposing the economic policies of the Mormon church, had a falling out with Brigham Young and was ex-communicated. So he started his own church, the Church of Zion, and his followers were called Godbeites. But that’s not all. Godbe is credited as the founder of the first non-LDS newspaper that later evolved into The Salt Lake Tribune! And before Utah had Democrats and Republicans, it had the People’s Party and the Liberal PartyGodbe being one of the founders of the latter.

Some interesting people owned property in Yalecrest before and after its homes were built.

—Kelly Marinan

Homes of LDS Church leaders in Yalecrest

From Yalecrest’s early history into modern times — prophets and apostles of the LDS Church were among the neighborhood’s most notable residents alongside captains of industry, professionals, academicians, government officials and civic leaders.

During the pre and post-war years, three  LDS prophets – George Albert Smith, Spencer W. Kimball and Ezra Taft Benson – resided in Yalecrest or its nearby streets, while either serving as head of the church or at different stages of their adult lives.

One of Yalecrest’s most iconic architectural structures – 1389 Harvard Ave.,  with its one-of-a-kind-swirled roof pattern, and castle-like turret in the entry-way –  was home to President Benson before he was appointed Secretary of Agriculture under U.S. President Dwight Eisenhower. Built in 1929, the 3,700 square foot Tudor stands today as a lasting reminder of a bygone era steeped in timeless beauty.

The first Salt Lake City home on the National Register of Historic Places, a spacious 3,800 square foot bungalow at 1302 Yale Ave., was the residence of President George Albert Smith, while he served as the eighth president of the LDS Church from 1945-1951. The original hardwood floors and leaded windows are still preserved in this brick and stone structure built in 1914.

President Spencer W. Kimball lived in two different houses in the Yalecrest area during his lifetime. One was a two-story brick Tudor at 1000 Military Drive, with a large peaked roof on the south end of the house resting over a series of narrow, rectangular leaded windows.  The other was  a one-story 3,200 square foot brick home at 2028 Laird Drive, built in 1947. His residency on Laird Drive was during his service as President of the LDS Church

Joseph Fielding Smith, LDS President from 1970-1972, raised his family at 998 Douglas Street. The 5,300 square foot residence, built in 1926, is situated just west of Yalecrest in the Gilmer Park area. Some of  the original historical features of the home have been preserved including the quarter sawn oak in the doors, mantle and library.

In modern times, two current Apostles of the LDS Church – Elder Dallin H. Oaks and Elder Russell M. Nelson – lived in Yalecrest at 1813 Yale Ave., and 1347 Normandie Circle respectively while serving in the Quorum of the Twelve.  Both have since moved from the neighborhood.  Four other apostles of the LDS Church –Elders  Marion G. Romney, Mark E. Petersen, Neal A. Maxwell, and Joseph B. Wirthlin – all resided here while serving as apostles and Elder Huge B. Brown was a resident before he was called to serve in the church.   Elder Romney’s home was in the Monument Park First Ward at 1903 Yale Ave. Elder Petersen resided at 852 Diestel Road and Elder Maxwell lived at 2059 Herbert Ave.  Elder Wirthlin owned two homes in Yalecrest, first, and relatively briefly at 1671 Harvard Ave., and then for well over 50 years at 932 Military Drive. Elder Wirthlin’s home on Military Drive is a classic 3,200 square foot Tudor built in 1928. Elder Oaks’ home on Yale, also a Tudor built in 1928.

President Hugh B. Brown lived at 1771 Harvard Ave. for a few years in the early 1950s before he was called as an Assistant to the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles. The 2,300 square foot brick home was built in 1930.

A few members of the LDS Church’s Quorum of the Seventy – Elders Royden G. Derrick, Sterling W. Sill and Joseph W. Anderson – also lived in Yalecrest.  Elder Anderson lived at 1732 Yalecrest Ave. and Elder Sill resided at 1264 Yale in the 1940s.

——- Jan Hemming

Remember the Dictaphone?

Salt Lake Desk Exchange

This 1936 photo of the Salt Lake Desk Exchange (advertising dictaphones) is courtesy of the Salt Lake County Archives.


Rulon and Bessie Davis were the first residents of 1784 Harvard Avenue. You don’t see guys like Rulon around here anymore. I mean, when was the last time you bumped into a dictaphone salesman on your block? Rulon was a distributor and the branch manager for The Dictaphone Sales Corporation. He lived here in the mid 1930’s. Multiple SLC companies sold dictaphones.

Old newspaper ads for LDS Business College often pictured a woman with a dictaphone. Besides dictaphones, the school offered classes on telegraphy, calculating machines, shorthand, and bookkeeping. “Business is calling for thousands of qualified workers.”

One of my favorite dictaphone ads was placed by The Columbia Stores Co, 221 S West Temple. Even though his wife disapproved, the ad writer said he loved smoking his old pipe. And when he went down to the front office smoking his pipe at work, he noticed the “operators’ noses take an elevation of about 45 degrees.” But he didn’t have to choose between the stenographers and his pipe. He could have them both because they used (drum roll) DICTAPHONES! “We shoot it through the speaking tube to a good wax record. The boy simply leaves the cylinders up in front… We don’t disturb them, and they don’t disturb us.” Ha! What a great business tool.

But dictaphones had other uses as well. Like in cases of espionage!

You can read about one case in the June 18, 1918 edition of the Salt Lake Telegram. A Pocatello crime was foiled because a detective planted a dictaphone in the room of two men plotting to rob and kill the proprietor of a certain store. Officers with their revolvers ready hid at the store and nabbed the Brigham City man and his cohort before they could commit their crimes and escape on the 10 o’clock train to Salt Lake City.

I can’t imagine not noticing a “planted” dictaphone. It must’ve been a messy room. I wonder how much recording time you get with one of those too. Lucky timing and great detective work, I guess.

Writing this makes me think of my old neighbor friend again. Once I stopped by while she was watching a movie with a switchboard scene. My eyes were on her TV when I heard her say sarcastically, “I suppose you don’t remember those days?” There’s a lot I wasn’t here for, but I love that I can still look at Rulon’s house and many other homes in Yalecrest and think about the people in our neighborhood and Salt Lake City’s History.

Rulon

Rulon (the dictaphone salesman) and Bessie Davis once lived here.

—Kelly Marinan

Over 100 Years Old

While reading a Salt Lake Tribune article on the Sarah Daft Home, these words caught my eye:

“What’s incredible is that it hasn’t been modified much in 100 years,” said Namba. “That’s a huge compliment to the 75 women on the board and the builders. They built a building that had permanence in mind, not a building meant to serve for 20 years. It has stood the test of time. Our nonprofit has been able to concentrate on the care of the residents, not necessarily in the preservation of the building. It is in remarkably great shape.”

Yalecrest has homes just as old.

And I believe Yalecrest builders were of the same mindset. They built homes of distinction, high quality, built to last. Existing Yalecrest homes are filled with interesting stories of their people and life in an earlier SLC.

This featured Yalecrest home (941 S 1300 East) was built in the same year (1913) as the Sarah Daft Home. Of course the landscape around it has changed a lot since then! 941S 1300E - iPad

Note: Shipler photo used by permission, Utah State Historical Society, all rights reserved.

-Kelly Marinan