Dec 25, 1992
- Julie Gallagher
Hautned
This places is literally haunted. We named the ghost "Elvis", but in doing research, the original owner's son was shot and killed in Sandy, and his funeral was held in this house. I am not the only witness to the hautings, but everyone who lived there with me (or around that time) died young.
Hautned
This places is literally haunted. We named the ghost "Elvis", but in doing research, the original owner's son was shot and killed in Sandy, and his funeral was held in this house. I am not the only witness to the hautings, but everyone who lived there with me (or around that time) died young.
Dec 25, 1992
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Oct 13, 1983
Oct 13, 1983
- Charmaine Bantugan
National Register of Historic Places - Alexander Mitchell House
Statement of Significance: The Alexander Mitchell House is a two-and-one-half-story brick and frame house with a gable roof and gabled cross-wings. Like the other houses in Perkins' Addition, its design was likely drawn from a pattern book or was created as one of a number of patterns that were made available to Perkins' Addition investors for the selection of a house type. One basic plan was used to design seven of the ten houses. The Mitchell House, however, is one of three houses that has elements common among the houses in the Addition, but which differs in plan and elevation from any of the other houses. It is essentially a complex variation of the common type used in the seven houses. houses generally consist of a rectangular two-and-one-half-story block with a gable roof, projecting bays or crosswinds with gable roofs, and a facade composed of a balanced arrangement of four openings. The main entrance in each house is on one side of the facade flanked by a large window. Distinctive one or two-story porches over the entrances have gable roofs and ornamentation that echoes the pitch and detailing of the main block. Belt courses and a change in the material in the gable break up the vertical thrust of other mass of each house, and distinctive shingle patterns make the gable areas a focal point of visual interest. The Alexander Mitchell House is architecturally and historically significant as one of the ten remaining houses that were original to Perkins' Addition subdivision, the most visually cohesive example of a streetcar subdivision in Salt Lake City. Streetcar subdivisions played a major role in the transformation of the land south of the original city from agricultural to residential use in the 1890s, and Perkins' Addition was considered the standard of subdivision excellence. The Mitchell House is one of three houses whose design varies from the standard pattern that was repeated with variations in seven Perkins Addition houses. This variation within a subdivision which is dominated by similar house types indicates that the ideal of personalized expression as a selling point in subdivision development occasionally became a reality. Although a unique type among Perkins Addition houses, the Mitchell house has many design features which visually tie it to other Perkins houses. The Alexander Mitchell House at 1620 South 1000 East was built in 1891 as one of the thirteen large, brick houses constructed in Perkins' Addition subdivision by Metropolitan Investment Company. Alexander and Jessie M. Mitchell, who contracted to have the house built in January 1891, lived here until 1899.2 The Mitchells had come to Salt Lake City around 1887, apparently from Milwaukee, and had been living at 29 F Street before moving into this house. Mr. Mitchell was a commercial agent for the Chicago, Milwaukee, and St. Paul Railroad. Their thirty-year-old son, Alexander R. Mitchell, manager of the Union Pacific coal yards, lived with them in this house until his accidental death on August 19, 1892. The Mitchells transferred the property to the National Bank of the Republic via a sheriff's deed in 1898 for $3800, then apparently left the state. The bank either left the house vacant or rented it out until selling it for $3500 in 1900 to Robert Hartley, who had arrived in Salt Lake City that same year. Hartley, a native of England, had mining interests in Nevada. He lived in this house until his death on December 3, 1919. His daughter, Ada H. Hartley, who had lived here with him, sold the house in 1920, moved to Sandy, and began teaching school at Murray High School. Paula Lubold, a widow who had first come to Salt Lake City around 1918, bought the house in 1920 and moved here from 770 East 700 South. Soon after, she married Dr. William Sahr, N.D., a naturopath. They opened a naturopathic health care center, East Side Sanitarium, in this house, which also served as their home. Mrs. Sahr, also listed as a doctor and a registered nurse, operated this facility by herself for a time while her husband operated a similar facility, Broadway Sanitarium, in the New Grand Hotel at 377 South Main. Ads for the East Side Sanitarium claim twenty-two years of experience in "nature treatments connected with the knowledge of what God likes us to do for suffering humanity...." William Sahr either died or moved away in 1924, a year after Broadway Sanitarium closed down. Paula L. Sahr, who also went by Louise M. Sahr, continued to operate the sanitarium and live in this house until her death in 1946. In 1947, the title to the property was transferred to Paula Sahr's brother, Gustav H. Schmidt, who lived here for one year and then divided it into two apartments around 1950. Schmidt also owned another of the Perkins' Addition houses at this same time, 936 East 1700 South, which was also divided into apartments, where he lived for several years. Schmidt, who was single, transferred the property to his relatives, Walter and Gustave A. Schmidt, in 1954, a few months before his death. Bertha and Elmer Lee Wellington, who bought the house in 1955, lived in one of the apartments in the house until 1958, then moved into the house next door at 1632 South 1000 East. Mr. Wellington operated the Wellington Cigar Stand-in.
National Register of Historic Places - Alexander Mitchell House
Statement of Significance: The Alexander Mitchell House is a two-and-one-half-story brick and frame house with a gable roof and gabled cross-wings. Like the other houses in Perkins' Addition, its design was likely drawn from a pattern book or was created as one of a number of patterns that were made available to Perkins' Addition investors for the selection of a house type. One basic plan was used to design seven of the ten houses. The Mitchell House, however, is one of three houses that has elements common among the houses in the Addition, but which differs in plan and elevation from any of the other houses. It is essentially a complex variation of the common type used in the seven houses. houses generally consist of a rectangular two-and-one-half-story block with a gable roof, projecting bays or crosswinds with gable roofs, and a facade composed of a balanced arrangement of four openings. The main entrance in each house is on one side of the facade flanked by a large window. Distinctive one or two-story porches over the entrances have gable roofs and ornamentation that echoes the pitch and detailing of the main block. Belt courses and a change in the material in the gable break up the vertical thrust of other mass of each house, and distinctive shingle patterns make the gable areas a focal point of visual interest. The Alexander Mitchell House is architecturally and historically significant as one of the ten remaining houses that were original to Perkins' Addition subdivision, the most visually cohesive example of a streetcar subdivision in Salt Lake City. Streetcar subdivisions played a major role in the transformation of the land south of the original city from agricultural to residential use in the 1890s, and Perkins' Addition was considered the standard of subdivision excellence. The Mitchell House is one of three houses whose design varies from the standard pattern that was repeated with variations in seven Perkins Addition houses. This variation within a subdivision which is dominated by similar house types indicates that the ideal of personalized expression as a selling point in subdivision development occasionally became a reality. Although a unique type among Perkins Addition houses, the Mitchell house has many design features which visually tie it to other Perkins houses. The Alexander Mitchell House at 1620 South 1000 East was built in 1891 as one of the thirteen large, brick houses constructed in Perkins' Addition subdivision by Metropolitan Investment Company. Alexander and Jessie M. Mitchell, who contracted to have the house built in January 1891, lived here until 1899.2 The Mitchells had come to Salt Lake City around 1887, apparently from Milwaukee, and had been living at 29 F Street before moving into this house. Mr. Mitchell was a commercial agent for the Chicago, Milwaukee, and St. Paul Railroad. Their thirty-year-old son, Alexander R. Mitchell, manager of the Union Pacific coal yards, lived with them in this house until his accidental death on August 19, 1892. The Mitchells transferred the property to the National Bank of the Republic via a sheriff's deed in 1898 for $3800, then apparently left the state. The bank either left the house vacant or rented it out until selling it for $3500 in 1900 to Robert Hartley, who had arrived in Salt Lake City that same year. Hartley, a native of England, had mining interests in Nevada. He lived in this house until his death on December 3, 1919. His daughter, Ada H. Hartley, who had lived here with him, sold the house in 1920, moved to Sandy, and began teaching school at Murray High School. Paula Lubold, a widow who had first come to Salt Lake City around 1918, bought the house in 1920 and moved here from 770 East 700 South. Soon after, she married Dr. William Sahr, N.D., a naturopath. They opened a naturopathic health care center, East Side Sanitarium, in this house, which also served as their home. Mrs. Sahr, also listed as a doctor and a registered nurse, operated this facility by herself for a time while her husband operated a similar facility, Broadway Sanitarium, in the New Grand Hotel at 377 South Main. Ads for the East Side Sanitarium claim twenty-two years of experience in "nature treatments connected with the knowledge of what God likes us to do for suffering humanity...." William Sahr either died or moved away in 1924, a year after Broadway Sanitarium closed down. Paula L. Sahr, who also went by Louise M. Sahr, continued to operate the sanitarium and live in this house until her death in 1946. In 1947, the title to the property was transferred to Paula Sahr's brother, Gustav H. Schmidt, who lived here for one year and then divided it into two apartments around 1950. Schmidt also owned another of the Perkins' Addition houses at this same time, 936 East 1700 South, which was also divided into apartments, where he lived for several years. Schmidt, who was single, transferred the property to his relatives, Walter and Gustave A. Schmidt, in 1954, a few months before his death. Bertha and Elmer Lee Wellington, who bought the house in 1955, lived in one of the apartments in the house until 1958, then moved into the house next door at 1632 South 1000 East. Mr. Wellington operated the Wellington Cigar Stand-in.
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