Dec 30, 2004
- Charmaine Bantugan
National Register of Historic Places - Brady-Brady House
Statement of Significant: The Brady/Brady House, built c. 1930, in Sandy, Utah, is significant under Criteria A and C. It is significant under Criterion A for its association with the Specialized Agriculture, Small Business and Community Development, 1906-46 category of the Historic Resources of Sandy City, Utah Multiple Property Submission. Built by second-generation Sandy residents, Lindsay and Ellen Brady, it is a good representative example of a dwelling typically associated with successful small family farmsteads in the community. The Brady's, who were farmers, had several children and maintained two households, this house and one they had built several decades earlier. In 1937, they passed this house on to their son and daughter-in-law, Kenneth and Jesse Brady. Under Criterion C the Brady/Brady House is significant as a well-executed, though modest version of an English Tudor-style period cottage, which is becoming increasingly rare in modem Sandy. Decorative brickwork and ornate window details set this apart from other period cottages in Sandy. This house type characterizes a level of prosperity found by middleclass Sandy residents in the pre-World War II era. The Brady/Brady House retains its historic integrity and is a contributing historic resource in Sandy.
National Register of Historic Places - Brady-Brady House
Statement of Significant: The Brady/Brady House, built c. 1930, in Sandy, Utah, is significant under Criteria A and C. It is significant under Criterion A for its association with the Specialized Agriculture, Small Business and Community Development, 1906-46 category of the Historic Resources of Sandy City, Utah Multiple Property Submission. Built by second-generation Sandy residents, Lindsay and Ellen Brady, it is a good representative example of a dwelling typically associated with successful small family farmsteads in the community. The Brady's, who were farmers, had several children and maintained two households, this house and one they had built several decades earlier. In 1937, they passed this house on to their son and daughter-in-law, Kenneth and Jesse Brady. Under Criterion C the Brady/Brady House is significant as a well-executed, though modest version of an English Tudor-style period cottage, which is becoming increasingly rare in modem Sandy. Decorative brickwork and ornate window details set this apart from other period cottages in Sandy. This house type characterizes a level of prosperity found by middleclass Sandy residents in the pre-World War II era. The Brady/Brady House retains its historic integrity and is a contributing historic resource in Sandy.
Dec 30, 2004
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