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Show United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 (Expires 5/31/2012) Amundsen, Dyre & Maria, House Salt Lake County, Utah Name of Property County and State History of the Dyre and Maria Amundsen House Dyre Amundsen was born on June 11, 1837, in Gernserud Buskerud, Norway. The family name was Anunsen in Norway. Dyre immigrated to Utah in 1862. While helping to bring other immigrants across the plains in 1863, Dyre Anunsen met and married Beata Erickson, who died in October 1863, only a month after their marriage. Dyre was living in South Cottonwood in 1865 when he met Sophia Maria Person. Maria Person was born in Marna, Sweden, in 1833.2 She immigrated to Utah in 1864. Dyre and Maria were married in October 1865.3 They lived with the Wheeler family until a small cabin was built for them on Andrew Hammer's property. Their son, John David, was born in the cabin in December 1867. Dyre Anunsen served in Utah's Black Hawk War in 1866 and was award a medal for his service. Sometime in 1867 or 1868, Dyre Anunsen claimed a homestead on land along the angled land that would become 6400 South. As a latecomer to the area, his homestead of 160 and 37/100s of an acre was in the shape of an upside down "T" and claimed in three separate parcels. Dyre built a two-room adobe house for his family where a daughter, Sarah Ann, was born in January 1870. A second daughter, Marinda, was born there in April 1873. The adobe house was located west of the later brick house. Dyre was a logger and a farmer. One of the first projects he completed on his homestead was planting a grove of locust trees. The family would later use the wood to build a barn, fences, and the woodwork in the brick house. On February 20, 1875, Dyre Anunsen was granted a land patent for his homestead property. The Anunsen begin using the name "Amundsen" in the 1880s. In 1891, Dyre filed a deposition with Salt Lake County to change the name on his deeds. The brick house was built in 1891. The builder is unknown, but Dyre himself may have placed the granite foundation blocks that he acquired. The bricks, windows, and other building materials were paid for by an acre of potato crop. The plaster ceiling medallions were reportedly given to Dyre in payment for hauling some of the granite for the Salt Lake temple.4 The Amundsen house and property were at the southern edge of Murray City after annexation in 1905. Dyre Amundsen died on November 17, 1906. He is buried in the Murray Cemetery. At the time of his death, the homestead property had been reduced by more than a half. The land and its water shares were divided between Maria Sophia Amundsen and her three children. Both daughters, Sarah Ann Amundsen Jensen and Marinda Amundsen Boyce, had been married several years and were living in Idaho. In 1909, Maria Amundsen deeded her acreage to her son John David, but retained a life estate. Maria Sophia Amundsen died on August 9, 1918. Her funeral was held in the Grant Ward meetinghouse and she was buried in the Murray Cemetery. John David Amundsen married Alma Pauline Janson on September 19, 1899. Alma was born in Sweden in 1860 and immigrated to Utah in 1897. On the 1900 census, John David (as David) and Alma are living with his parents, Dyre and Maria. David and Alma had three children: Alice Engre Sophia (born in 1901), Edith Selma Lenora (1903), and Wallace Janson (1906). In a letter describing the history of the house, Edith's daughter-inlaw, Linda Adams, wrote that "the house became two dwellings [Edith's] parents occupying the three rooms on the West side and her grandparents the two rooms on the East."5 Edith recalled the driveway was lined with "tall stately poplar trees" and her grandmother had planted the front yard with "yellow roses and Mormon tea 2 Her maiden name appears as Peterson or Petterson, after her father using the patronymic tradition. Her maiden name is Nilson in one family record. Her given name is Maria on the census and in her obituary; however, one family account refers to her as Sophia and she is Sophia M. on property deeds. 3 A pair of photographs in the book Faces of Murray are labeled Dyre Amundsen and a plural wife, Anna Helena Johnson Amundsen. Dyre did not have a second wife. Anna Helena Amundsen Johnsen was his sister. The woman in the photograph may be Sophia Maria Person Amundsen. 4 Family tradition suggests that Brigham Young gave the ceiling moldings to Dyre Amundsen. While Brigham Young died in 1877 well before the construction of the house, the payment may have been tied to a general policy put in place by Brigham Young for the temple that is considered part of his legacy. 5 Letter dated September 16, 1996 written by Linda C. Adams. 7 |