| OCR Text |
Show #6 continued JftN 14,1980 moved to Butte, Montana, and worked in the Parrot Mine. He moved in Salt Lake City in 1898 and lived here until 1914. He was consulting engineer in Utah, Arizona, and Mexico. From 1914 to 1931 he was a consulting engineer for the Mascot Copper and Dos Catezas, Arizona. He maintained his home in Salt Lake until 1923. In 1931 he retired and moved to Southern California. He died in San Diego in 1935. He was survived by his sons, A. G. Tibby, B. F. Tibby, and his daughter Mrs. Edna M. Kidder. From 1910 to 1923 Tibby 1 s daughter and her husband William H. Kidder lived in this house. Kidder worked as a clerk at several Salt Lake City businesses. There is no more information available on him. Edna lived in Los Angeles at the time of her father's death in 1935. In 1925 Frank H. Coulter owned the house. Coulter was building manager of the Continental Bank Building. He was born in Clark County, Iowa, on May 3, 1874. He worked for the Scott Hardware Company before he came to Salt Lake City. He served in the Spanish American War. He was a member of the Salt Lake Kiwanis Club. He was secretary of that club for eight years. He was also a member of the United Spanish-American War Veterans. He moved to San Diego, California, in 1938. He died in 1942. Coulter divided the house and made an apartment in about 1932. The house changed owners very frequently between 1937 and 1947. Between 1937 and 1940 Elmer H. Azbill; a carman for General Motors Acceptance Corporation. From 1941 to 1942 R. William McSwain, a teacher at the city schools, lived here. In 1944 Harold. Armyor, a time clerk lived here. In 1946 Kenneth M. Reinertson, a teacher at the Public Schools lived here. In 1948 Thomas Trinnaman lived here. All these people owned the house and rented part of it. The current owner, Joan C. Terry, told me that when they bought the house in 1948 there were three apartments in the house. The Terrys lived in the house after 1949@. Evan R. Terry is a certified public accountant. In 1978 Joan was president of the Relief Society of the LDS 20th Ward. The Terry's maintained part of the house as an apartment. |