| Title | 81201 |
| State | Utah |
| County | Salt Lake County |
| City | Draper |
| Address | 1613 Pioneer Road (12400 S) |
| Scanning Institution | Utah Correctional Institute |
| Holding Institution | Utah Division of State History |
| Collection | Utah Historic Buildings Collection |
| Building Name | 1613 Pioneer Road (12400 S); Smith, Heber and Sarah House; Draper, Salt Lake County |
| UTSHPO Collection | General Files |
| Spatial Coverage | Salt Lake County |
| Rights Management | Digital Image © 2020 Utah Division of State History. All Rights Reserved. |
| Publisher | Utah Division of State History, Preservation Section |
| Genre | Historic Buildings |
| Type | Text |
| Format | application/pdf |
| Date Digital | 2020-10-22 |
| Language | eng |
| ARK | ark:/87278/s6q29q18 |
| Setname | dha_uhbr |
| ID | 1602495 |
| OCR Text | Show 1613 E PIONEER (12100 S ') ( SMITH, HEBER & SARAH, HOUSE DRAPER, SALT LAKE COUNTY :.J UTAH STATE HISTORY IIIIIIIIIIIII~II~II~IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII~III 3 9222 00535 5404 L \\ "-. · ... _--_ .._ - - -- - - - - - EVALUATION SHEET Intensive Level Survey Utah Office of Preservation Number of Properties Surveyed :--'6..&..-_ _ __ Addresses of Properties Surveyed: 12325 S Date of Survey: 12345 S & 12368 S 900 F "InA 1999 12449 S 960 F 12883 S. 1300 E.. 1613 E. Pioneer Rd. Survey Conducted For: ........ D... ra:>+p....e...r ....C....I ....G"--_ _ _ _ _ _ __ By: Korral Broscbjnskv Evaluated By: .x I Cory lensen Date: Noy 2 1999 Approved Approved with Recommendations (see below) Returned for Corrections/Additionallnformation (see below) Checklist of items required for each surveyed property: Completed Historic Site Form (clearly handwritten or typed) 1. X Photographs (at least two color slides or black-and-white prints) 2. X Completed title search form 3. X Completed Biographical Research Form (or equivalent) for each prinCipal resident from the 4. X historic period (or adequately documented history for non-residential buildings) Photocopy of USGS map with location of building marked 5. X Photocopies of all research materials 6. X Separate file for each property (letter size) 7. X Recommended but not required: X Measured drawing(s) of floor plan(s) and field measurements 9. Sketch plan of the property (required if there are outbuildings) 10. X Photographs (B&W and slides) of all exterior elevations and significant architectural details on the exterior and interior 11 . X Old photographs of the building 8. Comments/Recommendations: - thorough overall research and documentation - in providing names for historic properties always use the first building owner's name and then any other significant owner - photographs and negatives should be placed in archival sleeves HISTORIC SITE FORM (I~I) UTAH OFFICE OF PREsERVATION IIJ)jj~mjStflW!ll.!IT'+jj;diBtllill~iw~t~wllljrfg; Name ofProperty: Addre88: 1613 East PioncerRoad Twn8hp: 3 S City. County: Draper, Salt Lake UTM: Current Owner Name: George & Rcgeoa Roden uros Map Name & Date: Current Owner Addreu: 1613 East Pioneer Road Range: 1E Section: 28 Draper, Utah 1963, photorevised 1969 and 1973 Draper, Utah 84020 Tax Number: 28 -28 - 327 - 013 Legal De8cription (include acreage): COM 1320 FT N & 643 FT W FR S 1/4 COR SEC 28 T 3S R IE SL MER; N 157 FT E 130 FT S 157 FT W 130 FT TO BEG. 0.4 ACRES Property Cate~oO' X buiJding(8) 8lrUcture 8ite _object Eyqluation X eligible/contributing _ ineliglblelnon-conlributing _ out-of-period PhOkM.· Date8 8Jide8: x..prinl$: 1999 Xhi8tOriC: circa 1937 Drqwin~" and Plan" _ melUuredfloor plan8 _ 8ite 8lcetch map _ Hutoric American Bldg. Survey _ original plOlI$ available at: _other: llH Original U8e: Domestic - single dwelling Current U8e: Domestic - single dwelling Ruearch Source8 (check all 80urce8 con8ulted, whether u8eful or not) Xab8tract oftitle X city/county hi8torie8 X tax card & photo Xpenonal intetview8 _ bUilding permit X USHS Library _ 8ewer permit X USHS Pre8e1Wllion File8 _ Sanborn Maps USHS Architecl$ File X obituary index X WS Family Hi8tory Library Xcity directorie&lgazetteen Xlocal library: X cen8U$ records _ university library(ie8): X biographical encyclopedilU X new8papen (boo"'. Bibliouqphjcal &ferencu article8. interview8. etc.) Attach cople8 ofall re8earch note8. litle 8earche8. obituarie8. and 80 forth. Draper Historical Commiuee, People ofDraper. 1849-1924: The Hi8tory ofDraper. Utah. Volume One. [Draper, Utah: Draper Historical Committee, 1998]. Jenson. Andrew, compo Latter-day SainI Biographical Encyclopedia. 4 Vou. Salt Lake City, Utah: Andrew Jenson History Company, 1901-1936. Roden, George. Interview by author, Draper, Utah, October 1999. Notes. Sail Lake County Archive8, tax cards and photographs. Sail Lake County Recorder'8 Office, title abstracts. Sail Lake Tribune. Utah Slale Gazetteen and R.L. Polk City Direclorie8. United Slate8 CeMU$. Draper. Utah: 1900. 1910 and 1920. Re8earcherlOrganization: __K.a:lorralA.UlIII.B~rosc_bMjpIlliHY _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ Date: SeJ>lcmber 1999 Building Style!/'ype:_BKun_&_al~ow.n....._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ No. Stories:---LFoundation Material:_C....,on ...... cret .......e'--_ _ _ __ Additions: X none _ minor _ major (describe below) Number ofassociated outbuildings ~ B,...ri""ck_ _ _ _ _ __ WaIIMaterial(s): _ _.... Alterations:_ none X minor _ major (describe below) and/or structures ~. Briefly describe the principal building, additions or alterations and their dates, and associated outbuildings and structures. Use continuation sheets as necessary. ~i..~'is~~ The brick bungalow constructed in 1915. The house is located at 1613 East Pioneer Road in Draper, Utah. The house sits on a concrete foundation and has an asphalt-shingled hipped-roof. The exterior walls ate pressed yellow brick laid in a running bond. The windows ate all original double-hung one-over-one wood windows with concrete sills and brick lintels. There ate several smaller decorative windows with narrow lights in fixed frames. The house faces south and features a full-width porch and a sma11 shingled, hipped-roof dormer. The porch is supported on square brick piers and is surrounded by a knee-wall of brick. The porch deck and steps ate concrete. During the 19608, the porch's wooden cornice box was sagging and the owner installed a steel beam and installed two steel posts to support the porch roof. The posts do not detract ftom the historic integrity of the facade. The main entrance is flanked by two large windows with 1ransoms. With the exception of screens, the other elevations have not been altered. There is a brick chimney with a corbeled lOf on the west elevation. The living room fireplace has a shorter chimney on the east elevation. The back door is on the west side of the north elevation. On the interior, the house features six rooms with approximately 1,575 square feet on floor space on the main floor. The Smith Roden house has fairly generous proportions for a 1915 bungalow. The front entrance leads into a sma11 square foyer. To the east is a large parlor with bookcase flanking the fireplace. On the west side is a dining room and inglenopk. The two rooms ate separated by a large opening. The interior featUres dark wood trim which has never been painted and a built-in hutch. There may have been a pass-through between the hutch and the kitchen, but if so, it was blocked before 1960. The kitchen has been remodeled once (date unknown, probably 195Os). A hall separates two bedrooms, a study and bathroom from the kitchen. Steps to the back door and the basement ate located in a sma11 porch area. The basement is ful1y excavated and finished between the 1930s and 19508. The attic is unfinished. The house faces Pioneer Road and sits on a slightly raised site. There is a large conifer in front and several matme deciduous trees to the east and rear. A gravel driveway is on the west and leads to a circa 1920s sing1e-car frame garage in the rear. A sidewalk follows the perimeter of the house. Pioneer Road is a curving road on the east side of Draper. The residences strung along the road include a few Victorian cottages and bungalows, but mostly newer homes dating from the 1950s to the 1990s. the house is in excellent condition and contributes to the historic resources of Draper. ArchitectlBuilder: Unknown Date ofConstruction: eire. ~ Historic Themes : Mark themes related to this property with "S" or "C" (S = significant, C = contributing). (see instructions for details) _Industry Politics/ ~ Agriculture Economics Government Education h Architecture Invention _Religion _ Engineering _ Archeology _Landscape Architecture Science Entertainment! Art ~ Social History Recreation Commerce Law _ Transportation _ Ethnic Heritage Literature Communications Other _ Exploration! £ Community Planning _Maritime History & Development _Military Settlement _ Performing A rts Conservation HealthlMedicine Write a chronological history ofthe property, focusing primarily on the original or principal owners & Significant events. Explain and justify any Significant themes marked above. Use continuation sheets as necessary. +\e.'\~/,( ~~~~.v\t ~ The Smidl H _ house is located on land originally patented to William 1. Teny in 1882. There was probably no house on the land until 190 1 when it was purchased by Heber A. Smith who built a brick cottage for his family. The bungalow was built in 1915 to the west of the first house. The older house was tom down in the 1940s. Heber Absalom Smith was born in Draper on January 5, 1858Ao early residents Absalom Wamsley and Amy Emily Downs Smith. Heber Smith married Sarah Fitzgerald on February 12, 1880. Sarah Jane Fitzgerald was born on November 29, 1861,in Draper to John and Sarah Williams Fitzgerald. Heber and Sarah Smith had ten children. The bungalow was built after most of their children had grown. Heber Smith had a varied career: he was a school teacher, a farmer, a banker, a businessman, and in 1903 setVed in the state legislature. In addition to raising ten children, Sarah Smith was a member of the Daughters of Utah Pioneers. The Smiths were members of the Draper Ward of the Church ofJesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Heber A. Smith died April 15, 1943. Sarah Smith died February 26, 1947. The property was deeded to three of the Smiths' sons, Heber 1., Alma F. and LeGrande Smith, in 1944. Alma Smith, and his wife Cordia Hendrickson were living in the house after his mother's death. The property was deeded to Alma and Cordia Smith in 1953. Alma Fitzgerald Smith was born on November 29, 1889 in Draper. Cordia Hendrickson was born on November 12, 1887 in Levan, Utah. Alma and Cordia were married on June 2, 1914. They had three children. Both Alma and Cordia taught school for many years. Alma Smith was also a banker. They were members of the Draper Ward. Alma F. Smith died on February 25, 1954,and Cordia Smith died on October 10, 1959. The house was deed to their daughter Margaret Smith and her husband Harman C. Steed. The Steeds sold the house to George and Regena Roden in 1960. George, a retired engineer, and his wife, Regena are still living in the home. ~~~~~-1.\-Q. ~"".,,~ Smith-RodeR I louse 1613 East Pioneer Road, Draper, Utah ILS Photographs 1999 Common Information: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Smith-Roden House Draper, Salt Lake County, Utah Photographer: Korral Broschinsky Date: 1999 Negative on file at Utah SHPO. Photo No.1: 6. South & west elevations of house. Camera facing northeast. Photo No.2: 6. South & west elevations of house. Camera facing northeast. Photo No.3: 6. North elevation of house. Camera facing south. Photo No.4: 6. East elevation of house. Camera facing west. Photo No.5: 6. South elevation of garage. Camera facing north. TITLE SEARCH FORM ADDRESS: CITY: 1613 East Pioneer Road Draper, Utah CURRENT OWNER: George & Regena Roden ADDRESS: 1613 East Pioneer Road Draper, Utah 84020 DATE BUILT: TAX NUMBER: 28 - 28 - 327 - 013 LEGAL DESCRIPTION AND ACREAGE: 0.4 ACRES COM 1320 FT N & 643 FT W FR S 1/4 COR SEC 28 T 3S R 1E SL MER; N 157 FT E 130 FT S 157 FT W 130 FT TO BEG LESS ROAD. 1915 DatI of DatI of it_rei Inatrunwnt GRANTOR (seller) GRANTEE (buyer) Dollar Type of Tranuctlon Amount 04-21-1960 05-09-1960 Harman C. Steed & wf. Margaret Smith George & Regena Roden WD 10.00 09-01-1957 04-04-1960 Cordia Smith, widow Harman C. Steed & wf. Margaret Smith WD 10.00 11-20-1953 12-03-1953 Heber J. Smith et al trustees Alma F. Smith & wf. Cordia H. WD 10.00 01-05-1944 01-06-1944 estate of Heber A. Smith Heber J., Alma F., & LeGrande Smith DECREE OF DIST 12-06-1901 12-06-1901 Wm .. J. Terry, & wf. Clarissa Heber A. Smith WD 11-20-1882 08-09-1889 United States of America Wm . J. Terry PATENT RESEARCHER: Korral Broschinsky DATE: COMMENTS property divided 2,500.00 -- 500.00 -- June 1999 PAGE 1 of 1 TITLE SEARCH FORM ADDRESS: CITY: 1613 East Pioneer Road Draper, Utah CURRENT OWNER: George & Regena Roden ADDRESS: 1613 East Pioneer Road Draper, Utah 84020 TAX NUMBER: 28 - 28 - 327 - 013 LEGAL DESCRIPTION AND ACREAGE: 0.4 ACRES COM 1320 FT N & 643 FT W FR S 1/4 COR SEC 28 T 3S R 1E SL MER; N 157 FT E 130 FT S 157 FT W 130 FT TO BEG LESS ROAD. 1915 DATE BUILT: Data of Instru...nt Data of ".cord GRANTOR (seller) Type of Tnonsaction GRANTEE (buyer) Dollar Amount 04-21-1960 05-09-1960 Harman C. Steed & wf. Margaret Smith George & Regena Roden WD 10.00 09-01-1957 04-04-1960 Cordia Smith, widow Harman C . Steed & wf. Margaret Smith WD 10.00 11-20-1953 12-03-1953 Heber J . Smith et al trustees Alma F. Smith & wf. Cordia H. WD 10.00 01-05-1944 01-06-1944 estate of Heber A. Smith Heber J. , Alma F., & LeGrande Smith DECREE OF DIST 12-06-1901 12-06-1901 Wm .. J . Terry, & wf. Clarissa Heber A. Smith WD 2,500.00 11-20-1882 08-09-1889 United States of America Wm . J. Terry PATENT 500.00 RESEARCHER: Korral Broschinsky DATE: COMMENTS property divided June 1999 PAGE 1 of 1 tion equipment w ': l1t into acti.on at 7.;05 o'clock W E'n one-thlrd'l o! th~ city W&3 nf!f'C Eorl hv the ' t at ahort. i . ' ; Heber A. Smith obitu At Second awn t .' ary rour. ·· ped~on! twere~,: Salt Lake Tnbune, April 16, 1943: 17 rect"!\'c tre~ men ',.,.. _ .• _. .. . _ . -r;;:.;.·I'::/~:-. ..;.~4~-.-,;· -\....L--:.·...;.·~11..:.;.4,1;..,:';..~~i....;:i !lquad' l Electric .w ~~.· ,we~ : th~O.' -~+-' i Tetically idown .. wa main.w~re " " ;' " . , '(' C " • ... " . ': '11, :" (.L . " bu~t ' and : othe Ii! havoc, .~ I --!II. . er "''TOu~htby make-li~1ieve ~ald. rap' >:;IVle i , '. ;'.'n:'. '.leS' . "I n\':der': :.IT · Of'! In'!. :,.' .i'i '~)m'Ie~ ' [I . . ' . 1'\\'0 oth~r majorL1nclde~ts ~e're I ~mulated , at Eighth East : apd ' 1 I' ;11' ' . 1 I " i . " , : j ~; First South 8treet~ . and DowninF- . 1 " . ' I ' ! ' " 1. ton avenue and l!:3eventh E8.!t I . ' ~trt'eu. " i:i. ! ; :; Ac!ting, all reCeref" in the ale[t ,'I J . 1.1 1' . ':I! :. ""ere l Major Jame! i~' Barker. a;s- . I ' . 1 . . :: 1 " '. . , si!tant ; director in' ;charge of ct- . r DR~fER.: April ~ ~5 A basal "llian protection fbr the eastern skull ' tf~ctur~. believe " to haYe~ .sector <? C D. ~nd. Clem ~. b!!en ~uffered i whez:t he f~l1 .!~mi Schramm. state al~rald warder. a j hol1!el·at hi. Ianni he ~;pro~~ci: ! AIter the one-l'\bur ~lert. all . fatal ;fo~ H~r:l.A~m : ,mitil;;&8,5h ~tor wardens m~t at the Salt proml~ent Draper i ~usi e!'ls ma.lt' Lake qty citizens' !! defense head- and ·farmer. !He died it . a I Sa1t ~t:arted . . 115' Sout~ . State stre~t. · Lake' r ~bsiptal! Thursda ! at "5::ld! :Major Barker said tbedrill p . . m., ; seven hours: aft r' he waS, ~howed tremcndou~ : Impro"emer1t found ,! uncons(:ious , in e:tarh-i O\'er all previous ~lcrts he 'h~d stocky~rd~ . : I : ~: 'I . ··j! ~>("V1 in Salt ,Lake Fity and comWell !,~o~nJ as ~resid ~t: ort.lle mended ' the Job of ;those who re- Sandy.' CIty , bank, . i and In other s;>onded. . ;: I busineSs ; ente~prises~ . . '. ;Smi t!h "Howe\"f!r. thf'rc ! ~'~s R woeful als? was a~ve : ;ifi'. c . . a* , l~.ck or ~an POWf'f; ' In the aux- pohtIc~1 af(airs. 8e~vJng for elg~t :l lary police find r,remen squads years in : the ; Draper~ 1. S war.d ~o b.a.ck . up "thf' r~¢\Ilar Of~iCCr.IS bishopricand i r~pre~en tng Salt ar.!! firemen. he sa;~d. . Lake countYi in the; ata e ·leglslaHe advise.d the o;~~icialll of . the ture . 1903~ 1 i U : : ~ i. . , j loc~l council to b~lld up these . Family member.s ·said It ii! beunits in order to ha"e a complete lieved 'Mr. SmJth , had b en riding o~aniz.a tion. II: . . " to a iieJd to 8upe,r\1ae BPI: ng.plantHe uplalnl'd thn~ itht' Mountalning :w~en the') acctqent . Occurred. ~tates ~--U~I Supply I ~ompany. the He wa~ found , by; ':fe'n' :Fltzge~ . ; nah Pow~r ' and ~Ight co~any ald. an: empl~y'e.; '.', ' f ' . il and the .city, wBt('r "'od Btrect .. deMr. ' ::Srilith was :.;bbrn !Jan.uary 1 partmentll ' r(,lIpondc~ : In fxcellc~t ~, 185~. in ' D~Iper;. i, ~ s ~ of A~ fuhlon to thr. slrrt.l !Ho Rl110 c~-. · 'slom W .. a.nd· *rny Pow a SmitH. rnendf'<1 .othf'r b\llll~~1UI firms .:for: enrly praper lsettler.. I lie had itndlnJ: :trurkJII ' (or ,lie RlI ambur been 8saoclated. with ! th:e!' Drap~r ' ;i: .. I,' . lanrrs. ' , ,: ( . r IrrigatIon company ;.(or !3~ year~ . . lth ·the need tor snrety ('duZonf' wllrorn!l In (1hsr~e nt the • SurvIving ar,e hili widaw. ·MNS. n ;: never .so . urgent, . exp<'rtH nnoull IOClltlotlll of !th''r: drill were Sarah Jane Sm,th; three SOOS, He~ three states will open tho JO("l Rl ell II. rdll. ZOrieI INO. 4: B. J~ ber .J. i Smith; i blshop ot : Draper nth annual 'safety conference Cohnf'. ;one iNo. ~. land William L D S !Sccond I , ' wa~; ' A~ma F.. aid meet of the UtahJ . Astler.. Wrie No. ~H: ' Smith, jlnstructor In 'J ordim 'hl~ -Idaho Safflty society .FrlThe cntiTe ;drill supervised school, I and ' .LeGrande Smith t 9':30 a. riw In the Newhollse by Captain T. F. ,tolli.ns. · com~ SpanisH Fork; : ~i:"'e, daughters, Mr~ r:-.ander ,of the clUten! defense Luretta: Maxwell o( i Draper. Mr:'lHc-rbert B. Maw will ('or,>! of Salt Lake ~ity: Ray M~ Lottie. Packero! Salt La~e CltYi Hendry. chlrt air ralp warde'l1 : find· MrsJ Bert)la : 'Car$lde' ot rMagna r Qn:"IIIC ' the ~legnte3 at the open. s5jOIl. Other speakers at the 5""rg~ant L, C. <;:ro~ther. a.ssist~ Mrsi Ethel S~h¥er, otl. Eag(~ apt chlf'f warden. II: . ' , Rock, Oal.. and ;Mrr'. Ylrgina LeWiS mQf*inl:T: meeting \vill' be Robert During thf' a!ten',lbon , air 'raid of St. Paul. Min" i 1'9 grandthiJl DdnQ\'an: San Francisco, chairman ;t~e ; western ! sta~~s committee "lr~!UI were t~8t'ed · ~r Salt Lak.e dr~n' and ninej~+ea -~randchildren! City and Salt l.ak~ i Icounty 811 a f~r brothers, ,J . . Smith ; of Salt on , cpnSCT\'atlo": of man power In t~gular t:h~ck of t~~ mt'chanical L~ke C!ty. Ber~ L, Parley, p. an~ industry ' a~ cOllc('rn~ accident prefrl1turrs of tht alann ayst~m. . Solomon E. Smith of iDrap,er. anq ' ve~tton', '~nd E. i.F. Campbell. Sac. ~. . ~wo Itlsters. · Mrs ' Nellie : Hnrd, ranianto., stale : director or conSf't:i Cllstlf' . of : Drap~r, and Mr$. Mar)\ vt\.tldn 0(. man ; po\\'er lUI conc~rn~ Rctl~t'n~ ': pr(,\,~lltionl In Indulilry. r~ I~~S Ship ot! Salt L~I( ·;i;'y, . j' . Th\" ., !le~~lon chnlrman will be i :rch : in: ety ,Meet , ~ns : :T~~a y or 4&.s ot./ " p ,I . d .Bureau ' ~IQr:r ~ arll~th . > ! . Deser~i h~8' P~o ?~n j :" ., i Fr~nt it A, Gt,rard~ Remington Attn tompnnY1· lIs/ety englnt't'r. . ~a k !~enl. Utah atalp. Induatrlnl Thtmd,.t IItonhl! In H.hf' 1IllrroundA cotnpreherisl e ,program fO~ hyt'l n~ ! enJ;ln<,er, ,snd Cnptnlri In~ mount;:ln!! ('om~risr tfit mfiln, providing hOllislng 0 IIccommodat~ ThCl1l?M F. CoJllnl'l, Snit, Lakc City . .. . : .• . ' 'Ii IWftrWOrk~rl'lI110thwal'ld '~ scrlbed <:Ivlllttn ! defen!lt ' dir('~tor. will ad, '.- ••• " .... "',.. ... .,..,,..,,,, \.... .. . ,.... .. , •. • r . .. , •.• ,...,,,,, :. t~r'\'\ \.; t ., / .., f"'l'T " I I rlr,: ~~ th!' ~ h'm ,,~.~t~i(lI1 , whlC'h ! il : I I ' i; I 1'1 }(lllowjll, ~ th~ (:ei,~jIIOni('$, (hll-L;III! I·tlny : ;nilll:;, tin' r;('rylr:(!:; r~!t:!~' -jng which MliS(}t:licCHemoriies were were conduct ed hy Tr.rlward C. ltaw- . L. t'Qpducte-<!. burial was held in the son. hL~hop. Prlndpal !IIpe.kerl ;;.~~;r. · 1,la:£Onic pot In MLOlivct d~mctel'Y. v,,'er€' I. ,A'. Smoot., Salt 1.a1<0 p'ojlt- n 11·11 te Pallbearers, all ti! whom are., , master: ~ l';l'nest C. N('Js(m. f,o rme.r ba~k. 1 ... .i.,..... lo.~'\th .. "" ""..... r. . . n •• O'.. on bishop of SUJlarhouseL 0 Sward nemlll and J . Will Knight. . ' ~I;~, In paying homage to Mr. McCul- i per .r ! lough, Mr. Smoot said, "nls was an and , uuts,t and,in.g personallty; characte'r .. ·Izcd by ral rness, bo.n esty and Integ- ' ,! , '-. - - - - - - - - - .rity." Both ; M.r. SntO()t and Mr. Tblt 'K'n l",ht ha.d beenfo. ·rmer employes J~u und;r Mr. McCullough and fdends C. ,J, for .more than .h atta (:enlury.. d'");~ t· Mr. Nelso'n read an autoblona ~.. goraphlca.lsketch or Mr. MeCul- .John' " . loUgh. cQmmenllng on the qualities " , DRA~ER Mm., Sarah Jano portrnyQd. ' tlV Fitzgerald .smith. 85. oldeatrc,d:' PaUbeareJ1l were Wllllam A. ThJI .dent In Draper. df.<,d ntherreld~ Pl'lhlmnn, i William McCuilough, lilt .denee Wednc,da.y lit 6:4~p.m~ , ot James }oJ •. and Lo·fUn . McCullough, rr::.·~l eau~ incldent t()A.ge. . " JamesR. Barney and FOrest Strlck- of S:' A native ot Drap(·r. ahe resided lIn ,g. : .t C!~ there. all of her lite. Gtaveside · services 'andbudal to ( . . 'She ,y.~Qb6rn In Dr.a per, Nov. 29. were COIl,(itlctcrl In~rov,o c~metery. co,~; 1861:, a. daughter or John tind H~~: · Sara,h\Villlams Fitzgerald. ,S he Oc Sarah Jane FitzgeraldS.mith. obituary Sa/fLake Tribune, February 27, 1947: 9 I, ·,'el, "'. es<t· 'n·Jt'ap Old ·· .. ···e·51-d.en D .·.·Ie'S R · R· ,'. E I' ' . ~c:r:;l~rr};:Jio :;:~:r~n:o~;:e!~ .· lt~S .. uoglZe. Fe~.. S T ;. La'· w··· 'y.·e·r' , ~. m~mbt'r th~. . .I..:l house 12.: 188,Q. " .. . ae:U'Ve,.l< of Church ,of J~sus Christ of Lattcr-' ' day SainUi •. Sh~ , al$o Was an'iem- . -: • ., , ' :. , ' . ." ! , .' r~!)~:· PI:1! tn I colin . hero! the Daughters O!i Utah L.a st rites honorinlr George Har- , .. Pioneers. ; .' rls Smith, 73., retired general.oll- rId; : SurViViilg' .ar~-· th'r aesons a:ndU . ' ' v. fivt" da:ug-htctft. Heber .J .and Alma C °drcto~ th~ t1nlO D ~a~tfteR.n\i;· · ~~·~Q d · F.Smtth . and Mrs. iLorcUa. Max- rQll . ~ •• ~ere conucted Weclnee- le~c · well,. ;Mr!!. LQUieS; Pl):ckcr ' and day by . George J. Weber. p,at()r,~et)t' · :MIra. RulCf1) P.. ·LeWI~; allot First Cong,r egatfonal church.. ' Draper; ~r.nd Bmtt!}. Sp.nn'iah .., Speaking ot Mr. Smttb durt~g '"Jr · Fork;Mra. Bertha (iarslde,Mag- ,/JeryjCe8 :at 574 E. lIt South,Rev. d'IJ~' na, an<t ~lr8. Ethel Schroeder, Los Weber 8.a ld, "he was a man ottine VI' tr .Arle~les;~ tw<? brothel:'s and. three chR.ra.cter~" ot keen and gitted .in- ,f?:, ' I .i8te~sf L'VlUlam C~, and Pcrz:y ~enect,PQ88uslng a rich appreeta:.. ,n' " FitzgerBj'ld. Draper: !,MrlJ. William Unn tOJ;: ths"beauUtul things ot •• ~}, Gardnerl, \\TC$t .J ordin; ~Mrs. Lola Ufe," , . AI l Chisholm. Sal t LalteClty. and '. Honorary. :,p.aUb. . earers,' . Incl. ud~d , I'll .~; . Mrs. Chloe 13roadbe"t., J1oUywood.; Fre'd Ii.. ,Knickerbocker, Dr. H. P. he .,i ,~9' ~aI~dchildren and i16 great- Kirtley; ·Dr• .J. C, . Landenberger. ~: " grandchildren. ' I i " .Tames W. Collins.A. Pratt Kesler . Un ' ___~";"""~_ _ _ _ I - - ,- George B.Thoma.s. Milton E,.Ljp~ ;1'1; if ' I man,. S . . ·A. }(en;nedy. Peat) F. ~ 'I Brayton, ;W. H. McIntyre, William !?r' l~ . . .. . .1· · · · J. Lowe,' .Jacob' ., ,f\. K ... al1D. Judge de~;: (I 'l~ Ie· · Sat;nuel W.st~JNar.t, . Guy R. Ph, :) ' . • ...• ..~ ', Ie, " ,: . , I e ' Toombes; Joel UPrle~t Jr. and :!:~ ,I 'n.:?: .. , ' .... R.ed'.(:,r ossNalnes ·: F··· d·· h· f . S··· L .~USI Linne$. Olson;7 :,now sta- ~. Cuh ~am,pton. t:i:oned' '.at the' U. S. Na ,fa! Station .,: Bnrlal '~as' In the _ _ _, . - ""_ _ _ ",,""'" "tAP" ;.... . ~alt Lake City - WII . .the HEBER ABSALOM SMITH Heber A. Smith was born in Draper, Utah on January 5, 1858, a son of Absalom Wamsley Smith and his wife, Amy Emily Downs, pioneers to Utah in 1852. Here he worked on a large farm with his father and brothers. He was educated in the Draper (Dr. Park's) School. After he finished his education he was chosen by the trustees to teach at this same school. He taught steadily, but laid off the day he got married, in the Endowment House, on February 12, 1880. He taught school only one year and then took over the William C. Allen farm, as Brother Allen had left for Arizona to colonize in the United Order. He bought a place of his own and later built a home where the Rasmussen Store is now. His property consisted of one-half block. This move was in January 1890. In his early life he was trustee of the 22nd District School for years, and when all the districts were consolidated into a corporation, he remained on the Jordan District Board. Heber was chosen as first counselor to William C. Allen, bishop of the Draper Ward, and served in this capacity for eight years. He became a member of the high council of the Jordan Stake when it was divided from the Salt Lake Stake. In 1903 Heber served a term of two years in the state legislature. He helped organize the Sandy City Bank in 1906 and was one of its directors. He became vice-president and later, when President Wilson died, he became president of the bank. Heber held this position the remainder of his life. He was president of Little Willow 580 Irrigation Company for thirty-five years. When the Draper Poultry Company was organized, he became its vice-president. He organized the Smith Auto Company in Spanish Fork and was very successful in the business of selling cars, until the war broke out. His wife, Sarah Jane Fitzgerald, has been his loving, constant companion through sixty-three years of married life, a wonderful helpmate, wife and mother, rearing a large family for him. Heber A. Smith grew up as a youth with plenty to do helping his father on his farm. Not too much is known about the boyhood of Heber A. He was blessed on January 31, 1858, by I. M. Stewart as Absalom Heber Smith. He was baptized as Absalom Heber Smith on June 24, 1899, and was confirmed the same day by his father. In 1861, when Heber A. was only three years old, there came a man to his father's house who was to become famous as an educator throughout Utah and the United States, John R. Park. He was on his way west but had run out of money. He inquired about doing some work and was given the job of hoeing weeds out of the com and potatoes. His compensation was his board and lodging. Absalom W. Smith soon recognized him as an educated and widely experienced individual, and prevailed upon him to stay in Draper and teach school, which he consented to do. Heber A. attended Dr. Park's school for at least four or five years. Dr. Park, one afternoon just before the close of school, called out the names of ten or twelve boys and asked them to stay after school. Heber A. was one of the names called. At first they wondered what misdeeds they had committed, but to their relief and pleasant surprise he organized them into a military band. Dr. Park taught them to march and drill with wooden guns. News came that Brigham Young was coming to visit Draper. The boys' military band was chosen to escort him from Sandy to Draper. On the day of his arrival they marched to meet him and lined up beside his carriage with strict military precision. From People of Draper, 1849-1924: The History of Draper, Utah, Volume One. [Draper, Utah: 1998). 581 It is reasonable to surmise that Heber A. entered into the activities of the youth of the community although he lived a mile west of the center of the town. Childhood passed quickly during pioneer times. Work came first and childhood games came second. Teenagers getting together was limited mostly to evenings and Sunday afternoons. One of the boy's favorite sports was to corral wild horses and ride them. When he was seventeen years old (on November 5, 1875), it is recorded that he was re-baptized into the United Order by Henry Day, and was confirmed by his father Absalom W. Smith. There were many others who were 'also re-baptized in Draper into the United Order during this period. He was re-baptized as Absalom Heber Smith. The first entry on the Draper Ward records where his name was recorded as Heber Absalom was November 7,1887, when he blessed Thomas Burnham. When Heber A. was seventeen, he had four full sisters, four full brothers, seven half-sisters and seven half-brothers. By the time Heber A. was seventeen he had received a good education by early standards. He must have been a good student. Later, when he was twenty-one years old, he was a teacher in the Draper School. The fall of 1879 Heber A. was hired as a schoolteacher in the Draper School which attested to his own scholarship as a young man. On February 12, 1880, he and Sarah Jane Fitzgerald were married in the Endowment House in Salt Lake City. On the day they were married, Leah Fitzgerald substituted for Heber A. at school. Sarah Jane gives a good account of the trip to Salt Lake City. She records, "It snowed heavily all day and as we went in an open buggy, the ride could have been very disagreeable, but, of course, venturing on such a new experience we did not notice the weather so much. We had to stop very often to shake the umbrella, as it became so weighed with snow that I could not hold it. On our way home we stopped at my grandfather William's to get warm. We finally arrived 582 at our nice little house where a cheery fire and a delicious molasses cake, made by Heber's mother, awaited us. Heber and Sarah started off life together with several cows, some chickens, ducks, pigs, horses, and a hired man, Charles Dudley. Heber A. became one of the most prominent sheep men in Salt Lake County. Running sheep from Vernal to Wendover, and from Draper to Idaho around Soda Springs became a pattern of his life for some twenty years. Heber A. was very religious by nature and was always active in Church. He was often called upon to help in performing the ordinances of the Church. His name appears frequently in the ward records as blessing the babies, ordaining members to the Priesthood, baptizing and confirming members into the Church. Heber A. came up through the school of hard knocks. He learned the lesson of work as a boy and he never stopped from that time until the day he passed away. He never looked back, he was always looking forward. On April 15, 1943, Heber died of a basal skull fracture suffered in a fall from a horse at his farm in Draper. ... Unknown SARAH JANE FITZGERALD SMITH Sarah Jane Fitzgerald Smith, second child of John Fitzgerald and Sarah Ann Williams, was born on November 29, 1861, in the eastern part of Draperville, in a little log house with a dirt roof, on a cold wintry day, with rain pouring down in torrents, making a very uncomfortable "delivery room." Pans placed on the bed supplied some protection. Her grandmother Williams was the nurse and doctor, as medical aid was quite a lUXUry. When Sarah was a child, her family moved into the fort in Draperville for protection from the Indians. They feared the Indians may harm them as they lived far from other pioneer families. When Sarah saw an Indian approaching the cabin, she ran 583 siammea and barred the door. The Indian, hammering on the door, ultimately turned away exhausted, totally peeved from the lack of a food handout. With her parents' permission, Sarah loved to play pomp pomp-pull-away, and run-sheep-run outside the fort in the evenings after the work was done. The only toy she had was a big rag doll. Sarah's schooldays were filled with fear of teachers daily using the rod or willows on children as punishment. In the one-room school, the students sat two in a seat, and Frank Fitzgerald was Sarah's partner. As a child, Sarah began helping her parents do hard work. Her older sister assisted her mother in the cabin and Sarah was her father's helper. Her tasks each morning were to drive the cows one mile east to the pasture and cut wood for the next day for heating and laundry. She helped her father irrigate the long furrowed rows of tall corn by standing at the bottom of the field. With a bandana attached to a long stick, she would raise the "flag" to signal him that the water had reached the bottom of a row. Her father directed the water from a large headditch into furrows along each row of corn . Upon Sarah's signal he would shift the water to another row. Many mornings at the crack of dawn, Sarah helped her father plow and cultivate crops. Her father guided the plow or cultivator pulled by the horse while Sarah rode to keep the horse in the furrow or from stepping on the plants. In the frigid winter evenings after supper, the family huddled around the wood-fed kitchen stove to stay warm by absorbing the heat radiated from the fire inside. While warm and cozy, her father taught the children the multiplication tables by having them Sing a catchy tune . The family also enjoyed making popcorn or molasses candy, as her father read the scriptures. Sarah was deeply impressed by the parable of the wise and foolish virgins. The next morning she cleaned all the lamps so she would not be numbered with the foolish virgins . 1I1~IUt:: ClIlU 584 While Sarah was very young her father was called on an LOS six-month mission, and , with her mother's and sister's help, they managed the farm. In the fall before frost time and while wearing gum boots, they harvested the corn by moonlight. Occasionally, when needed, her mother soled her shoes . Leaving at daybreak, Sarah always went with her father in the wagon to gather wood , arriving in Butterfield Canyon or Big Cottonwood Canyon as the sun came peeping over the mountains. She and her father worked hard all day chopping and loading the wagon with loads too dangerous to ride on , so Sarah would walk nearly all the way home. One year the grasshoppers came in such clouds that it seemed they would hide the sun. Sarah, her father, mother, and sister tried to kill them before their wings developed by driving them with sacks toward a ditch, where they floated downstream. At intervals her father had sacks propped open to catch the hoppers. When the sack was filled , he buried it in a large hole. Capturing, killing, and burying grasshoppers was done many times daily. One night, Sarah's father sent her for some hay on his property near the Draper Cemetery. She was startled by peculiar lights in the darkness and wasted no time running home to tell her father about the "spirits" she saw in the cemetery. He assured her that the "spirits" were fireflies and she was safe. Sarah was hired out to do housework at Hewards to earn some money. One of her tasks was to feed the silkworms mulberry leaves gathered from Bishop Rawlings' and Croggs' trees. Another was peddling dairy products and vegetables door to door. At about age 17, Sarah Jane realized that boys were quite important. She and Heber Smith were attracted to each other. Her father was very strict, not allowing Sarah to sit up with her beau after ten o'clock. Heber asked her father if he would give him permission to marry his 585 daughter Sarah. On February 12,1880, Heber and Sarah Jane were married in the Endowment House in Salt Lake City. It snowed heavily all that day. As they went in an open buggy, the ride could have been very disagreeable, but, venturing on such a new course, they did not notice the weather much. They stopped very often to shake the snow off their umbrella since it got so heavy Sarah could not hold it. On their way home they stopped at Sarah's grandfather Williams' home to get warm, then continued on their journey, finally arriving at their nice little home where a cheery fire and a delicious molasses cake, made by Heber's mother, waited them. Heber taught school at the time he and Sarah were married. Leah Fitzgerald was his substitute teacher for that day. Sarah took seriously her responsibility of rearing their family of ten children. When she realized that her three sons and one daughter had been on missions, her three sons called to preside as bishops, and all her children were clean, honorable men and women, she felt that her efforts had not been in vain. She never held positions of public responsibility and so she had developed her energies to the care and development of her home and family. Sarah Jane Fitzgerald Smith died on February 26,1947, in Draper, Utah, of natural causes, at 86 years of age. She was buried in Draper Cemetery beside her husband, Heber Absalom Smith. Marjorie S. Clements, granddaughter Smith, and John after my grandfather John Fitzgerald on my mother's side. John Fitzgerald was a son of Perry Fitzgerald, one of the early pioneers who came to Draper in 1851. I am the grandson of Absolom and Amy Downs Smith, and the oldest son of my parents, Heber A. and Sarah Jane Fitzgerald Smith. I was born in Draper on November 26, 1886, in a home owned by William C. Allen who had been called to go to southern Utah to help colonize that part of the country. We rented their home while they were gone. Four children were born in this home, Luretta, Lotti, Bertha and me. I suppose they were happy when I came along, being their first boy. While we lived there my father bought some land and built a log house that we lived in for a short time while he built a store where Sonnie's store now is, and the big red brick house that is next door (north) to it. It was said that I was the first boy in Draper to have a bicycle, and Lula Brown was the first girl, and we were the only ones in town that had one. Mother would send me on it on errands up to Aunt Melissa Fitzgerald's place (mother's sister) who lived about a mile east of us up close to the mountain. Then I got to riding horses and that was more fun than a bicycle, so I got rid of it. We had a horse named Dick. He was the M&M delivery horse that pulled the delivery wagon for years. He got stiff in his front legs, so my father bought him and he made a right fine saddle horse. I was baptized on September 1, 1895, by Joseph M. Smith, in his pond, and was confirmed the same day by Niels Boberg. In those days when there was a baptism, all the people came, old and young, and it was more like a party. All the kids in town were baptized in that pond in the field back of Joseph M. Smith's home. I remember the first picture show I ever saw. It was slides and a man stood there and told us about it. The next improvement was pictures on a reel, but no sound. just sentences written with each picture that we had to read that told us what they were saying. Of course, later came the movies (moving pictures), then the talkies in the 1920's. Once I was in the 24th of July celebration at Draper Park, and the program presented at that time had quite an impact on the spectators. Joshua Terry lived in a log house just east and on the property where Gotbergs live 586 587 HEBER JOHN "J" SMITH I was named Heber after my father, Heber Absolom _.1."_.r ....... 11& • • : eA _ _ ,..,.... _"'- ..... -~-:~-~ ..... ) . . . . , I.I~. ii".;, ••.• ; . .--~·=:t..!:":'l\~-. .... FAMILY GROUP RECORD Ancestral File (TM) - ver n419 04 SEP 1999 Page 1 HUSBAND: Absolom Heber SMITH 5 Jan 1858 PLACE: Draper, S-Lk, UT CHR.: 31 Jan 1858 PLACE : Draper , S-Lk, UT B: 24 Jun 1866 DIED : 15 Apr 1943 PLACE : Salt Lake City, S - Lk , UT E: 12 Feb 1830 EHOUS BUR. : 20 Apr 1943 PLACE : Draper, S-Lk, UT SP : BIC MAR. : 12 Feb 1880 PLACE: Salt Lake City, S-Lk, UT SS: 12 Feb 1880 EHOUS BORN: LDS ORDINANCE DATA FATHER: Absolom Warmsley SMITH MOTHER: Amy Emily DOWNS OTHER WIVES : WIFE : Sarah Jane FITZGERALD BORN : 29 Nov 1861 PLACE: Draper, S-Lk, UT CHR. : 12 Jan 1862 PLACE: Draper, S-Lk, UT B: 19 Jun 1870 DIED : 26 Feb 1947 PLACE: Draper, E : 12 Feb 1880 EHOUS BUR.: PLACE: Draper, S-Lk, UT 2 Mar 1947 S-L~, UT SP: BIC FATHER: John FITZGERALD MOTHER: Sarah Ann WILLIAMS OTHER HUSBANDS: Sex 1. F CHILDREN NAME: Luretta Jane SMITH BORN: 15 Nov 1880 PLACE : Draper, S-Lk, UT B: CHR . : PLACE: E: 28 Sep 1934 SLAKE DIED: 4 Feb 1968 PLACE: 1 Sep 1889 SP : BIC PLACE: BUR. : SPOUSE: Phalors Homer MAXWELL MAR.: 16 Sep 1907 2. F PLACE : SS: NAME: Lottie Lovina SMITH BORN: 28 Jul 1882 PLACE: Draper, Slk, UT B: 17 Aug 1890 CHR .: PLACE: E : 13 Jun 1906 DIED : 8 Nov 1957 BUR.: 11 Nov 1957 PLACE : Salt Lake City, Slk, UT SP : BIC PLACE: Draper, Slk, UT SPOUSE: Edison Whipple PACKER JR. MAR .: 13 Jun 1906 PLACE: Salt Lake City, Slk, UT SS: 13 Jun 1906 SLAKE 3. NAME : Sarah Bertha SMITH PLACE: Draper, Salt Lake, Utah B: 5 Aug 1894 F CHR . : PLACE: E: 4 May 1910 DIED: 12 Dec 1966 PLACE: Magna, Salt Lake , Utah BUR . : PLACE: Draper, Salt Lake, Utah BORN: 8 Oct 1884 SP: BIC SPOUSE: Willard George GARSIDE MAR. : 4. M 4 May 1910 SS: PLACE: Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, UT 4 May 1910 SLAKE NAME: Heber John SMITH BORN: 26 Nov 1886 PLACE: Draper, S-Lk, UT B: CHR. : PLACE: PLACE: Draper, Salt Lake, Utah E : 28 Aug 1907 SLAKE DIED : 25 Ju1 1979 BUR.: 29 Jun 1979 1 Sep 1895 SP : BIC PLACE: Draper, Salt Lake, Utah SPOUSE: Edith Matilda MICKELSEN MAR.: 14 Apr 1915 Codes: SS: PLACE: AFN=Ancestral File Number B=Baptized E-Endowed SS=Sealed to Spouse SP=Sealed to Parents Ances~ral FAMILY GROUP RECORD File (TM) - ver n419 04 SEP 1999 HUSBAND : Absolom Heber SMITH WIFE : Sarah Jane FITZGERALD BORN : 5 Jan 1858 BORN : 29 Nov 1861 Sex CHILDREN (Continued) LOS ORDINANCE DATA 5. M 6. F 7. F 8. M 9. F 10. U NAME : Alma Fitzgerald SMITH BORN: 29 Nov 1889 PLACE : Draper, Salt Lake , UT CHR . : PLACE: PLACE: Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, UT DIED: 25 Feb 1954 BUR . : 2 Mar 1954 PLACE : Draper, Salt Lake, UT SPOUSE: Concordia M. HENDRICKSON and 1 Others PLACE : Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, UT MAR . : 2 Jun 1914 B: 18 Aug 1898 E: 28 May 1914 SLAKE SP : BIC SS : NAME : Rose Oralie SMITH BORN : 20 May 1892 PLACE : Draper, S-Lk, UT CHR. : PLACE: PLACE : DIED: 4 Jan 1929 PLACE: BUR . : SPOUSE: PLACE: MAR . : NAME: Rebecca SMITH BORN: 26 Nov 1894 CHR . : DIED: 12 Feb 1911 BUR . : SPOUSE : MAR . : 2 Jun 1914 SLAKE B: 29 Jul 1900 E: 15 Feb 1929 SLAKE SP: BIC SS : PLACE: Draper, S-Lk, UT PLACE: PLACE : PLACE : B: 27 Aug 1904 E: 22 Nov 1912 SP: BIC PLACE: SS: NAME: Legrand Fitzgerald SMITH PLACE : BORN: 25 May 1898 CHR. : PLACE: DIED: 29 Apr 1978 PLACE : BUR . : 2 May 1978 PLACE: SPOUSE : Sarah Phyllis Snow DAY MAR. : 16 Apr 1924 PLACE: Draper, Salt Lake, Utah B: 3 Aug 1903 E: 26 Sep 1919 SP: BIC Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah Draper, Salt Lake, Utah Salt Lake, Salt Lake, Utah SS : 16 Apr 1924 NAME : Ethel Verine SMITH PLACE: Draper, S-Lk, UT BORN : 8 Sep 1902 PLACE: CHR. : PLACE: DIED : PLACE: BUR. : SPOUSE: Harold Goldbransen SCHRODER PLACE: MAR .: 21 Aug 1930 B: 30 Jul 1911 E: 23 Sep 1926 SLAKE SP: BIC SS: NAME: Amy Virginia SMITH BORN: <1902> CHR. : DIED: BUR . : SPOUSE : MAR. : Codes: PLACE: <Draper, Salt Lake, UT> PLACE : PLACE : PLACE: B: E: SP : SS: PLACE : AFN=Ancestral File Number B=Baptized Page 2 E=Endowed SS=Sealed to Spouse SP=Sealed to Parents :dUIl'llll'lllIUllt.'d .\1 \' nppC'ared hnc II , ago. Astut('l~' Programr \C/ Alma F. Smith, obituary Salt Lake Tribune, February 27, 1954: 21 SNO'W V CLOUDY \j;;J III' " ': ,:1:1. " :;:...•::.:. RAIN . ..... ... .. 'I ItXOl ' \ ,.;.>. ;:~. . r Il . = ' 8' ISclll(\T. )-- Ballti.{Cr . . : II~::::;:=================::::!~~-=~~!!! @] sonat~s '1' D·ICS ,1 t 64 . 1llC', B~chau('r prng"<lmmC'd i tely, wIth a !'un' know}('dge er particular ~ifts. Evcn . in . 1iI.I',.,. :, I choice of Beethoven . played the Opus 101 Ill , ~.ior) she st'lecCt'd one suit· ' ./ • STATIC • • • WIND . . . COLD WARM . . . -:-$P((O (. -HIGH TIl " Wcather fon'cast m.a p for . Saturday .indicates partly c10udv ,skies o\"(,r much of Intl'f' moun and ::r;i~;~~:~~:::~':~~: ~::; :Af te~: -fli~]ess ti ,EAGIJ E-NI~i's=- rCleal' Skiei I • . . . ~-:;;:::;;:;;~:;~~m;;:~;~;r::~,":'~;;;;:;:;':;:;~:~::;;;~::~::;:~:':(~$8'OlrlN::S:'I:::~=~~-1~rt;ciSt~ S I I I - 0.,. ..mag~ificentIy Tht': ()pen. ~ . nTI :\PEH-Alma F:Smlth',~4, rI'II'RJI~''''I' A I~" \ I\'aldl and ScarlattI were \' Ice presIdent of Sandy CIty , . . . . "-}~ J ~ 'ro';'. the U. I. tt to a crisp . For I1W, thl' , Bank and ' former Jordan dis· U .. ar Aki ... ar • . "xP.("\I'c1 I ... ttl· provid"d thp l'V"llin(1's " tric!.t e a c her The first or Salt r.<lke 1(>( 1h.'" Int.·rmollllialn w." ,. 'y ' . b . . ' . ' nnrl Sunlla~' In ·th(' wak" , lout perfoZ:I11<lllcc. 1twas ' ' . rt i e d ',I'hursdily Junior League 's "double har- ! .~"rm whl('h mo\'"rl ' aCrM! I 1 I '. .. , a t 11 '"40 . I~' m. ' in ,gaind<lYs" wa5 a hll . e SllC~ win(\~ ~ IlrlAY. T .. nll'"raturp. wIll Iat t I,· ~l'I."1 sp y 'atH c eat y .... are u~ .. rtl'(1 to c1l'cr, g Icd: wIth a regularIty of a Salt Lake has. : Cl'SS, Mrs . 1\1. D ,C" :'lottc· Porn. . mala (or 24.hour rerlod 1'." 1m Ic ..{:on t('nt ..and .. -e-v€nness . ' ter ..a .long .•..._- .. - .. ': ·:---··-T-.- ...-----;----at-:'\.-p-.mo;-----.~.---. ne control. It was Scarlatti ' illness. NOY, chal~'man '?f thIS yt'<lr s I Utlh e haven't heard him since An lie t i ve ; . Lcague rummage sale, an· (',,<lar hl Y . ...... .....HI~~ ; ... churchman, Mr. i, noul1ccd late Frida'-.'. I.',"an 4ft · 'r t . C asa d esus per f orme d I J MIlford .,,, . ".... . . "........ ....•.. !WI e same piano on the. same I ' Smithwns bish 'l She estimated that Friday's ~!~,',I;',~" """" " " " ~ , II little more than three I op of San d Y sale of refurb{shcd ' article~ oC S;tlll.~l< .. Airport ... ;, . !I:I .... hi r d War d " 1 70 ',<;1 . GrorlCc '" ago C~ hu.rc h of J esus I clothiri ...Cf • householdilems and . Id.ho d P .t · T oc Ie . en ern.css II Mr. Smith CI 1rJS t 0 f I .,a tt cr·, bric .,. n hrac , at 2"8 Fdison St IInl." ... :,... ,." . .. ' w '. ' 1I11/'1~:v . ........... . . I natura Iy c~pcct \ .... ol11e.n :, day Sail~ts, for sjx 'years and It had brought approxiri)atcly l";oho Fall~ ...... ,. , . . w t t II 111 t Il~ pOP t IC : bishop of . the Draper L D.S! S800 into tile League co ff (; rs 1'0 .. 81,,110 Inl.rmounl.ln. .' 4:1 !S S 0 , c~ce 51." l' rneSS ll1~erent 111 the r.V<rrd nine ye~rs. ,.. " . . . for use' in its art treasure 11111Inl:',. "....... 4' C of C lIe he"an te:lchin" . in ,Jordan program and community weI. ~lIt'" ..., ........... 211 1 hopm . l\I .m e , Bac. h' l I i h '" h , ( hr VI' nne , .......... . ' !\O (emO~lst .rate( t IS capa~lty : High School in 1916, retiring , fare betterment P)"(lJC'ctS.· : Or'1\'rr ..... . ... , . .. . 6!'1 ('r"Chopm"group, pnrtlcu" in 1953. . ' . .' . T The ' saJe' wiIr c·o n tin t(e .1G~n · . ... . .... ~~ . in th. e· opening ly.ricnl :,' He was born l'\ov. 29, 1889 in ! Saturday, she said,pointing (;rllntlJunctlnn ... .... Rft~ arolle Il1 F sharp mll1or -: Dr<lper, the son of JIeber A ; out that ,bargain hunters still:i~~oV""':l' ::::.: :: :: ~R coming in for a spiritC'd ! and . Sarnh Jane Fitzgerald c;1'n find a lot of the clothing, ~~~~lii"a":lnIl5 .. ~ . . ... .. ~~ ing W<lS the Polonaise' in . Smith. HI:' in<lrried Cordia Hen. furniture and other . itC'ms \\'"ot y"llow.tonl! ' 30 , arne kcy. ' i dricbon June. 2 1914 in the Salt they've been wanting at ' a We,' .. tl' " ' , . L()~ AnJ:ples . ..... '. M ·b ussy IS ano ler compos,- r : L<lke L D STemple. . rca 1 savIng. Portland .: ." ., .. , .'., 411 :'cd by the distaff side. His ; Survi"in!! are his widow, two . The rummage sale location San 1I1~r.tl . .. .. . , . . ' 1\0 I ~ Sail ~'rancl~co ... .. ..... 60 .Ide; Sara b ande Clnd Toccata [ daughtcrs, lVII's. 1I0w<lrd (Ruth) -2211 Edison St.-is on a S ...n ltl~ , .. ............ ~ , the-Suite for. Piano came : l\Iorri<;, St; P;lul, !\'Iinn., and . smClll street running - nortdh Spokane." :,':".Mld,We,' In.. ~_ ..s.c.inti1Jating . "p~J:fQ.n:i1 ~,i.r-..Irs;-H.a.r-man' (1\1 argarC'O-- Sh>ed; i' and '~outh between 2nd an . .. 'nl;;;~·~ ·;;k -,· :-.. " ~';" . 4:1 that . rivalled the _~,c"arlatti Draper, and the f.ollowing ,: ~rd South and between State (,hlrBao ., ........ .... 36 t as for top honors. '1 he Toe· ; brothers and sisters: .1Hrs . Lot. i Street and 2nd East, she said. g~I\~~~t ,,::: ::::::::: :~; ; tie Packer, and Hcber J. Si11ith, 1 ~~~;~~:~~il\: ::::::::::: :~ i Draper; Mrs. LureHa 1\Iax\\'cl\, i Omaha!H Lehi·; 1\1rs. Bertha Yarsi.de, \ Hnoton E.," , . .411 ~l 1\la~~a; :'I-1rs. Ethel Scl~ro?e.r, ! Ynrk '("ity . . ' ;~ · ( IH ILOS Angeles: 1\Irs. VlrgIl1Ja : . '. . . wa~hln"l~ri ~ 1>. \oUlh I I. W.. I I I I L . • , I i · geb rctscn R"lItes . Sta t e Pt ' Off. :-;"'" I 'F .. I ay \ 11 S · S L I:> as t or . . .LpgrClnde Lewis, Lar<l~lie, . W~:' o " and iF ·· n a·I V()te . 1.~lIhnl".'.' ,\lhu'lul'r'lUI' .... , ~F. ·SnHth. Spanlsh" Fork: ;. ..1 _ r_ . ":~ .I , .,I . ,. ". .. .......... .e _ . •. . . c( 1 . ... JJ_ F_ we . -. ' Rates __. _._ ... ........ r"' .• be COil- , . . Jl'\ew Orl"an •.. " .. ; "" 7!1 Illcr:!l ~en'ices were cOll· : ductrd !\Iond<lv at 1 p.m. in i O O.klahoma ("IIY .. . .... ~6 c d Friday at 2 p,m. [It 36 E. : DrnpcLLD_S __\\:.ar.d_ chapc.Lby. :_ _ Jl_~_._.~ ~u~~l~nlu " ... " , ,- - .- - ...-- - - - - -- .... -- ....- . SaIl lake \" .. ather !lata: 1'1 ;-,outh for .Jamcs Ingcbret· : (;C'orge Hodcn, hishop . FrJC'llds : (o~ 2~.h()ur perlorl pnded lit 77,30 S . Wolcott, Salt Lake : may cali 4760 S. StnteSun· : Continued from Pag-e 15 pr('rIPltallon{lfOr .. ~·elH"2u'~r)". . . . : ' mula!J\'" d~ cll'llry. . ... PI 'cr a. nd bUSInessman who. : d<lY from G to 8 p ,m , <ll1dat the . .' .. . d It ' . d'. ' .in,·r. Oct. 1. 11)5:1. 3,00; 'I' uc~'(! 'oJ' 'j '-' , -' 0 ('I1CC', ' 15')7 E'. . ] "3{)O S tl 1, healltlg Is resume. \\ as In I 1dcfil'l .. ncy, :1.53. Sunrloe. at ' • : resl ~. ~, ,Oll . .' . . ' R.m.: Sun".. t 6 : 17 p . m . F:~P. Ie He~' . George .J , Weber, : Draper, i\lonc!ay from 10 a,m. '.catt'n that the parties mIght /Inurn 44.: Expected Mlnlmu . B una ' I III ' ngrC'c on alia A t e uurlll... A ' , . , the week , like City,early .nd vlclnlh :stcr , 'F'Irst r' .... ongregll t'lona.l t() ' tllne of Sl'l"\·lce. .. i lnl: clourline" Sa turd rch Offici<lted. : Draj)cr Cemetery of :\Inrch 21 to complete 'the !i nK K"nl'rlllly' (illrSlOt,!rdllYlIl , ., ' - --. ". 'I' f r J 1al. he<lring -. Hi!lnK temperature' Sunrlay. statement 111 praIse of l\lr. , /' . . urday 'U, SunrlAY !l0, ·Iow 'bret~en from the Salt Lake ' ./ Ion , .' . . ~~~~~;;. Generall,. decrea! nty Bar was read by W. W. 0p{'ll to Prospectiil~ The Ullccrtalll pOSItIOn of the 1 u'.n-iH~reuln«· ~I()udln In' , Ilc(1ulation Commis-' Saturday bf'comln, rfOneraUl ,. :''' Somc' ·3R',I94 '';JCT('S- of''·plll5 rC·~uUqIWSS - . to. . -lurday .nir~ Sur'-ifaj".Ti~6rerSa '!\,:1 le sen'i cC's f<111()\':C'o ilt _,~~'" .. ; .. '" , ,, .. ' l ,~ .. ,. - .,. .•. I ' t I , : 'ir ' n ; '1 jn":lr:'I1(,(, r ;;\(' rr:rl'l:l' ! r\sln~ I .. ml'~r~tun" Sunda' . . , I- uneral servIces wll ~1r:lIllI 7. bl_ at "U I ,.It ' llC,t; n n I n~ ~nLye3r: the bo,ttom or . ('hart :.' . [ ~I\'e t ben I!Dler·.u:.I.L-A,;.uaJ~ C-1:.IJLlU:ILeU-DllUl..llri,:...LJ1i> UJ, t!"Lu.~i-.k----------:'-"'4---' en'r~upward cune untJl in 19;)9. dlildrf'n and by e'461 Long Illness !liJl~idE' :<\!~dr'Fa tal,f or Ed GrOHP to-Study .Pionee.r E nLi:y.,.. __ ~_ - . Thr. E'nlry or pion~~rs to I Gr(,flt Salt LaKe Valley lind ! . Highs andI . 'hoo!; .. ~ ! :l.c rCas . cd_stu.: XIII ~ · uca cturmK.-c.o.n..,-'_ _._ _ _ .... ~ __. _ ,,:_ _ ,_ . .. ~e buildings I f;p('('i .. 1 to Thl! Tribune crable alter· DRAPER _ :'IIrs. Corelia bouudarif's, Hendirckson Smith, 72, Draper, ,o~e ~cho?ls. dicd Saturday at 6:15 ' a.m,' , t O. _ r' . acti\'itie~Ldurin!! :. :the. _Winter , I' WR-17'48_Wlll1c-discUSS~ " the first \~intr:r m('cting' of s.-,It Lako Vall('y Chap. t('r. T.;tah State Illstorical III Sori,,"'·. · " , ~ .- . _Shc..cQmc.uu U1'-d "~<'cu-.l.Ll.-l.L,~·""L~ __ ishcd cottcn frock with 0 pClI~ i ~ ~ed_ ·~coll.?n opron in.~oy.t;.ly rlo:ching print, loffeln ~Iir! 'r.y. ~ Ion pantic5, nylon bobby·~od" ond 'ccal-- patcn!.lcalh~r ! hoc! , . -~SfiOiLP~J~c!Iy~~pr~l'.or! ~onc5L!i' Wllnr big ~i~tcr ' s recl 3·'!Nl'.clrl cloth ing . . • She has laroe. lu slr.ou:. eye:. wfln ~~ ~~~~~;~~~ j IO~fi~~I~~~~tlitn Salt Lake Tribune, October 11, 1959: 8-9 lstncts . . . _':':'1"'CiS -::-..a-formerIXG of the iJ ~ r ~ a n . School ;~"~akcr wiIrht>:-:lchola...c; ·G. lion indicates IDlStnct m~truc· I )1organ Sr. who has intrn· af those d.."- i tor. an~ was ! sively studied pionC'cr under· ~h\''''' ln . th" . takin£'s in thevalky. g the , school a Uo.J. " ' ' ' . • , -Church of Jesus '~ . ':'1' 1 A slate of proposed 'oHi· ~ called upon., . : "';'~-":.';'~::.:' ! ccrs -[or' the cominel' ...·ear \\111 ; undoubtedly Christ ~! L,''ltter· ". . . ,...~~: h oJ ' .. Saints.. . ." , \.~ .. .. ' . ' he presented b.\' the nomlnat· I <7ain and it cia oJ ~ . ' if the trend . She had served )lrs. Smith : I.ng committee. r year or two on. the Gen('ral Board of th(' .rt·time first Prunary Assn. of the LDS I' \' "'l'liminated ~hur('h for 23' years and. \~as (' r.ow\, and : ms.trumcl.1tal ",In nr g a!1 lZ1ng ; (' d(\sing (\f i ~('\ era,l s~ngm;, groups In the : )f the oIdC'r : drap<'1 al ('a. , . i ~lRS. s:m TH was born Aod · nge ('ould, be> , 12, 1887. in Lcvan. .Juah I , den ('{'onomiC' : eOt!nt~":--':r-d:lltgh!(,I" ~Of-H(,t~r~~;-D -.t-~-j t dep:res~ion . . a~d Cordia HC'nrl;.ieksol1 . SIlI' ! OC. ~r. S thl' ~rban : was marnro 10 Alma F. SmI t h, . thpir mci:-t, ·JulH>:':. i 01~. in trlP Salt L ,kC' Earl~' 'si,:::'\ <: of :l rt hrit ic; can ' 'k into urban ' LDS Temple. He rli('{j Feb. 23,: :-lOW hI' ('.~:'lb li " r. rrl through : 193-l. ' exam ination of patients' fe<>t. · rHE eause of ; Survivors include two daugh· ' said Dr. Ir\'i;'lg Yal(', _Ansonia, : nion and the Ite~. : )trs. Howard. (Ruth) : Conn., Saturd3.Y at ~e>.\'house : future. the! ~!om!;, St. Paul, ~1mn . ; and : Hotel : > nt is off. the I~S~" K~annb~n d c>!argar~td) i DR. YALE. a fellow of the 'r as ho",,'ll1g ' t=-u. ana, an SLX gran . . . J '" ...." i children. iAmerican SOcIety of Chlrop- i .nd .' prospects i odical Roentgenology and As.j ~a.sm~.oLth.e "'<· F1J~ERAL services--wm -be ! sociate _ iIL _ the_ ...p~merjcaILCo1_l.. ,r the s)'stem conducted Wednesday at 2 p.m. lIege of Foot Surgeons, is guest I! ayette SChool. in the Draper Second LDS lecturer for a three·day post 'en challenged Ward Chapel, L?900 • 13th East. graduate srminar sponsored' n .~he courts, Friends may' call 4760 S. State, by . Utah. State ~£s~ciation of 'q~I:r.h. . .. ~ . ;\Iurray Tuesday from 6 . to Chlropodlsts·P(1dlatnsts. I turmng tlus 18P~m. and \Vednesda~·.a.t the' He said a TCcfnt ~tudy of I 'ments' of the home of LaGrand~ Smith, 1587 1 more than 100 persons in the :0 ~tudyof an- E. 12300 S~th, Draper, fr~m 20 to 40 age group showed I :ocI~l problem 11~ a,m. u~tU 1:30 p.m ., Bur!al 19 and 5·tenths prr Cent have ! ilstnct -:- -the 1WIU - be . .m ·'the · Drape~ City 1 hardehingoflhe nrtC'ries. i )outs. I Cemeter:-. ' Arterio sclerosis W<lS su~pret. ; thp j)('ak fOn. ! ('(1. in an adrliti(lnaI 16 prr cC'nt ' . quoted abovc i ConYClle Todav i of those eX3m\l1cd. , o·df'C'ade- sp-a:n-;--- .. . - - ..- - -.~ . --:--:--.- - -;-- ,-:.. - .. -~-:- 0 , the 'C!.Yera e Scand.ir.avian . merl1ber: _. o! ~ . J-,~'.IRO~~U,~TAL factor . . •. " figure a~d the Church or JesusChnst of: lnc~udmg hard-panmfOnt,' upon :. ie enrollment Latter-day Saints will meet for ; wlllch ma!1~' persons willk uation da\" at their annual conference Sun· i most of the tlmi', were thou;!ht e school ' ·ear. day at 4:30 p.m. in the As· .to contribute .to the condition, occasioned by sembly HaJJ on Temple Square. I added the lec.urer. :drcn ·who ·quit . districts. __ ___ i :e.s-en-:- ilid" this ' lievt-s th1:! drop- I .- J1_~5. Cordl"a Hendrl"ckson Sml"th, obl'tuary .ume..1n. first-:-1t-Slllt-·L:l ~;Hi{'~. : homeafter ' a ig'her ,~ftIH.~ ___ . ___ . __ ~.~~- --.- .__ ( • i 'I "! .! ,. " 1------------ Foot Reveals A I .. rt IrItIS., Oa) I ' . I MAIL ORDERS ACCEPTE> other. th:: ;Carfon is ma ilable 10 post offices be reached by Greyhound please.) I GRAND CENTRAL i DRUG BUYS! . ... .., _.".i.Mt!2'Ht!tltlR_ ~;a or Rc: ' - - - - -- - -- _. I ~ Expre.~s. Utan Slele . !cle~ Ie MATTEL· DOUBLE I - (",-I'\ ~ i ~r~ ~;J. ~!~::Z I~cl v de 2 :;: :' ~ .27·IN. LONG • FIRES BURSTS OR SINGLE 'SHOTS " .SMOKING·CAP FIRE OR LOU~ VIBRATING ACTION I. . .FOOTBALL' . 400 Utah, from 1929 to 1930 +, was born born April 16, 1873, in London, Aug. 30, 1879, in Salt Lake City, Utah, land, a son of William Vi tier a son of Riego Hawkins and Charlotte . and Mary Ann Ballard. He emci2'rate<ll E. Stay. He was baptized Aug. 30, to America in October, 1878, was 1887, ordained to the Priesthood and tized Sept. 14, 1890, ordained a filled a mission to the Southern States Priest Aug. 12, 1916, by Francis in 1898-1900, was ordained a High Lyman, and ordained a Bishop Priest Nov. 7, 1926, by Heber J. Grant, I, 1919, by Rudger Clawson. and ordained a Bishop Sept. 8, 1928, by Rudger Clawson. RASMUSSEN, Arelius Peter, op of the Midvale 1st Ward, JENSEN, James Ernest, Bishop of Jordan Stake, Utah, from 1928 the Sandy 3rd Ward, East Jordan 1930+, was born Nov. 2, 1886, . Stake, Utah, from 1926 to 1930 was Draper, Salt Lake Co., Utah, a born Sept. 18, 1886, in Juab, Juab Co., Peter Christian Rasmussen and Utah, a son of Carl Jensen and Chris- Marie Jensen. He was baptized tine Petersen. He was baptized Oct. I, 1895, ordained a High Priest 3, 1894, ordained an Elder June 24, 30, 1915, by Francis M. Lyman, 1906, filled a mission to the Southern tl"in"tl Ri"hnn nf t.hp Miilvale States in I ' High Priest Alma F. Smith biography from the Clawson, an Latter-day Saint Biographical Encyclopedia 8, 1926, by , +, JENSEN, James Peter, Bishop of the Sandy 2nd Ward, East Jordan Stake, Utah, from 1920 to 1930 +, was born Dec. 9, 1881, in Draper, Utah, a son of J ens Peter Jensen and Ann Petersen. He was baptized Aug. 17, 1890, ordained to the Priesthood, filled a mission to the Southern States in 1902-1904, and was ordained a High Priest and Bishop Dec. 12, 1920. MILNE, Charles Lindsay Mounteer, Bishop of the Union Ward, East Jordan Stake, Utah, from 1910 to 1918, was born June 3, 1871, in Woodhouse, Normanton, Yorkshire, England, emigrated to Utah with his parents in 1873, was baptized June 6, 1880, ordained to the Priesthood, filled a mission to Great Britain in 1902-1904, and was ordained a High Priest and Bishop Nov. 20, 1910, by Francis M. Lyman. MORRIS, Arthur Charles, Bishop of the Cresent Ward, East Jordan Stake, Utah, from 1919 to 1924, was SMITH, Alma 'Fitzgerald, the Draper Ward, East Jordan Utah, from 1927 to 1930 +, was . Nov. 29, 1889, in Draper, Salt Co., Utah, a son of Heber A. and Sarah Jane Fitzgerald. baptized when about eight ordained to the Priesthood called on a mission to 1914, but was transferred to the ern States on account of the war; returned home in 1916. ordained a High Priest and the Sandy 3rd Ward Dec. 12, Rudger Clawson, and was by Joseph F. Smith, jun., as of the Draper Ward Aug. 21, WOOTTON, William op of the Butler Ward, East Stake, Utah, from 1919 to born Nov. 11, 1879, in South wood, Salt Lake Co., Utah, Charles R. Wootton and lard. He was baptized June ordained a Seventy Oct. 17, George Teasdale, filled a Southern States in 1900-1902, and ordained a High Priest and BishAug. 10, 1919, by James E. Tal. WRIGHT, Joseph Brigham, Bishop the Midvale Ward, East Jordan Utah, from 1902 to 1915, was 17, 1861, in Lichfield, StafEngland, a son of Joseph and Elizabeth Smith. He was ed when eighteen years old, to Utah in 1883, was ora High Priest Dec. 15, 1895, Joseph E. Taylor, and was ordained April 7, 1902, by John R. Emery Stake , Joseph Orson, Bishop of Clawson Ward, Emery Stake, from 1917 to 1925, was born 19, 1870, in Kanosh, Utah, the of Joseph Smith Barney and . Azelia Oviatt. He was bapin April, 1879, ordained a High Oct. 25, 1904, by Rudger Clawordained a Bishop May 13, by Hyrum M. Smith. Lyman Smith, Bishop of Ward, Emery Stake, Utah, 1884 to 1891 and from 1906 to was born May 7, 1849, in Big Utah, the son of Nathanand Isabella A . Saxton. baptized when· about eight moved to Manti in 1855, and in 1878, and was ordained a High Priest and Bishop Aug. 3 1884, by Erastus Snow. BEAL, Newel K., Bishop of t l Ferron Ward, Emery Stake, Uta , from 1906 to 1914, was born April 1867, in Manti, Utah, the son of Joh Alma Beal and Levina Esther DeMi ! He was baptized in 1878, ordained i the Priesthood, _and called on a m i sion to the Southern States in 189! He was ordained a High Priest F el 18, 1906, by Reuben G. Miller, and Bishop April 9, 1906, by Francis 1\ Lyman. BERG, Carl, Bishop of the Cast: Dale Ward, Emery Stake, Utah, fro i 1928 to 1930 + , was born Oct. 22, 186 in GjerriId, Randers amt, Denmark, t1 son of Andrew Berg and Engeli l Petersen. He was baptized in 18'1 came to Utah in 1885, was ordained t the Priesthood, and filled a mission 1 Denmark in 1907-1909. He was 0 dained a High Priest May 8, 1910, 1 Francis M. Lyman, and a Bishop l"ho 28, 1929, by Jos. F. Smith, jun. BRASHER, Reuben, presiding E del' of the Lawrence Branch, Eme l Stake, Utah, from 1922 to 1930, w; born July 26, 1878, in Randolph, Uta , the son of John L. Brasher and Eli;. Cheshire. He was baptized in Augu> 1886, ordained an Elder in 1905, fillt a mission to the Southern States } 1910-1912, was ordained a High Prie: Nov. 12, 1922, by Alonzo E. Wall, a r. set apart as presiding Elder. BRINKERHOFF, Alonzo, Bishop ( the Emery Ward, Emery Stake, Uta' from 1896 to 1922, was born JUly t 1864, in St. George, Utah, the son ( James Brinkerhoff and Rebecca Hal' He was baptized when eight years 01 ordained to the Priesthood, filled mission to the Southern States i 1893-1895, and was ordained a Bisho Aug. 9, 1896. the Primary Association, is a daugh, ter of William Weir Salmon and Margaret Hay Hunter. She was baptized when eight years of age by William Phillips, and received her education the kindergarten department of the Weber Stake Sunday school board. She is also a member of the Weber Board of the Daughters of the Pioneers. Sister Ross served as second assistant in the general superintendency of the Primary Association from 1926 to 1930, when she was promoted to the position of first assistant superintendent. SHURTLIFF, Mary Myrtle Ballard, member of the general board of the Primary Association from 1912 to 1913, was born Aug. 21, 1885, at Logan, Utah, a daughter of Henry Ballard and Margaret McNeil. She was baptized Aug. , 22, 1893, by W. M. Checketts. She was educated at the Brigham Young College and at the Agricultural College at Logan, Utah, and at the University of California at Berkeley, Calif. She was head of the Domestic Science Department of the Weber Stake Academy for some time. She served as assistant secrctary of the Primary Board of the Cache Stake in 1905-1908, was a membel' of the Weber Stake Sunday School Board in 1908-1910, and, moving to Salt Lake City, was president of the Liberty Stake Relief Society Board in 1921-1925. She is historian of the Yalecrest Camp of the Daughters of ? in the public schools of Salt Lake City, Jater specializing in physical education. She was a teacher of the primary grade in the 18th Ward Church ' school, Sal~ Lake City. She also • taught in the Salt Lake City public : schools and was director of physical , education at the Brigham Young Col- lege at Logan, Utah, and ', physical education at the Cordia Smith biography from the the Deaf and Blind at 0 Latter-day Saint Biographical Encyclopedia where her work is outsl '. pursuit of her chosen work . ed the University of Utah, took a summer course in the Hemingway SMITH, Cordia Hendrikson, a memGymnasium at the Harvard Univer- ber of the general board of the , sity and a course in speech under Primary Association since 1917, was i AJfred Ayers in New York City. Wil- born at Levan, Utah, a daughter of : liam W. Salmon and his family were Henry Hendrikson and Cordia Thom. prominent members of the 20th Ward, asson. She was baptized Sept. 2, 1897, 'Salt Lake City and from her child- by Martin Nielson, graduated from ", hood Sis tel' Ross was active in ward the L. D. S. high school in Salt Lake <activities, especially in the Primary City, and while attending that insti'Association and Sunda~' Schools. On tution won the "Heber J. Grant schol~Sept. 29, 1897, she was married to arship" for scholastic ability. She obCharles James Ross of Ogden (a mem- tained the degree of A.B. at the Uni":- er of the Deseret Sunday School versity of Utah in 1912 and taught ~'poard) and she became supervisor of school four years. Sister Smith was ,.0 .. .............. . 298 LATTER-DAY SAINT a teacher in Primary at an early age, president of Y. L. M. I. A. in Levan and Sandy wards, chorister in both these wards and also in a stake capacity. She served as a member of the Jordan Stake Y. L. M. I. A. board, as director of ward dramatics, and was sustained as a member of the general board of the Primary Association, Feb. 19, 1917, and has traveled extensively throughout the stakes of the Church in the interest of Primary work. In 1914 she was married to Alma F. Smith and is the mother of three children. SMITH, Edna Lambson, a member of the general board of the Primary Association from May, 1901, to March 24, 1911, was born March 2, 1851, in Salt Lake City, Utah, a daughter of Alfred B. Lambson and Melissa .Jane Bigler. She loved to read and kept herself informed, and understood the Gospel aS 'few women did. When her husband was conversing on matters pertaining to the Gospel she would leave her household affairs and listen as did Mary of old. From 1893 to 1922 she presided over the women workers in the Salt Lake Temple. On Jan. 1, 1871, she was married to Apostle (later President) Joseph F. Smith and became the mother of five sons and five daughters, namely, Hyrum Mack, Alvin Fielding, Alfred Jason, Edna Melissa, Albert Jesse, Robert, Emma, Zina, Ruth and Martha. Sister Smith died in Salt Lake City, Feb. 28, 1926 . SMITH, Gertrude Pearson, a member of the general board of the Primary Association since 1929, was born Oct. 6, 1887, in Salt Lake City, Utah. She was baptized Oct. 6, 1895, became a member of the Liberty Stake Sunday School board, was a member of • 1.~ UT"~">~t. <::!>ot.o V T. 1\,1 T A the University of Utah, and " teacher in the Salt Lake City sc for five years. For a time she supervisor of schools in Heber Utah, and for four years was in . tor in the Lincoln County High ~ at Panaca, Nevada. Later she b( a teacher of the Home Economic: partment at the L. D. S. Colle, Salt Lake City and president 0 Parent-Teachers' Association 0 Irving Junior High Schoo!. On 16, 1911, she was married to . Richard Smith and is the motl1 one daughter (Sarah Gertrude S I SMITH, Ida Elizabeth Bowm member of the general board ( Primary Association from 191 1918, was born April 19, 1872, ,. den, Utah, a daughter of Andr· Bowman and Elizabeth Fife. SI baptized in June, 1880, by her and educated in the Salt Lak . district and high schools. On 15, 1895, she was married to J M. Smith, a son of Pres. JOS( Smith. She acted as general urer of the Primary board in as general librarian from Ja 1906, to April 1, 1909, and agai l March 18, 1910, to her death, occurred in Salt Lake City, Se 1918. Sister Smith did outst. canteen work and Red Cross work during the World war in of the general Primary board. her husband, she filled a mis ~ Europe in 1913-1916, while he band presided over the Europe:, sion and scores of letters are from English nobility thankii for neat and useful supplies j British soldiers, furnished wh was presiding over the ·L. D. S Societies in the British Missio l was the mother of two sons a daughters, namely, Joseph F Hyrum Mack, Geraldine (Mrs . File (TM) ~cestral - ver n419 FAMILY GROUP RECORD 04 SEP 1999 Page 1 ============================================================================================================================== HUSBAND: Alma Fitzgerald SMITH BORN: 29 Nov 1889 PLACE: Draper, Salt Lake, UT CHR. : PLACE : DIED: 25 Feb 1954 PLACE: Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, UT BUR. : Mar 1954 PLACE: Draper, Salt Lake, UT SP: BIC MAR . : 2 Jun 1914 PLACE: Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, UT SS: LOS ORDINANCE DATA B: 18 Aug 1898 E : 28 May 1914 SLAKE 2 Jun 1914 SLAKE FATHER : Absolom Heber SMITH MOTHER: Sarah Jane FITZGERALD OTHER WIVES: Cordelia HENDRICKSEN WIFE: Concordia M. HENDRICKSON BORN: 12 Nov 1887 PLACE : Levan , Juab, UT CHR. : PLACE: B: DIED: 10 Oct 1959 PLACE : Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, UT E : 28 May 1914 SLAKE BUR .: 14 Oct 1959 PLACE : Draper, Salt Lake, UT 3 Sep 1897 SP : BIC FATHER: Henry HENDRICKSON MOTHER: Fredericka Concordia THOMASSEN OTHER HUSBANDS: ============================================================================================================================== Sex CHILDREN ============================================================================================================================== 1- NAME: Allen Howard SMITH BORN : 23 Jan 1919 PLACE: Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah B: M CHR . : PLACE: E : 23 Jan 1939 SLAKE DIED: 20 Aug 1937 PLACE: SP: 23 Jan 1939 SLAKE BUR . : PLACE: 4 May 1927 SPOUSE: PLACE : SS: BORN: LIVING PLACE : B: CHR. : PLACE: E: DIED: PLACE : SP: BUR . : PLACE : MAR. : 2. F NAME: Frances Ruth SMITH SPOUSE: PLACE : SS: BORN: LIVING PLACE : B: CHR. : PLACE: E: DIED: PLACE : SP: BUR. : PLACE: MAR . : 3. F NAME: Margaret SMITH SPOUSE: Harman Clark STEED 4. SS: PLACE : MAR. : NAME: BORN : PLACE : B: CHR. : PLACE: E: DIED: PLACE : SP : BUR. : PLACE : SPOUSE : MAR . : SS: PLACE: ============================================================================================================================== Codes : AFN=Ancestral File Number B=Baptized E=Endowed SS=Sealed to Spouse SP=Sealed to Parents Ancestral File (TM ) - ver n419 FAMILY GROUP RECORD - OTHER MARRIAGES 04 SEP 1999 HUSBAND: Alma Fitzgerald SMITH BORN: 29 Nov 1889 WIFE: Concordia M. HENDRICKSON BORN: 12 Nov 1887 OTHER MARRIAGES LDS ORDINANCE DATA HUSBAND: Alma Fitzgerald SMITH SPOUSE: Cordelia HENDRICKSEN MAR.: 2 Jun 1914 PLACE: Codes: AFN=Ancestral File Number Copyright 0 SS : E=Endowed B=Baptized 1987, June 1998 by Intellectual Reserve, Inc. SS=Sealed to Spouse All rights reserved. SP=Sealed to Parents Page 2 ... - ----_._-- --------~-~---~-.--- ....... 1j;;- • 1613 East Pioneer Road, Draper, Utah Tax cards 1937 & 1958; Tax photo circa 1937 ..,.....-'" 1'""3 ?L KIND OF BUILDING 19 • 19..5;:? 19 ' 19 I 19 96~ 191964 19 1'163 19 ~~ ~ GARAGE RESIDENCE TOTAL --, '7 '-f n / 'R. .' , . .5. ASSESSED VALUE I {; : I c'" KIND OF BUILDING 19 . .~. L~ : ., I) ..... L-.• ". .. ""., . '- l '1 I ~ ';_ 19 ~ lsr~0 - ,J ' ,,- !(-) _L....--.. ~----- 19 19 ~ ~ . .. , 77 3r "' J '/S12.. .... I.j~ (p q ..., \CJ ~...;? 1'17.5 / 19 71 19 'Y'::/ / , / 19 19 TOTAL ~-- r ~ ' l / .. , '7 F(?o .. RESIDENCE L..---- -, .. , .. GARAGE ASSESSED VALUE 1 11t~ LV' -- . I,' , !. 19£8 : / . -; , / ,/ _'I fZ'_ ,. : // ~~ 19 .' ..~ '·--'7<' /' ~ ,.-. ...-/ /--. J ~ / \ / 19 George 9 . ! R e gen ~ R. Rol en 1613 East 12300 So. 40A-;92 Dzoa per, Utah CC;;-1320 it ~r <1 643 it Ii f'r S! cor Se c 28, T 3S, R lE, SL Mer, N 157 ft; E 130 ft; S 157 ft; W 130 it to beg. Less raad.. 0.4 Ao ci z: ...J UJ u 0:: < Cl.. FRONTAGE OR AREA / ?I ~ O ~ DEPTH ' FACTOR "'-;i ~ RATE I CORNER INFLU- , ENCE RATE VALUE ?s-.< () 3? P" ~ TOTAL OST 1 ~) 1974 ASSESSED VALUE ';{'/ l'lt::'W fwpraisal Ba~ /JoS- i I GOTT8CHALL PTO, 8·87 ., /-..,# ,. '. ' J. .t " ., ,'1. . I ~ .... ;iL{ I ! • j .... /. '. '. , :: i . I' '1 " VTDI 28-28-327-013-0000 DIST 59 RODEN. GEORGE B. & REGENA R. PRINT P UPDATE LEGAL \0 TAX CLASS NE 1613 E PIONEER RD EDIT 1 FACTOR BYPASS DRAPER UT 84020915713 LOC~ 1613 E PIONEER RD EDIT 1 BOOK 0000 TOTAL ACRES REAL ESTATE BUILDINGS MOTOR VEHIC TOTAL VALUE 0.40 65900 25200 o 91100 PAGE 0000 DATE 00/00/0000 TYPE UNKN PLAT 03/18/1999 PROPERTY DESCRIPTION FOR TAXATION PURPOSES ONLY COM 1320 FT N & 643 FT W FR S 1/4 COR SEC 28 T 3S R 1E SL MER N 157 FT E 130 FT S 157 FT W 130 FT TO BEG LESS ROAD 0.4 AC SUB~ PFKEYS: 1~VTNH 2~VTOP 4=VTAU 6=NEXT 7~RTRN VTAS 8=RXMU 10=RXBK 11=RXPN 12~PREV STAXM803 SALT LAKE COUNTY SINGLE FAMILY RESIDENCE PARCEL: 28283270130000 YEAR BUILT: 1915 EFP YEAR BUILT: 1968 FN ATTC UPPER FN MAIN FL BASEMENT FIN BSMT AREA AREA: AREA: AREA: AREA: AREA: 1584 1584 400 VEHICLE STORAGE ATT GAR SF: BLTIN GAR SF: CARPORT SF: BSMT GAR SF: CLR OR PF3=QUIT TYPE1: RESID RECORD1: 001 08/30/1999 13:53:52 TYPE2: 0 RECORD2: 0 FINISHED BSMT GRAD: NUMBER 1.0 BUILDING STYLE: NUMBER STORIES: CENTRAL AC: NUMBER KITCHENS: 1 CONFORMITY: NUMBER BEDROOMS: 3 HEAT TYPE: FIN FIREPLACES: 1 PRIMARY KIT QUAL: METAL FIREPLACES: LIVEABILTY: CARPORT CAP: MAINTENANCE: TOTAL ROOMS: 10 OVERALL CONDITION: BATHS OVERALL GRADE: RAISED ROOF: PRIMARY BATH QUAL: SEMI MOD ROOFING: THREE QTR BATHS: FULL BATHS: 1 EXTERIOR WALL TYPE: VISUAL APPEAL: HALF BATHS: 1 PF7=PREV RECORD PF8=NEXT RECORD FAIR COTTGE/BUNGLW EQUAL PRIM CENTRAL SEMI MOD AVERAGE MINIMUM FAIR FAIR YES ASPHALT SNGL BRICK AVERAGE PF12=MAIN MENU 4489 \ ti .'1 UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR GEOLOGICAL SURVEY 32'30" 448f ':.; 4485 30 ~~~~~ SM l"flol ~ HOU S~ I b\ ~ £. '\l\o w0- f't:), 31 4485 T A c: DRAPER, UTAH N4030-Wll14517 .5 1963 PHOTOREVISED 1969 AND 1975 AMS 3665 III SE-SERIES V897 : . I I ....-.......:... ... ~ 2'1c:'J .'-.. ." ~ '.-" ' .. City of Draper County of Salt Lake State of Utah Original Owner: Date Built: Builders Name: History of Building: Type of Building: Building Material: Important Facts: .s~'1\-l'" ~ K6CA~l:7 'DtlA~, \.A.TM-l ?H6TO \ '5~ l-rH - I'U> ~ 'DtlA?t1 1 \A.TRH 'PHoTO "1 ,..4otU) S~ SM,.\'1l-t- Q..ob~ ~~1) eL, ?\-\.CIn) U."rA' t'\ ~ H40CC 5M'1lt- QA1>&N ~()US€ 'b"'l>OL, 'P .... on ~ v-.~~ '5~\"""' - tLo~ "Pfl.~'Q~"u..IA'" PH6~ '5' \-tausit' |
| Reference URL | https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6q29q18 |



