| Title | 70951 |
| NR ID | 83004424 |
| State | Utah |
| County | Salt Lake County |
| City | Holladay |
| Address | 4249 S 2300 East |
| Scanning Institution | Utah Correctional Institute |
| Holding Institution | Utah Division of State History |
| Collection | Utah Historic Buildings Collection |
| Building Name | 4249 S 2300 East; Hintze, Anders, House; Holladay, Salt Lake County |
| UTSHPO Collection | National Register 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 | 2020-12-09 |
| Language | eng |
| ARK | ark:/87278/s6xt1m91 |
| Setname | dha_uhbr |
| ID | 1622141 |
| OCR Text | Show 00 EAST 4249 S 2;NDERS, HOUSE LAKE COUNTY HINTZE, SALT LAKE COUNTY, SALT For more information see : Scandinavian-American Pair-houses TR general nomination in Sanpe t e County This text message is used to keep the image from rotating in ocr process. Be sure to crop the top .25" off after the ocr process. NOMINATION FORM \ Utah State Historical Society Pr operty Type: Site No. _ __ Historic Preservation Research Office Structure/Site Information Form Street Address: z o t-. <1: U LL I- Z W o UTM: 12/430400/4503350 4249 South 2300 East Name of Structure: Anders Hintze House T. Present Owner: Glenn J. Hintze Owner Address: 4255 South 2300 East, Salt Lake City, Utah 84117 Year Built (Tax Record): Legal Description c. 1863-64 Effective Age: Kind of Building: 2 S Tax# : 120 years R. 1 E S. 3 18-1292-001 Com. 1002.54 ft S fr n 1/4 cor sec 3 T 2 S, R 1 E SL Mer S 135.18 ft E 297.75 ft N 135.18 ft W 297.75 ft to beg. Original Owner: Anders Hintze Construction Date: c. 1863-64 Demolition Date: Original Use: dwelling Present Use: Building Condition: o o o Exc ellent r.;('Good Site Ruins 'Q i.J z o Photography: o Unal t ered Vsignificant Major Alterations o o ~inor Alterations Research Sources: VAbstract of Title w :'i: 0 Contributory Not of the Historic Period Slide No,: District Multi·Resource 0 Newspapers [) U of U library 0 BYU library 0 USU library I2""'City Directories VUtah State Historical Society ii/'BiOgraphical Encycloped ias [} o o o ~ Obiturary Index Bu ilding Permit 0 0 llt""Sanborn Maps lYTax Card & Photo Sewer Permit National Landmark National Register iii County & City Histories [} T:'ematic Photo No.: View s: 0 Front [} Side 0 Rear 0 Other 17.' Plat Records I Map u o o Date of Photographs: ':;:) ,0 Final Register Status: [} State Register Not Contributory Views: C Front iJ Side 0 Rear C Ot her I- Z Preliminary Evaluation: Dat e of Slides: I- <1: Integrity: o LJ Deteriorated dwelling Personal Interviews 0 LOS Church Archiv es [} LOS Genealog ical Society 0 SLC library 0 Other Bibliographical References (books, articles, records, interviews, old phot ographs and maps, et c .): Salt Lake County Records Hintze Family Genealogical Records LDS Mi1lenia1 Star, November 6, 1882 Researcher: Tom Carter Date: Street Address: 4 Architect! Builder: 0: Building Materials: Site No: ill ::> l- t) ill l- I Building Type/Style: t) ex: <! Description of physical appearance & significant architectural features: (Include addi tions, alterations, ancillary structures, and landscaping if applicable) This house, built in the 1863-1864 period, is an example of the 1YPE IIA pair-house. This subtype is characterized by a two room deep plan. The house is one story high and is built of locally produced adobe which was plastered over at an early date. 'The present stucco exterior was applied in the 1940s and remains consistent with the historic appearance of the house. A small adobe lean-to bedroom extension was appended to th: original house at the southwest corner. A scroll-bracketed porch once ran the length of the facade but was removed in the 1940s. The absence of this porch remains the only major alteration of the house. 5 >ex: o I- m I Statement of Histor!cal Significance: Construction Date: The Anders Hintze house in Holladay is significant as an example of Scandinavian vernacular architecture in Utah. 'The house contributes historically to the thematic nomination, "1he Scandinavian-Anerican Pair-house in Utah." Additionally, the Hintze house remains as one of the few homes in the Salt Lake Valley datil15 to the l860s. Anders Hintze was born in 1821 in Herslex, Roskilde Parish, Denmark. Hintze converted to the LDS Church in the late l850s and emigrated to Utah in the early l860s. Arriving in Salt Lake City, Hintze received a land grant which atended from 3900 South to 4500 South and from 2300 East to 2700 East. A fanner by trade, Hintze prospered and eventually married three wives. Despite the large size of the horre, only one wife, Karen Sophie Swenson, lived in the main house. The other wives occupied smaller houses located on the family property. After Anders Hintze's death in 1888, the house passed to his son, Ferdinand. The youl15er Hintze married four wives and held the dubious honor of beil15 the first Mormon arrested under the provisions of the Edrrnmds Act (anti-polygamy) in 1882. / ::"J ;, Anders Hintze House Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah ~"05 UTM Reference: 12/430400/4503350 l: I- ::l , o u) ::>. <:1- ::0 .. ,,, \()"'~"._.,._ • ..~It-. . neater:lIl \ J"'L~~. 10'" - . - - ~_~ ---=; .- Jl'~9514l=-1JI ~-10 l( d o 0 ~ ~. • 0 , _ •••• . ,, " ,I, I ~""""'_'I~··· , , If ' l r "'<t if-bn ' l' . , '.. ~ . jJ = - -\~ \at-L-'3!JUU'JL-Jl ,; ~ .r~l u _ , ~ ". .~J' I , . , ,/ """"'= ...'.\\ " ' IL-1~·.,r=JII~UUIHJ~ " ~l " ~=~ " -.JL _. • ;w=, ' ~ -, ~-~.~'J' '.---==--"'-~ - ';"i!',, +I I Ii , ...J I...J '~ 4 .j-.. , ', 0\ , "' '' - MURRAY ' j, , t <:I h'I, 'I J l ,"---: ., e \ / . ,', 1H..oI;it·:;.a.:'\' '\ . ',0 . " ' .~.~~~:::~~.' .\ '\' . ... t ... . . , ~ . r ·' 1" :I ,I 1.<1'1 .. . ,' ; 'I ,!,.,," " >, • . ~. ~. J/\.-", fi·· .r ... .. ---...,-'; ,.,......-. _ ",.1", , ., Ir..: . 0 ..... ~ /' 0 -~ .' . . ~' . - .~ \ .. .. Anders Hintze House Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah Rear east Photo: Tom Carter, February 1981 Negative: Utah State Historical Society 2 of 2 ow . . ; b;;<=:0¥:><= ~~~~(~~;~J GO ", flifiiiWl-. '. .': --.-. I.. • _- I ", .... . , , ... Anders Hintze House Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah Principal west facade from NW corner Photo: Tom Carter, February 1981 Negative: Utah State Historical Soc. 1 of 2 The Anders Hintze House Holladay, Utah Current Owner: Glenn Hintze 4255 South 2300 East Sal t Lake City, Utah Statement of Significance The Anders Hintze house in Holladay is significant as an example of Scandinavian vernacular architecture in Utah. The house contributes historically to the thematic nomi nati on, liThe Scandi navi an-American Pai r-house in Utah." Additionally, the Hintze house remains as one of the few homes in the Salt Lake Valley dating to the l860s. Oescription This house, built in the 1863-1864 period, is an example of the TYPE IIA pair-house. This subtype is characterized by a two room rleep plan. The house is one story high and is built of locally produced adobe which was plastered over at an early date. The present stucco exterior was applied in the 1940s and remains consistent with the historic appearance of the house. A small adobe lean-to bedroom extension was appended to the original house at the southwest corner. A scroll-bracketed porch once ran the length of the facade but was removed in the 1940s. The absence of this porch remains the only major alteration of the house. Hi story Anders Hintze was born in 1821 in Hers1ex, Roskilde Parish, nenmark. Hintze converted to the LOS Church in the late 1850s and emigrated to Utah in the early 1860s. Arriving in Salt Lake City, Hintze received a land grant which extended from 3900 South to 4500 South and from ?300 East to 2700 East. A farmer by trade, Hintze prospered and eventually married three wives. Oespite the large size of the home, only one wife, Karen Sophie Swenson, lived in the main house. The other wives occupied smaller houses located on the family property. After Anders Hintze's death in 1888, the house passed to his son, Ferdinand. The younger Hintze married four wives and held the dubious honor of being the first Mormon arrested under the provisions of the Edmunds Act (anti-polygamy) in 1882. Unjleu States Department of tila interior :--Jerltage Conservation and Recrealion Service iRegisfte1r of !H3s'~Oiric Dlnueiniory-L\'Jominalio:n !Form frJal~~lnaa ~aaces See instructions in How to Complete National Register Forms Type all entries-complete applicable sections 1. Name historic The Scandinavian-American Pair-house in Utah and/or common 2. Location Multiple locations: street & number see attached inventory forms __ vicinity of city. town code state __ not for publication congressional district county code 3. CSass§iicaiion Category __ district _ building(s) __ structure __ site _object X Thematic Group Status Present Use Public Acquisition Accessible __ In process N/A being considered ~ _ agriculture _ commercial _ educational _ entertainment _ government _ industrial _military Ownership __ public ~occupied' _ unoccupied _ work in progress ~private __ both yes: restricted _ yes: unrestricted _no Multiple ~vnership: name __ museum __ park .-.!.. private residence __ religious __ scientific __ transportation _other: see individual inventory forms street & number __ vicinity of city, town courthouse, registry of deeds, etc. state Hultip1e County listing: see inventory forms street & number state city, town title Vernacular Architectural Survey date has this property been determined elegible? __ yes ___ federal ~ state _ 1979-1981 --------------------------------------------------------------depository for survey records Utah State Eistorical Society city, tmvn Salt Lake City state Utah county _ .1 L- no local Co~djtion x excellent ~good £= ~fair _ deteriorated _ ruins _unexposed C~eck one _unaltered ~altered C'){C~ _ _ one original site moved date _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~_ _ Describ& the present and original (if known) physical appearance This nomination, "The Scandinavian-American Pair-house in Utah," gathers together 16 houses which represent a particular ethnic architectural type fotmd in various parts of the state. 1bis house type, briefly summarized as being three rooms wide and one room deep, was transmitted to Utah by Scandinavian immigrant converts to the Qn.n:ch of Jesus Oui..st of Latter-day Saints in the mid-19th century. The name used here to identify this house type comes from the SW'edish ''parstuga, II which translates literally as "pair-house," or, a house with a central room flan..~ by a pair of rooms. The . pair-house exists in Utah in a variety of forms and remains an inconspicuous but distinctive feature of the state's architectural landscape, historically documenti.r:g the multi-cult:tn:'a1-nature of early Mormon society. : .Included in this thematic house type grouping are the following residerees: 1) The Anders Hintze House, c. 1862-63 4255 South 2390 East Holladay, Utah The Thuesen~Petersen House, c. 1868 2) Block 36 wt 1 Scipio, Utah 3) The Soren Simonsen House, c. 1880 55 'vest 100 North Monroe, Utah ' .. The Hartin Johnson House, c. 1880 -~ . 4) 45 West 400 South Glenwood, Utah 5) The Peter Hansen House, c. 1875 ' 247 South 200 East Manti, Utah 6) The Claus P. Andersen House, c. 1865 Block 3. Lot 7 Ephraim, Utah 7) Too Andre\., Petersen House, c. -1870-1875 92 East 200 South Richfield, Utah 8) The Jens C. Nielsen House, c. 1870 Block 7 wt 4 . Ephraim, Utah 9) The Hans C. Jensen House, c. 1870 Block 14 lot 2 Ephraim, Utah Period __ prehistoric _1400-1499 _1500-1599 _1600-1699 _1700-1799 -1L 1800-1899 _1900- Areas of Significance-.Check and justify below archeology-prehistoric _ community planning archeology-historic _ . conservation agriculture _ economics ..lL architecture _ education _art engineering _commerce exploration/settlement _ communications .industry. - Specific dates 1855-1885 Invention Builder/Architect _ _ _ _ _ landscape architecture_ religion law _ science literature _ sculpture military ~ sociall music hUmanitarian philosophy _ theater politics/government _ transportation _ other (specify) Nultiple Statement of Significance (in one paragraph) . During the second half of the 19th century, the Church of Jesus Olrist of Latter-day Saints, the 11oDllOIls, colonized much of the Intermountain Uest in an attempt to build a milleni.al Kingdom of GJd. Through intense missionary efforts, Uomon converts were gathered to this new Zion from maqy parts of· the east~ United States and northetn Europe. TIle Scandinavian cotmtries were particularly susceptible to l1oDIlOn proselytism and sent over 20,000 enigrants . to Utah by 1900. Despite this remarkable influx of Nordic blood, the Scandinavian cultural contribution to Utah has been consistently denied. Historians have maintained that the Mormon theocracy, charged with molding a heterogenous body of converts into a unified conmunity of like-minded Saints, openly discouraged the retention of Old '~orld values and custans. l Indeed, in statements made by many of the O1urch leaders the use of the Scandinavian la~es was repeatedly denounced • . New studies, however, have recently shown that amo~ the first generation of immigrants many of the local Scandinavian IDS ,.,ard meetings, conducted primarily in Danish and to a lesser extent, Swedish, persisted into the 20th century.2 TIle presence of the northern European pair-house type in Utah corrmunities further reinforces the idea that a degree of et:1mic identity was tolerated. · The .pair-house is historically sioonificant, therefore, because in demonstrating the cultural diversity exhibited by Honnon domestic architecture, the house makes an important contribution to the dismantling of the prevailing monolithic interpretation of Homon society. The pair-house functioned as a rather complex symbol of Scandinavian ethnicity and newly acquired economic status. It is a house which is inextricably tied · to the history of imnigration to Utah during the 19th century. TIle Utah pair-house finds its ongms in the folk building traditions of S,veden and Nonvay during the 16th and 17th centuries. In S'iveden the house was found as. the principle dwelling on the larger farms and Church estates and enjoyed a popularity in many sections of the country 'iYhich lasted "''ell into the 19th century. TIle Swedish folklife scP.o lar, Sigurd Erixon, ackno,"Tledged that the pair-house, with a narrm-l entrance hall 8.I."1d a la~e living room on each side, could be considered "the typical S\Vedish form." In later examples of the type, the kitchen lvaS moved from op.e of the side rooms into the central room where it occupied a position just behind the then greatly diminished entrance hall. In Norway, a similarl~ arranged, tripartite house has been called a "dobblethus," or double house. The Norwegian house also places the kitchen in t'b.e smaller middle room and the Oluf Larsen house in . Ephraim is an exact replica of this Old World arrangerr.ent. In Denmark and in Skane, the southernmost S\Vedish province long controlled by the Danish ldngs, the pair-house is not encountered in venerable fonn. '!'be traditional Danish peasant house appears as an irregular longhouse which is -9-..-~.i-n-;a-j-D-rr-[8-·-:-'j ,-a~-o-,g-. a-rP-!--lh-:-a-c-ca-.g-fR-'-e-:'~-e-rt-IE-;n-(C-e-5------' ' - , \~-.~.~~ [' b - '. 1 - --------~~----------~----~--------------------------------.--~--------------~~ I' ~~~ Hilliam Nu1der~ HomeHard to Zion: The Hormon Nigration from Scandinavia, Ninneapo1is: ~. " > . ..... University of tlinnestoa Press, 1952. ~~:, Sigurd Erixon, Svensk Byggnadskultur. V ": Acreage of nominated property See ;ndivj!tlnaJimlentory sheets Quadrangle name _ _ _ _ _ __ Quadrangle scale _ _ _ _ _ __ UMT References ALLj Zone I II I c' LLJ ~I 1 I Northing ---.....--...-_' .10- LU I I G LL.J I I BW Ii I I I Easting I I E Zone o L.tJ III I Easling II f L.U I I HLU II .J--.J..~....&o...IO~1 1--1 .J--.J..-'---'"...L.....I.....I II--.J--.J..~~,.....J 1--1 I I I I I I INorthing II I II I II I I I I I 1l Verbal boundary description .and justification See inventory sheets List aU states and counties for properties overlapping state or county boundaries state NIP, code county See jndi vi dual code state U/l\ code county code i nv'en tory sheets Tom Carter, Architectural Historian name/title Utah State Historical Society organization street & number 300 Rio Grande 801-533.,..6017 telephone Salt Lake City city or town 1981 date Utah state The evaluated significance of this property within the state is: __ national -X... state _local As the designated State Historic Preservation OHicer for the National Historic Preservation Act of 1956 (Public Law 8~ 655), I h~reby nominate this property for inclusion in the National Register and certify that it has been evaluated &!ccording to the criteria and procedures set forth b the Heritage Conservation and Recreation Service. State Historic Preservation OHicer signature title /// ~-,ff/",,//../-v-~ _____ -.~ Ne1vin T. Smith, State Historic Preservation Officer , date For HCAS use only . , .. . .. I h~reby certify that this property is included in the National Register date Ke~p~r of the National Register ~tt2St: Chief of Registration date ff,.. Z (. ~ %' Z- FHR-8-300A (llil8) UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR HERITAGE CONSERVATION AND RECREATION SERVICE NATIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES INVENTOR Y -- NOMINA TI ON FORM CONTI NUATION SHEET 10) 11) ITEM NUMBER The Rasmus Jensen House, c. 1870 Block 16 Lot 1 Ephraim, Utah The Oluf Larsen House, c. 1869-1870 - Block 17 Lot 3 Ephraim, Utah 12) The lars S. Andersen House, c. 1865 Block 34 lot 1 Ephraim, Utah 13) The Dykes Sorensen House, c. 1870 Block 7 lot 6 Ephraim, Utah _14) 7 PAGE 2 15) Jacobsen-Jensen House Block 5 Lot 5 ' Ephraim, Utah 16) Niels Mortensen House Block 28 lot 13 Ephraim, Utah The Andre\v H. Barentsen House, 1872 Block 12 Lot 3 Fountain Green, Utah These 16 dwellings \'lere culled from a total of 49 such houses identified by an ongoing survey of the vernacular domestic architecture in the state of Utah. Three of these houses have already been listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Two, the Peter Honson house and the Jens Jensen house, are listed as part of the SpriD.g City Historic District in Sanpete County. Also in Sanpete County, the Fredrick C. Sorensen house in Ephraim \vas listed separately in 1980. The final selection of these 14 houses for nomination \,ras based pri..marlly on architectural integrity. . llist pair-houses were originally modest dwellings and \vere usually built of adobe. Since they are also some of the oldest buildings left in the state, the ravages of time, \'leather, and reI!lodeling have taken a heavy toll, 30 of the documented houses of this unusual type have either been altered beyond recognition or are too severely damaged to warrant preservation. A list of these inelligible hOuses is provided as an appendi."'{ to this nomination form. For the most part, these houses were constructed by the more humble people in their cO!Ilffitmities and unfortunately) there is not a great deal of historical information available to reconstruct their lives. Tne names and dates FHR-8- 300A (11/78) UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR HERITAGE CONSERVATION AND RECREATION SERVICE NATIONAL REGISTER OF mSTORIC PLACES INVENTOR Y -- NOMINATION FORM CONTI NUATION SHEET ITEM NUMBER 7 PAGE 3 provided on the attached inventory forms give only a vague impression of Scandinavian immigrant life in the American \-lest. The architec~e presented here serves in a surrogate capacity by speaking materially of the newccxners I response to their Utah home." \fuat the people cannot tell us, their houses potentially can. The specific historical message is one of newly acquiJ:ed economic status combined with ethnic pride. The immigrant convert was a rural laborer and tradesman in Europe, occupying a social niche just helm., that of the emerging bourgeois farIning class. In America, land--even a fe\v acres--carried \dth it :imnediate status and in Utah the Scandinavian inmigrant quickly became the farmer he could not have roped to become in Europe. This new social position required a corresponding change in external symbols and many (though certainly not all) Scandinavians chose to build, not the older peasant dvlellings they had left behind nor the houses of their Anglo-hnerican neighbors, but rather the house they associated with 19th century middle-class respectability in their Scandinavian homeland. This house was the pair-house. Utah Pair-houses are bound together as a type by an adherence to three-room-wide floor plan. lhese rooos are located in a linear fashion along the axial ridgeline of the roof and constitute the base structure from lAUch Utah carpenters generated a variety of real houses. Within the -fL"{ed structure of the tripartite plan, the houses demonstrate diversity in facade fenestration, chimney placement, height, depth, rear extension, and construction materials. The three-roam-plan is a convention--a culturally determined preference which dictates how the house will be laid out and ultimately hmv it will look \vhen completed. It is this base structure which the archeologist James IP....etz calls "the mental template" of artifactual design. Deetz points out that the "idea of the proper form of an object exists in the mind of the maker, and '\vhen this idea is expressed in ta~ible foun in ra\v materials, an artifact results. "1 TI1e founal attributes of the house--the doors, the windmvs, the roof, the decorative trim, and so forth--are all logical continuations of the deslgn momentum set into motion by the tripartite structure of the plan. The inherent ordering of ideas ,-rl.thin this structure furnishes the carpenter with a conceptual blueprint which \dll guide the subsequent actions required in building the house. Anglo-l'>G1erican domestic architecture, . at least until the mid-19th century, was dominated by a transplanted English model which, "men properly executed, was two-rooms \vide. There are, of course, exceptions such as the square cabin house and the extended hall house (see, for example, the George \01. Bradley house in Horoni, Utah), but most typologies of knerican vernaCular fHR-8-300A (1/78) UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR HERITAGE CONSERVATION AND RECREATION SERVICE NA TIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES INVENTOR Y -- NOMINA TI ON FORM CONTI NUATION SHEET ITEM NUMBER 7 PAGE 4 architecture a.re limited to houses which are composed of but two bays.2 The most common Anglo-inspired .American house types are the hall and parlor house» the double-pen house, and the central hall house. Though composed of three spatial units, the central hall type cannot qualify as a three-room rouse because the hall is too narrow to function in BIT:! capacity other than as a passageway. The Scandinavian building tradition, while offerirg a wide range of house types, presented an interesting alternative to the English double-bay style in a widely distributed bouse form which placed three rooms in a line under a gable nx>f. Dating to the 1600s in central and northern Sweden and in central and western Norway, this three-room-type grad\,lally migrated southward into Swedish province of Skane and by the late 18th and early 19th century had crossed the channel into Denmark.3 In these areas the house first surfaced as an upper-cla~s phenomenon, but later acquired general favor as a rural farmhouse type. In the second half of the 19th century, the symnetrica11y tripartite pair-house had become the principle dwelling form being built on middle-class farms in Denmark--an ubiquitous symbol of economic achievercent. It "'''as this house which the Scandinavian immigrants from DeI'JID8.rk, Norway, and S,.,eden brought: to Utah. The pair-house is fOl.md throughout Utah but survives in the greatest numbers in those regions l.mere the Scandinavian population \o1aS the mos t concentrated. TIle Sanpete-Sevier county area, often called ''Little Scandinavia" for its sizeable northern European population, accounts for over 90% of the recorded pair-house examples. The house form may be broken down into four major . categories, each yielding houses in various sizes and architectural styles. These four- main types are the fol1mving: 1) TYPE 1. nus first category contains those houses most closely resemblirg the oldest traditional pair-houses in Nonvay and S~-reden. The distinctive feature of TYPE I is that the middle room is the smallest of the three. This center room is often about two-thirds o£a complete square (designated Y2 in the illustrations) and flanked Ly two roughly square rooms (marked X). The piercing rules for the facades of 'lYPE I houses require a door to be placed in the center room and either one or two symmetrically placed \v.i.ndows in the side rooms. The width of the center room is about 12-13 feet and thus is easily distinguished from the 6-7 foot passageway found in the Anglo-Arnerica~ central hall house type. The Oluf Larsen house in Ephraim is the best remaining example of a TYPE I pair-house in the state. FHR-8-300A (I 1178) UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR HERITAGE CONSERVATION AND RECREATION SERVICE NATIONAL REGISTER OF ffiSTORIC PLACES INVENTOR Y -- NOMINA nON FORM CONTI NUATION SHEET ITEM NUMBER 7 PAGE 5 x x TYPE I 2) TYPE II. This heading represents the IIlOS t commonly encountered pair-house in Utah. There are 29 1YPE II houses, or about 65% of the total. Here the main interior 1X>Om is ahlays the largest and formed by a square unit (X) or a slightly larger rectangle (Z). If the inside roOm is a square, then the side rooms will be either three~qaurters (Y) or tM:>-thirds (Y2) of the square. . If the inside room is a rectangle, then the paired outside rooms will be squares. FHR-8-300A (11/78) UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR HERITAGE CONSERVATION AND RECREATION SERVICE NATIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES INVENTOR Y -- NOMINA TI ON FORM CONTI NUATION SHEET ITEM NUMBER 7 PAGE 6 x . y x )( y z TYPE II Pair-house variants The facade piercing rules for TYPE II houses normally place a symmetrical " wiooow-door-window" pattern in the central room and only a single window in each of the side rooms. Such a facade is characterized by slightly . e.'{aggerated spaces between the internal cluster of openings and the windows to each side. TIle breaking up of the house front into three distinct bays is one of u'1e classic and roost easily spotted features of the TYPE II pair-house. ~ Soren Simonsen house, the Andrew Petersen house, the Claus Andersen house, the Rasmus Jensen house, and the Andrew H. Barentsen house are structures included in this nomination ,vhich rep:-esent the type of house. FHR-8-300A 01/78) UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR HERITAGE CONSERVATION AND RECREATION SERVICE NA TIONAL REGISTER OF HiSTORIC PLACES INVENTORY -- NOMINA TION FORM ITEM NUMBER CONTI NUATION SHEET [ t o Oe=O .~ . PAGE 7 ] JI'- 7 ; 0 -I Typical TYPE II Facade There are two main sub-types of TYPE II: A) TYffi IIA. This bouse is similar in plan and fenestration to the regular 'riPE II house but is constructed two-rooms deep in what is often called a "double-pilell arrangement. The center area mayor may not be partitioned into DvO rooms. The Anders Hintze house and the Peter Hansen houses are both examples of the TYPE IIA subtype. TYPE IIA Plan B) TYPZ lIB. This subtype category acounts for 1YPE II pair houses ·.vhich are composed of only bw-thirds of the complete house form. 1he FHR-8-300A (11178) UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR HERITAGE CONSERVATION AND. RECREATION SERVICE NATIONAL REGISTER OF mSTORIC PLACES INVENTORY -- NOMINA nON FORM CONTINUATION SHEET ITEM NUMBER 7 PAGE 8 subtraction of one section of the geometrically conceptualized house is a comnon practice in folk architectural design. TYPE lIB Plan 3) TYPE III. The houses in this group represent a variant of TYPE II, the main difference being that the 1YPE III house has a balanced, symmetrical facade instead of the idiosyncratic three-bay arrangement found on the majority of suCh houses. By placDJg the openings equally spaced across the front of the bouse, sane adjustments are required internally. TYPE III houses are recognized by asymmetrically room sizes. The Soren A•. Mar.iager house is a pair-house whose 'IYPE III identity is revealed by the symnetrical facade and unusual floor plan. The present owner of this home has requested that the house not be listed on the National Register. l :J DO y DO x z TYPE III Facade and Plan FHR-8-300A (11/78) UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR HERITAGE CONSERVATION AND 'RECREATION SERVICE NATIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES INVENTORY --NOMINATION FORM CONTI NUATION SHEET 4) ITEM NUMBER 7 PAGE 9 TYPE IV. Tnis house, perhaps the mst distinctive of the pair-house types, is characterized by a three-room linear pattern in whic...'l the side . pair of roans are squares (X) and the inside room in a square (XV which is only half as laJ:ge. The smaller center unit creates an. indented . space which serves as a ·porch. Xl X X ~ 'IYPE IV plan 1he facade piercing rules for 1YPE 'N prescribe either a sYIIlrn.etrlcal ''window-door-window'' pattern or a simple tHO opening "door-windm-r arrangement for the smaller internal square. The side rooms can bave .one or two windows placed symmetrically. The Theusen-Petersen house . (originally only a one story house) and the Jens C. Nielsen hoUse are tHO excellent and well preserved examples of TYPE IV. Tnere is one subtype of the fourth type: A) TYPE IVA. As in TYPE III, this subtype of TIPE IV consists of only two-thirds of the complete house. This rather peculiar house occurs with some frequency and the Dykes Sorensen house illustrates this design variation of the TYPE IV pair-house. 1YPE "'£VA FHR-8-300A ( 11/78) UNITED STATES DEPARTt-1ENT OF THE INTERIOR HERITAGE CONSERVATION AND RECREATION SERVICE NA TIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES INVENTOR Y -- NOMINA nON FORM CONTI NUATION SHEET 1 2 3 4 . ITEM NUMBER 7 PAGE 10 James Deetz, Invitation to Archaeology (Garden City, N.Y.: History Press, 1967), p. 45. The NatlIral See R.W. Brunskill, Illustrated Handbook of Vert".acular Architecture (London: Fa~.;r and Faber, 1971), pp. 95-105; Henry G1assie, Folk P.ousi.J;lg in l1i..dd1e Virginia (Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 1975), pp. 19=41; and AUstin Fife, liThe Stone Houses of Northern Utah," Utah Historical Quarterly, 40:1 (Winter 1972), pp. 6-23. Sigurd Erlxon, Svensk Byggnadskultur (Stockholm; Alctiebo1oget Bokverk, 1947), pp. 286-331; and Gurmar JabIl, Byggeskikker Pa Den Norske Landsbygd (Oslo: Haschehaug,1925). . . . . . Jonas Klercker, "Officersbosta1.1en I Slr.ane Under Indelningsverkets Tid (1682-1878) ," Skanes Hembygdsforbund Arsbok (1969), pp. 34-57. FHR-8-300A ( 11/78) UNITED STATES DEPARTf.1ENT OF THE INTERIOR HERITAGE CONSERVATION AND RECREATION SERVICE - NATIONAL REGISTEROFIDSTORIC PLACES INVENTOR Y -- ].\10MINA TION FORM CONTI NUATION SHEH ITEM NUMBER 8 PAGE 2 broken up into a variety of small and often odd-sized compartments. 5 The pair-house, hmYever, was introduced into Skane in the 18th century with the Swedish army of occupation as an officers' dwelling. TI1ese houses differed from the nonnal pa:ir-house in that they were often two-rooms deep and the center room was larger than the side roans. 6 This variant of the pair-h::mse proved popular with the local residents and influenced the building of rnaIo/ farmhouses of similar plan. 'The balan:ed order of the pair-house facade was favored over the often disorganized asymmetry of the Danish longhouse. There are several early houses in the Copenhagen area which indicate that the tripartite, symmetrical pair-house had penetrated tr.e Danish upper-class by the beginning of the 19th century. Spurveskjul, an estate in Lyngby built in 1805, displays both the three-room plan and distinctive three-bay facade lvhich characterize the pair-house . 7 While extensive architectural research has not yet be accomplished for 19th century Danish fann houses, the pair-house type seems to have generally replaced the older longhouse on larger fams by thB l850s and l860s. The bouse is almost invariably found as a ovo-room deep house and often sports a centrally placed cross gable on the facade. The pair~house was a relative newcaner to nrral Denmark when the Hormon converts began leaving for Utah. Yet, the house was obvious on the prosperous fm."lIls as 8 . replac~ent for older houses associated w"ith a peasant agricultural heritage. Mormon converts generally came, not from the poorest level of society, but from the rural laboring and artisan classes, groups which had not shared in the prosperity of the 19th century land reforms. Utah offered a new set of opportunities and the memory of the middle-class house did not fade. \-lhen ne\-1 houses ,,,,ere built in Zion, the pair-house became an attractive reality. The pair~house type 'vas, then, introduced into Utah from various points in Scan:linavia. Oluf Larsen had known the bouse in NO!1vay, Peter Monson had probably built tr..em in Sweden, and Rasmus Jensen 'vould hav"'e S2en tbera as he worked the large fauns around his village home in Denmark. Co.ning together in Utah, these diverse streams of tradition merged to create an essentially ne\J architectural form. The pair-house at once looked back to its roots and fon-lard as a model in its mID right; it was both Scandinavia'1. and Nonnon. Its distinctive form ,.,as a reminder of the past, an expression of the present, and a hint of a millenial future. Not all Scandinavian immigrants chose the pair~house. A great many opted for the· Anglo-American house types \.ffiich they found being built by their neyl English speaking neighbors. But the crucial point is that these newcomers had a choice to make; all their decisions "'ere FHR-8-300A (11/78) UNITED STATES DEPARTt'lENT OF THE INTERIOR HERITAGE CONSERVATION AND RECREATION SERVICE NATIONAL REGISTER OF mSTORIC PLACES INVENTORY -- NOMINA TION FORM CONTINUATION SHEET ITEM NUMBER 8 PAGE 3 not already made. The pair-house is important as a symbol of the cultural diversity which was the early Mo:rmon Church. 1 2 See '~illiam Hulder, Horoe,.,ard to Zion (Hinneapolis: Minnesota Press, 1957) pp. 248-273. University of See Richard Jensen, "Glimpses of Mantua Ward I s History," Unpublished manuscript, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Jensen I s research demonstrated that in the primarily Danish community of Mantua in Box Elder County, Danish as the pr.JlCiple larguage persisted until the turn of the century. 3 Sigurd Erixon, Svensk Byggnadskultur, p. 286. 4 Gunnar Jahn, Byggesld.kker Pa Den Norske Landebvgd. 5 Bjarne Stoklund, Bondegard og B~f:eskik (Copenhagen: Faellesforenings Handooger, 197 ,pp. 55-76. 6 See, Jonas Klercker, "Officers bostellen I Skar.e • • .," pp. 34-57. 7 Harald Langberg and Hans E. Langkilde, DfulSk Byggesaet Om..1aing 1792 og 1942 (Copenhagen; 1942), p. 116. Dansk Historisk ~HUSETTS, Franklin County, Colrain vicinity, Smith, Arthur A., Covered Bridge, W of Colrain .nsville Rd. (02/03/83) RASKA, Colfax County, Schuyler, Oak Ballroom, Colfax St. (02/01/83) Dixon County, Wakefield, Swedish Evangelical Lutheran Salem Church, Off NE 35 ~3RASKA, J/01/83) . l~ORTH CAROLINA, Person County, Bushy Fork vicinity, Henry-Vernon House, SW of Bushy Fork on NC 49 (02/03/83) SOUTH DAKOTA, Hughes County, Pierre, Hyde Buildings, 101 1/2, 105, 108 1/2, and 109 S. Pierre St; and 105 1/2 Capitol Ave. (02/01/83) " UTAH, Millard County, Scipio, Thuesen-Petersen House (Scandinavian-American Pair-houses TR), 260 W. Center St. (02/01/83) .-."UTAH, Salt Lake County, Salt Lake City, Casto, Santa Anna, House, 2731 Casto Lane (02/03/83) "OTAH, Salt Lake County, Salt Lake, Hintze, Anders, House (Scandinavian-American Pair-houses TR), 1249 ~. 2300 East (02/01/83) /UTAH, Sanpete County, Ephraim, Andersen, Claus P., House (Scandinavian-American Pair-houses TR), 2,nd South St. (02/01/83) / OTAH, Sanpete County, Ephraim, Andersen, Lars S., House (Scandinavian-American Pair-houses TR), ~3 N. 200 East (02/01/83) .YUTAH, Sanpete County, Ephraim, Jensen, Hans C., House (Scandinavian-American Pair-houses TR), 263 E. 100 South (02/01/83) .rU'T AH, santete count~, Ephraim, Jensen, Rasmus, House (Scandinavian-American Pair-houses TR), 97 },.-100 sour (02/01/83 . . UTAH, Sanpete County, Ephraim, Larsen, Oluf, House (Scandinavian-American Pair-houses TR), 75 S. l 'OO West (02/01/83) /UTAH, Sanpete County, Ephraim, Nielsen, Jens, House (Scandinavian-American Pai~holiSes TR), 192 / W.200 South (02/01/83) / UTAH, Sanpete County, Fountain Green, Barentsen, Andrew, House (Scandinavian-American Pairhouses TR), UT 30 (02/01/83) . /UTAH, Sanpete County, Manti, Hansen, Peter, House (Scandinavian-American Pair-houses TR), 247 S. 200 East (02/01/83) VERMONT, Addison County, Bristol, Bristol Downtown Historic District, Main St. (02/03/83) VERMONT, Washington County, Plainfield, Plainfield Village Historic District, High, School, Main and Water Sts., and Brook Rd. (02/03/83) VERMONT, Windsor County, South Reading, South Reading Schoolhouse, Felchville-Tyson's Corner Rd. (02/03/83) VERMONT, Windsor County, South Royalton vicinity, Royalton Mill Complex, N of South Royalton on Town Rd. 12 (02/03/83) The following properties were also entered in the National Register but were excluded from a previous notice: . MAR YLAND, Baltimore (Independent City), Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond, Baltimore Branch, 114 E. Lexington St. (01/27/83) WISCONSIN, EauClaire County, EauClaire, Barber, James, House (EauClaire MRA), 132 Marston Ave. (01/28/83) WISCONSIN, EauClaire County, EauClaire, Barron~ ;Vlartin Van Buren, House (EauClaire MRA), 221 Washington St. (01/28 / 83) WISCONSIN, EauClaire County, EauClaire, Brice~ Orlando, House (EauClaire ,VIRA), 120 Marston Ave. This text message is used to keep the image from rotating in ocr process. Be sure to crop the top .25" off after the ocr process. PHOTOGRAPHS & SLIDES Hintze, Anders, House. 4249 S 2300 East, Salt Lake County, Utah. Hintze, Anders, House. 424982300 East, 8alt Lake County, Utah. Hintze, Anders, House. 4249 S 2300 East, Salt Lake County, Utah. Hintze, Anders, House. 4249 S 2300 East, Salt Lake County, Utah. .. . /' -." . .-- ':~::'.:-::T.~:':" " ""'"""':.?7._~.....~~~:.",,;;; ,'F ' \ Anders Hintze House Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah Rear east Photo: Tom Carter, February 1981 Negative: Utah State Historical Society 2 of 2 W9klf1 Piii'~6 ' This text message is used to keep the image from rotating in ocr process. Be sure to crop the top .25" off after the ocr process. MAPS & DRAWINGS This text message is used to keep the image from rotating in ocr process. Be sure to crop the top .25" off after the ocr process. RESEARCH NOTESIM'SCEllANEOlJ~ The Anders Hintze House Holl aday, Utah Current Owner: Glenn Hintze 4255 South 2300 East Salt Lake City, Utah Statement of Significance The Anders Hintze house in Holladay is significant as an example of Scandinavian vernacular architecture in Utah. The house contrihutes hi storically to the thematic nomi nati on, liThe Scandi nav; an-/\merican Pai r-house in Utah." Additionally, the Hintze house remains as one of the few homes in the Salt Lake Valley dating to the 1860s. Oe5cription This house, built in the 1863-1864 period, is an example of the TYPE IIA pair-house. Thi s subtype is characteri zed by a two room rleep pl an. The hOllse ;s one story high and is built of locally produced adobe which was p1as te ren over at an early date. The present stucco exterior was applied in the lQ40s and remains consistent \I.,rith the historic appp.arance of the house. A small adohe lean-to bedroom extension was appended to the original house at th e southwes t corner. A scroll-hracketed porch once ran the 1engtl1 of the facade but was removed in the 1940s. The absence of this porch remains the only major alteration of the house. Hi story Anders Hintze was born in 1821 in Herslex, Roskilde Parish, Denmark. Hintze converted to the LOS Church in the late l850s ~nd emigrated to Utah in the early 1860s. Arriving in Salt Lake rity, Hintze t'eceived a land grant which extended from 3900 South to 4500 South and from ?300 East to 2700 East . A farmer by trade, Hintze prospered and eventually mar'r-ied three wives. Despite the large size of the home, only one wife, Karen Sophie Swenson, lived in the main house. The other wives occupied smaller hou ses located on the family property. After Anders Hintze's death in 1888, the house passed to hi s SOri , Ferdinand. The younger Hintze married four wives and held the duhious honor of bei ng the fi rst r~ormon arrested unde r the provi s'l ons of the Edmunds Act (anti-polygamy) in 1882. -------1.1,55 Sa. Z. ~oo ~. l\c'.:Jres:; of ,7 ite ~2411C11 So. 2500 E . .~1~?~·~~i!!:i~.,~'~li~F~.~._. ___--;;~ ~ ~ _.. __. _ bri'l'in~.l :?!."es~nt U'3~ 0-,mer l1.n~. ,,",~ .... c;:: J;; • I 5 _ ;eel . ..!:..." . "r,a teriai I .. 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For exar'lP18 , have t.'1el."e ')een any a(:fiitions? . '::1ere? -1):I.e,."'1? I~ ,"-.That '\.Tays :1as use t'1e interior S:Jace heeri altere:'.,? ': icts the buildinq ':..--een stuccoed or ot.l1er'Tis e S;1eat'1ed? of 4-~ S~ '-- +\~ -+0 ~ ~~ Wo..S' b~~ ((~or), a.. UJaU Wc:u ~b~ ·3··· 40 Describe t.lte uhysical condition -+""-": ~ ~- d, a..cL~ -f\........ T~hat 5. ~ cl C7V"\ -...1-\....a,.. ~ c. kJ' "'-0 are the future plans for rn .. . ~ ,\-\+ ~ w &v.IJ cJ "-CU the site c.t t~,e uJ::'esent ti"'l.e . ~ " l~ ~od C8Y\~. ILL .~ ~ ,'~ ~ b<..~ ~·t I t; ce b-==t.cA:. ~ ~ ~S-A., ~ ~ -TkJa. ~"'i~ a::t; 0"= ~cJ Gi ~,., .. R ., ..-c 0* -'Ai/.fl CtA,..,v....).1I'\.'1 t:....u.Jo.. y, t:1e s ite? I i kR.. '""-a b; c!J ~ n:s.t-~ -4- kA.. ~ ~e ~ ~, ~ .(.csz.i.J ~ ~~ ~""'OVcJ ~ wovlc. C\A: ~. :1'oYCA. ~~ 'C'• • ha.s ekprdUcJ ~ in~ ~f'\ ~i~'i +~ ~ ~ d t.Vev~ ~ \'"4-. .., m ... ~'h+CJ-J'~C~ r ~~ ~ ""-- . ~j ,') " , ~ £c..{l..IL. ~ ~.'...p~ '- ~ ~...e . 4-~ ~ , .Ico,v-'0~ V~l1n1' ~~i ' ·,ources usee. J.n t;le .llstOry ',¥'\ u oia::ies" fa-:-ily histories! nelS~Japers . etc . ) (":> - ~ ~. ~+-+~ • . • ..:t . , k e:!:"sons lllt2rv~ewe( ' ·. ,.JOO s .' , ~ G.~~~t ~~~O t=: f..Ji..,+", ~\ b; ev~ tv\CSJ:lay ~...~~ (~~I0tv~~) t-l9tl..A.dD.,/, .5a...rlA: l.o.Ac:.c.. ~ I ~ b..J i~ N..e,.'...I~'- W~ (1",1) It A t4;~~ 9b e' ~~vi'c.u.J, 1Y\ ..... G ~ t;. '-I jn-h:...-..., ~ . .30, 1'1's lMr:~: f.l ~~~d D~I v~. X. p.435 7. ?erson cormilin'.! form. )':;~~ tln~ WI''''v/~ Address S Lc:.. <.03 E., Tele?hone ~ttLl'11 SQ. -r~ f7<11 {) "2.. 53 3 - 5'" 5S to · Preservation ?larmin--r ()::fice Society Utw~ ;~istorical Te 'ple -::: alt L.3ke City, Utah 50:3 '2. ~outh o '3 4102 va..c.~ -cs-i 4,.- '1." . Year Juilt ---1. =:>2sc::E1e t':1e historical si%if:icancp. 0:: t~e :::it2 , Ir..cLi'.e-:l. eisC"ussirm of t.l1e ori~ina.l and ' su-,l;s~querlt 0"rnc::::= ~1-:t~3 CLl1I.~i. eVents a~socia.te ': -,Ti t'-1 the ')uil,:in-T anc; th,:! oT.mer-s" r:. ~~ ~ Q ~hA.. S~ 9t tg rsq l-l ; ~ AV\<~ b r;r.., Wo.l +<:.A..,t ~J. y\ ;"'" -h",~ a.....f..lv c..,..-- ~ cl &.v9"".....t-d +0 ~ a '9. ; '"\ ;~ t(l...oy'~ ~~"'" kL'ck~~. ~ ~d -+0 ~ ;.... l'uA "'-"_ o,JV\ ~~ J:. ~...-EM w 0" cl • ~c..L, ~Irl'l i'j~ __ . ., \ a.-d J.4oy-,H 'j l-li", 4-"C.A-" Yvvw$-1'ervvl +0 sO tV a.J 4~ L'-.L&( ..t-I"\.I,A..UL~h ~ (tnl-~~ 181ct - l~), 5~d~ntlvi~ (\ b'gS-8'l), ~d w~ t?v'e~~ ~ -r~ ~ ~s-i~ ( I g151 - q 0) , f-l c wru.l I i\ +,:t. vt-, Ca...R.JL1. d- -+\.,..A.. 'l l=~. ~ '* t1 -+-klt V~().....v..; ~l1 ~ ~ I d, Vy\"~, x)a....~ ; -vto pt. -\:-1..-v... ~"--""' . l-/ i 1"\-+ c......" -::r." ~o wev -I-l~~ d --+~."'9-'"A..o/- +0 ~ t it'\. 4~ pa.v4 kA.., T t..--v ~ • ~G¥vi j.(, ~ ,-...-y," ~ ~ .sp V\'I\.C\j D,·*-c-t... LfJlW~o/l1 (~v..Ja..p~ ~QJ2~ ~\ ~~J.<.cu.....t.- c;) ~~ l-le ~ d-. i f'\ l t1 "Z. ~. l q 0 to G~ 5~~· L.o.k..ct. v~ ~d --t-~-A- -CoY 'I ~o · +~ Boc91c.. G?:b ~ch... ~ ~&..d ~\...L ~~(.,L~ O=b ~.J ~ PV~~'i' , .5<..t...-pWvt~ '+'. -~ ~ood C~ ~ ~c:... Wru alao ~ ~ \_" . 1r-n'1~ .sy~ ~.. l-Jir'\-+~ h\..~'-ed -!.~ w;~. l1vz.. -+irPt::; dA''I'(7y~d. ~ 0" """ .d ~..a.. t9-tM....~ ~ ~ l \ -<.,.. d "'" o...~ a. ~ ~ i l) Utah State Historical Society Property Type: Site N o. --.::=:::::==~__ Historic Preservation Research Office Structure/Site Information Form 1 z o ~ <I: U u.. ~ -424'1 'Sou+h 2300 Ea.a.l-Name of Structure: AvJc.rs H lV\tze ~V£ w UTM:I\J: 45(j 3$.5(:} Street Address: b Ie.~ n J. Present Owner: Z C E; .q~400 Owner Address: R. IE. ~ \~tze 4255" Sou-#! 23(){) East- if>&, 3-irA- Effective Age: 120 1~ Year Built (Tax Record): C. Legal Description 25 T. Tax N: Kind of Building: 18 -12.Q.2 -(J()l COM 1002. 54 fr 5 FR ~ V4 [Oe SEC,. .3 T zs ~ lE. ..:sL,. mER s l~s", l8 Fr E Ztf7.7s Fi N l3S.18 Fr W 2'17.7 S- F=r W BE" FeetAbE'I91 2 . A\'\devs ~Iy)~ Original Owner: d~\h"q Original Use: Building Condition: o o o j xcel lent r/ Good o 3z o ~ <I: Present Use: ~OOd Site Ruins Deteriorated Photography: Preliminary Evaluation: D pnaltered cAign ificant rsI Minor Alterations o Major Alterations Date of Slides: Views: 0 Front 0 Side 0 Rear ~ Tax Card & Photo c/Biographical oc o o u o Contributory Final Register Status: Not of the o~National Landmark Historic Period I!'f National Register o Not Contributory State Register Date of Photographs: 0 Other o o o District Multi·Resource Thematic Photo No.: Views: 0 Front 0 Side 0 Rear 0 Other R}lsearch Sources: => :!: o o Slide No.: rl"sanborn Maps w d~lh~ Integrity: ~ Abstract of Title ~ Z Construction Date: (, l~b3-6~ Demolition Date: ~Plat Recordsl Map Building Permit Sewer Permit ;r City Directories Encyclopedias ~ Obiturary Index ¢' County & City Histories Bibliographical References (books, articles, records, £.lHa~ {JJJn~ ~ o jlewspapers ~ Utah o o o LOS Church Archives LOS Genealogical Society U of U Library BYU Library USU Library SLC Library Other interviews, old photographs and maps , etc.): . Hi~ntzeta.M~o/ b~lt\ea~lcJ ~ds l.-DS frHl~\iJ Stz:tr { l\Jovc~bev 6/ Researcher: State Historical Society Personal Interviews o o o o o lag z: Date: Street Address: 4 W II: ::l I- () w !:: J: () II: <I: 4249 Architect! Builder: Building Materials: Building Type/Style: 'say&, 2"300 ~!- Site No: AV\d~rs ~. hV\ t-ze.. adobe. aMO e\~s+Cr pa IY' h6U~ ty pc.,/ lJe.V nacJl.a.r Description of physical appearance & significant architectural features: (Include additions , alterations, ancillary structures, and landscaping if applicable) 5 > II: oI- en J: Statement of Historical Significance: Construction Date: ." H !III 1 Zf . Gi- till J. t f D I (H E_ 1.2 ') '3 S 2"300 E SL (. U T~~ -0 . 3! ~~~) - - r s - - - . - - - -~ ~ () '- -:: - _I . :. L,. -',' ! :-- ' .- ' . - ' .: ,. - -, . . -o ((;;01 0 (t.. i~' I. '7 f) S I" N j i l l l , , . l ) T .- '-, :<l ~: o AGR 0 101. 18 FT E 207.75 FT S 120.i6 fT <:, f..',""')' ,. i."-, 84117 . . roT 18 1292-00 1 i--- ~ ';\1. (Jlf~ HINT ZE. .. J_ ~ c\~r.s 4255 ~ 2300 E ~L " - "0 "-e L; - VAL' '" - I \JJ:<"S,,-f f- S-'F ~ - Ii ~~;~;: ~~tS~;! ~~!:::::::] ~Hg::}~~~~~~:T: :'::2~~~~~: ~ ~ :~:: ~~::~: ~~: ~ :~~~~" . .. . . 3/ ?~9 •. Rf: ~ __,___ ______ _Q_.r.. H IN TZE. GLEN J . 84117 Sl ( . UTA H --'1 f BUTL ER . KF NN£:!H I?, HHt~1 B. 1( 1292-(104 'H NTZE . f4f! AM AN 42 0 7 ' S ' 2 ~()O f 3, 93() R'S 1:; .705' _ . ... - . ~ - ' ..... It .. l- --- -- --·, - 'O--l .-." -- -_. '3', (; 2~OO f SU. UTA H 1-- ~L .. v:\, U~J,I_C"!__ _,_ .. ____. _".i~.?_~Q______._ ":':.L" .,_ ' .. -,. 81.117 (I loF j f"T III o / j,~ J', ~ . TOT A~ ... V:. tt'·~ T ,i) _.__ ., , t. C" ..- -, ." "f' i" -. -. ---'1 S--,. .' \.,\ , 1 ': " ,~ ~: "v L:-,IC!,i "l'~ i ... , i-\(" ... ("~;-f-i-·.:) ~ :~:. ", ,. . ~ t-I .. -"[\I- G F T f 2)' .. 7S F T .> .- . ['J j -.- \·;c f(! rc (~!,~~:' S 1;' l, • II I r· t '#J , ~ . _. -'\;.~-: ... . -~ '~1 " ~,, , ,:. ! , , l_ . I, !, " I 1! 1I ____ .. __ __ _ _____ .. _ .., _..._. _ • ___ .. __ _ " " ~ I I r' ~I I ~ 4 -,. -. ~ l .., ; -•. --.----.... -- . ~----.. - .,----. --- ~---,-----~ --- ". ~ j .~,..I <: '... ' ____ ,_,___~________ ....__ . _ _ ._ _ . . . - - -. - .. - - - - - - - - - - - ... - - - -. -';':;"r; (r~-: -:- -- - - - - -0 ~ t:-:q- - - 129 ~ - OO 3 42 17 S rOT 01 _':': :,,:~_c_ !:~' ';. :i ~", 18 'Ii? o (OM 0 C, . . . • '.,) r ~ s F ~ ~J 11 " ((.1<\ ::,;: .:.:; ; _, r,.' r '.,!. "'. ;, • o f.. -R - -- - --- --- ---o-·"t·:..'-'-v----------.. 0 1 - - w rr f 297 7 C f - N , ., '/3 7 W ?'" -, I 1 , .. ," ,.-- ·-'3'.\;'.iO"-lXr .I-- -'_:'_~2~=~,_>_ . ~ __'_i_ .. ;.",_ .. ,. _;_c:. ..::",: , '. "; 4255 S 2300 E o 1>' - - - - - - •- i ) ', l i..~ - $f[~ 'T~ > 5" R ~f.·h::,L ' ';;':,~' .. _-- ·--- .-.-.---- ---.-AC RiO"fGE:- - - -O. 69--MO TOR"'VEHHLfNC)';'-- -' H_ L_OJ!'-l)f.t;-________ ,, ____ _, '-r-' '" 18 1292- 002 o 3.~ -;; ~ - - - - - -- -; .-; ;~- -~('H~r;- ~-O-'~-T~~~": ~~~~ii~ ~;;~l~':~ ~~f ---6 - . -. , O·q 'C0M h. - . . _. _ 8 / . 117 C UTAH 'IT J' ~k ~~~~~! !~~~ _, _~ ~ ~_ J~~~L _~J_~_O_O_~_6.~~~. ~~-,~~Y~'~~~~'~~'~~~-~'~ ~ _~-~ ~~!~~ _~'~l~f__£~i~~ _~ :'.?~ .'. ,1~_ ., . . ·4. 8. EDlYH E. .. ~ I IcrV - r-;"~d;e;s : [-~~t~ ---~~I of Construction: 3(5/1-.5 (;rantee Grantor ~:.. ,. . - ')"0 \ }, [original Ow,n_e_r_:_ _ __ TITLE Year IResearcher: TN- - Pi.- - BLi< - - No:- \ -\:1 i r- '\ I I f- \"("1' r'" \J.,) :r J' I Instr. \...., P-" .: " ~ ll!.l\ t l . , "'-,. " .$ . ; $ ~~" ~~ \ '_" V 'I 0.,. , ....:' .. J '~..- ' -I 2, ; \'1." , ::1 ,,, ::T';'" , ~J ~' ..l.,:j P1\Vfl;S 0/= OlIJ I~ -= (5120 II'-i LAW'=' AONT 1i.wt::: . UlfJTZE HouSE I I t=AUYl.~ I AtJ082.S LO'S 41\J1l ~ ",~..-u ... comes 1.+\llT7l= ( 182/- 1988) . I.}/:IlSte:,/ -,lCJStU1Ii SN · ~il'WfW SOP1+-(4:' I4\1ZFJJ sLl€JJ~~ (J) ~Of.lE~W SClJli..l AM - - Ll I&I-UJII"M' M' . r ~ "T\YY\&. (~,.AINt' ..}£NSOAJ!so - s ~ (2) AM.)£. ,c~2..\IUA- S'1rs(M$~AI BUIA.D5. ~ll.wJ ~ ' lR(g4 I:.T 4X e!.:S Fl'ZOYY\ !\~J t"', (.M\AE l\rnru ~i\N)/11 W \I)t -Z100 , L~: ') BOOIL ~ L Zk:lJS <JOOE C; IWoD< ~9~$""'"-45OO A~ -Z700E. / \ s(.t)~ O~tJ\S# t="£eOINAOD I-ilUT'ZE IBs4 CD ~~\~4 1Yl~ twsKl)f)E OlVoe.G€O (AAJrur mll/I\IIE) 2. '876 ~ ® ---- ..-------------------- --------- 1\1?1l.F~rfJ) llUl I'"'11 F OlY\ tlldlS - mMwf\. UJI4{L - ~~ o&rr-\ ... la78 ~(3) VVH~·J,2.11\- &')Pl-tiA -.MJj~W CB\611d\J11E \"1&4 ~ tJoeA IYll l:::/(~I.Q:"l' ~ 6-n bLaJ~ ~\ VtoE. (YbOrJ6€-'i>t ot:.c, ~J);~ ) GPo"£. 01= 1ST Ml6USOt I uJtlllr~ll lli l M ;<;tmlJ • \ - '4«0&5 '21(10 S . IJ.JLS'- 10 t898 2. 0escrLJe ele l)uilting in ter.:1.3 of its a1:'c'i..tectural si';ni f icance. Inclu"',e ft, ch.:>.racterizatir;l1 of the stvle. a (oes~i?tion of .:-ny unique foat'L,"oces it !'r,i'jht possess as T'Jell a:., t.~q con'C xi':ution i t :,111:es to the environ-"=nt 0 Yh v. -+\....~ S~ W;n ~ LA,..) 4-'0 h~o\'.AUl. + (JL... i~ dA. ~~-S ~ a..s .-t-",-,- ben-)-\.. i-l- Wo..S' (. (t( 0 8' ) ~c...~ --t.~ -..{..Lu\... I ~. LU a..e.Q. Cl ~j~. k.~ ' IS k..e~li I4b~~ wcu IlJ b~ let ~ I ~ ' .,.. ~ .,,-,~~~4-t~~~~""~"""--'+tt---t .. .. ,_,\ _, l~ '. . .j.. .~ . --0Mtt-'''-'~ . ' ~ Q ~lA.~ ~~--:-t n-t'f'\ £\ "'~'"':.lt.:::r, .-_ .f--.. .~ _. :~. _~~ n ~ -1-1..... ,_. 5-~ +lou- j", -+~. ~ li"';~ ~ . ~Os d.t..:tt,.."Oy~ My. '-l-i,,-+Uw d.uuq ,+ ~-t: .by ~~ Wt+k.. -+~ . ~ O#: ct.. ~s.c..., l ~.~.:\v_ ..c- \ 0 . ~ p~ o.Jo ()w.., ~ re.k~ +'t..~ i ~~ .~\ oervi Y'\.J . . ~ WQ.JU +h.J... . ,"'- ~o..A.~ +0 CfY~ d to '4- ~ 435 : ."'K.,:~. UTAH Weber, proved aborttv'e on account of the intense saline properties of the Lake and other minor causes. L. D. S. Millennial 8taJ·, September 25, 1882 A great deal of building is going on in Salt Lake City, notably in dwellings. L. D. S. Millennial Star, October 2, 1882 Active steps are being taken by brother Arthur Stayner, of Farmington, for the manufacture of sugar. The Utah Legislature has offered $5,000, and the U. S. Government $1,200, for the first 7,000 lbs. of merchantable sugar produced in Utah. The caste population of Utah according to the last census in 1880, was as follows: "Mormons," 120,283; Gentiles, 14,156; Apostates, 6,988; Josephites, 820; Doubtful, 1,716. Of the registrars appointed by the Commissioners to enroll voters for the coming November election, 8 are "Mormon," 7 Gentiles and 9 Apostates. For registration purposes the population of the Territory has been allotted as follows: To "Mormon" registrars, 12,308; Gentile, 63,543; Apostate, 68,112. This is a ~pecimen of American justice. L. D. S. Millennial Stw', November 6, 1882 The first arrest under the provisions of the Edmunds Act was made at Big Cottonwood, m the night of the 16th ult. Mr. F. F. ~~~.. \\'ho was to have started tffl a 'iiiiSS16ri ~ to Europe the next morning, was taken into custody as he was driving home in the rain. The arrest was made at the instance of one Julius Jensen, brother to Miss Mary Jensen, a young lady whom Mr. Hintze is charged with having married as a plural wife. Mr. Hintze denies the charge and declares the affair to be purely spite work. L. D. S. M-iilennhtl Stcw, ~ovember 13, 1882 The building "boom" in Salt Lake City still (:ontintles. . . . . L. D. S. M -illennial Star, December 18, 1882 At the sugar works of Mr. Arthur Stayner, in Farmington, the first crystalization has paRsed through the centrifugal machine, the last process, the result being about forty sacks (two tons) of merchantable SUgar. St ..John's Lodge, F. & A . M. , was chartered .July 18, 1882. ' T. B. H. Stenhouse died in San Francisco March 7, 1882. He launched the Daily TeleUI'((lJh in Salt Lake City on July 5, 186-1. P"('viously h(' was occupied chiefly as a newsl:upcl' concspondent; and in 1872 he pubh :. ;jled hiR Rocky Mountain Saints, a compl'ch('Il~ive histol'v. He ran the first news ~tand ill Salt Lakl' (~ity; and his wife, "vho was also an author of note, ran a millinery store in Salt Lake City some years. March 9, 1882, Kanab became the county . seat of Kane county. _" The Swedish Lutheran Church was organized in Salt Lake City July 18, 1882. The Emery Stake of Zion was organized August 13, 1882. Heber M. Wells became Salt Lake City Recorder in 1882, remaining in that position until 1880. The Ladies Literary Club of Salt Lake City filed Articles of Incorporation in December, 1882. Wm. H. Hooper, Utah';.; second congressman, died in Salt Lake City December 29, 1882. He came to Utah in 1850, becoming a merchant. He married a Mormon girl and joined the Church. 'Vent to the legislature several terms, and acted as Secretary of the Territory in 1857. Elected delegate , to , Congress in 1859, serving four consecutive terms, and one other term, the last expiring March 4, 1873. , He was succeeded by George Q. Cannon. He was an original director of the Z. C. M. I., and became its president in October, 1877, succeeding Brigham Young. He founded a bank in 1869, which by reorganization became the Bank of Deseret in 1870. The non-Mormon defender of the Mormons has been given a deaf ear in all times, but from the begfnning he has given us the most valuable, invulnerable, and trustworthy de<fense, the most reliable picture of conditions in Utah. A TRIBUTE :\ Here in Salt Lake City there is the most extraordinary ignorance of Mormonism that can be imagined. I have actually been aEsured by "Gentiles" that the Saints do not believe in the God of the Bible-that adultery among them is winked at by husbands uncler a tacit understanding of reciprocity-that the Mormons as a cla s s are profane , and drunken, and so forth, Now, if they knew anything whatever of the Mormons, such statements would be impossible (unless of course made in wilful malice), for my personal acquaintance with "the Saints" (gained by sojourns among and with them in Salt Lake City, Ogden, Logan, Provo, Nephi, Moroni, Ephraim, Manti, Monroe, Marysvale, Panguitch, Orderville, and in othel' settlements for some months) has shown me that in all classes alike the reverence for the God of the Bible is formulated not only in their morning and evening prayers, but in their grace bet'ol'e every meal; that so far from there being any exceptional familiarity between families, the very reverse is con3picuous, fol' so strict is the Mormon eti<-luette of social courte::;ies, that householrls which in England would b(' on tht:' m()~t inti:• •"Iillnl: "'" ((,/ll S,1i1l18 - , 1 TO/II' . 1"1'11:; ," tI" , SllItes, 1I'II t! NUl/lid TIt"III'- "·ill. '1'11 , '1'1' .1/I) " I/i" , IIIIIlJl!1 tilt: ,lIl/rIllIlJl.'; , By I'hil Rllhill>-'''11. 1"s ::, . Yy\"-I"..'S i"\ ~ 'It m~'1 cLLa.;k~ CA9-\2~/-...Q,.. !~ (~)~ ~ l,'reol ~2-r~. Ii-__ vovt 1- ~ f" -ku... ~ do..;C~ .. ~\--,.A.. Cl;t '+-b +lc!)~ ~ ~~ se..-v~d i Cl'. . ,J" ...*~J lrv. . . Q. d, l~"\~ ! t\ ~~. a), -{.k..,- ~ cJ~cA..... Clh+-e-.....- -bu.... .....~ v u.es ~~~ ~ 0- ~ in 4~vl'A,q ../-0 +VJ-O ~. Fev- Vh.~ '1~~ wi d.<z., ~ 4iu:.c~ Q..vvd GD' >c 2 0 ( ~ ~ ~ WGU ~d~d +k ~,.} .........." d +'" >-e.JZ... ~ J:~.k ~~ . ~ I W \~ ~~J ~ vC9Cv-A. . E. ~ 'J { C<...1LJ<...., ~ +a./~ ~ ~ ~ "-+t~ aU ' 5bv-~ ~o~d, ~ +toO<"'s ~.. S~~ ~/V'"I.fd WCA.Jc-e. d, CWv d a.. ~ u., L.U~ W..d. by W i",+CA...av'\t cl. ~\ W\~ .. r-~ -t-yO\ ~ $C\..'15 -+\""'a;t- f'\Iv:rv~ 0~~ ~;+\~ ( i~c.e.u..~'J r:. ~"'r~-t:M-t ~ ~q~ ~~ Prd. ~o~ a.k ~ p~i~r . ~ 14;V'.4-- c:...Q.... ~d ) ~ h.i ~ s:.u..v- vi \'"' \ n CJ (2,-'h.-~· ~d/;".Q~ ~ l~ ~ ~ ~.y. l\.u... ~.~U:, . G_ . t..e.~ -::Je--..,....:u--, l-li~4~1 d--~~ . --+~ ~ ~ . l/w~ Or", cl h.cu ~~ ~ ~ s,'", u.. ~.. . ·3 ·· ":. De.scril)e the D'wsical con(;ition n-: t_"!e site c.t -'-kIt. obvi(XAl a;t- -t-.~ ~ ~ be:t.c.k. 1 ~ ~ -...l..~ C7V"'\ ~. ~ k..r 0... d..~ ~. l'):::'esent ti"-~e. '" j", ~O d C8Y\ ~. ILL ~ ~,~ ~ be., ~ ~4 (c c Va:::e ~ d. -+t...a... t~\e ~S-A.., ~ ~ o-f ~Yi I\.~ -l..o 4A.fLQ 6...vJe:;.. 'I ; 'hat are the future plans for t~1~ ~ ~ site? +t.....A... LJI'n+~ WG-v..J)cJ libt ~ n:~~ ~ c::J (;" IfJffJ' ..,' A84iJh b; J l ~ c;l" rn .. , Ok- ~e ~ c::l h..ru ~ .(. CJ2.1l.s k ~~ ~-«OVcJ ~ wovlc. c::vt; ~. ::Toyc... ~~ ~ has Ckprcl$-Cd ~ iY\~ ~r\ ~iV\q +h..c... . ~ ~ dt..vev~ t>n, \~-l- , a-., m .... #-l 'h +C-LJ'~C~ I ~~ ~ kt.. . LU ill ~ ~, ~ tc...:..p~ ~ ',,,,- ~ ..(:.~" ,,+-of ........... _ _ ~L- -..{-~ ~ II vac~. ~~. C;Q1.L""CeS usee. in co"-:oilirrr t :.'!e histo~.! Gia:::ie s ., ::a-"ily histories, OJ n~Js:)a~)e;:-s .a ' •_ .• _ u (?e~.sons iIlt.?nTie;.Je~. ?JOOks . etc . ) 6Y-~e-~, ~~~O ~ I-li ..... +~ bj Ev~ tv\c1.C C.Cly ~..... ~.J~ (~0'iY~ cl) (-1ot£A.~o.."Jl ~ L.a.Ac.c.. ~ I ~ b..j Eti~~ I\L~~ w~ (./(:\,1) A ~i~":J 9'b :r..~+e..vv~ lAko..A: 7. ?erson Tele?hcne ~ ~ ~ St~-ed D~~, v~.:c. co0."()ilirr ~ ::or"". 5 3 3 - 5> 1 55 ?.etu..."t"J'l to · ~reservation ?l~~in~ 0~fice UtaJ.'1 :·:istorir;a.l Society 50:3 ;~. ~outl1 ':c'e~"'ple ~: 3.lt 1'1"1.5 p. c.J3S YV\~. G~ t:", I-li~"h:",___ , ~.3o, L.3..1.:e City, Utr'lh r~ U02 ., ,.·;·i ONAL REGISTER HISTORIC OF ' . ;,'n :o,;>p i •• D4tpal"tm.nt of Ute Intenor~ EVALUATION / RETURN PLACES SHE E. . ' . • " .'1 1 ~urf. ~S;Ie' Uq.staptive Review: .( Hin~ze, l'.nders, House (Scandinavian-American Pairhouses TR) 'Salt Lake Countv -UTAH 9,4k--2YoS y . Working No. Fed.· Reg. Datoe: . Date Due: /o/7Ir~ Action' ~ resubri'lissiorT nomin.:tion by person or local government ~e~ I~~: ":"'/!_ sa~~I~_ ,~,r~.;..q_u_e_s_t~. . ?-. /d/.zj.../d ~ ACCEPT~ ' . . ~TURN~dlf_ REJECT . .' . Federal. Agency: _ _ _ _ _ __ .~ . ....:;:::.tObject~o. n, <. ;:. '. / S ubsta.nt I v& .. . - _ _._.. _.a._p_p_.~a . ~ ~R I: .. .. deC_iS_i_ .O_Il_.'_ " ._ .. .._....:. .' ,.~~i .... ;-... .. ... ~ .~ • Nominationr~t'lirj,~d ' . ~: ' '- i~ ~=- ~ '::'~X t~:dh~t~af c'~r~~~tio ~s " ~ited ' - - -~ ...-- : - .•. 1 .. Name -' .. : . .. ,~ .. ....... . ' ~u.:.. .' . ...o ...~.. Owner of Property ", ,': '.. ~. ; L' ~;~~-:-' - .. . ~ _.,: .. . . to .. f.;..occ:ltion· of Legal Description , . " "--_~ tIMft -....0_ "igttt.. ~ :. Description "'" _ _ -... ....... Ni"_. '. c - I t _ . ._ _ UNlIIHK' aIt., _ ~ summary paragraph completenesSl clarity al terati on s/ in teg ri t y ,.{~ j '-' ' ' ' , . CMc:k _ ",.",K _ __ OtIgtnal· all. _ ._ I . ..'; . " ~: . -.. - .. Representation in Existing Surveys _ '. " ' Sta.... _ . ... .- . ;; .:· ·:} ·:· .'~i~~~~.';::;-:-):,~(: ..... : .' . $ .. Classification' t: ~ .. . . .. ... :, 2. Location ~~ below " :::.~;~;:f~substanti~& reasons" discuss.edbetow . ~ '. ~ . ~ : . -._,... _ no' . -....• .~ :. -..: ....•.. ,r /~:cance summary paragraph ~ompleteness. r.- • ..., clarity applicable- criteria justification ' ot areas . checked _ relating significance to the· resource contaxt relationship: of integrity . . t'a significance justification ot exceptic,n other; :!~"2)J~jor Bibliographical References --:i~.~e09r3phicarData - ,:.; ..~f!, .". ~._:.; : . "~ " ,' r "-~ ·'-:--. - .~<, - -" '~':'.. .. ~'~, . ,.A A '7'~~~~~'______ ." ~~"""'~'" -c-'_____ t:: ~p"", --c . - .'"- .• _ _.. -".>''''~ .........~ "-""-~' J-m.c.~ '~<J. Form Prepared By 12. State Historic: Preservation Officer Certification' MtioIwI. ~' 3. -- - '_",,: Other Maps Photographs Other (:7- lestion s . concerning this nominatio.", may . be directed to ____--:.__________ Signed~ :1I·.. r.i;j(~:S :~~~ny Item may be continued Phone: 202 on an attached sheet 272 - 35 C - ---- · ~;:;~· U.3~{;~/_~) ~ -- _ -V? ~_o..a O-?-t.. I I -~~-ot -4~, t2&d'r~') I_Y~~ L~ _ , /~ ~'-~- ~~~-f~~~ ~ ~~-e~ cj _Vv~cJ ~ . Z-h __ __~~ , I wUL~ i ~ ,I I I I, 1;" - - - ~~\_ / rknclvw ~_/_ ~ _..-#-cv1.<'Y\ ~)1'2 ~~, - - - <1/V<cI I ___ _ .vJ?Ur~J~· ~~j, ~' .;;bG_~~ If6os , Z;~ ~~-~ ~ ~ ~ r-~ ~-~'--~ 1/C#;~~~ _ ~ ~ j?~Q5 / a_ _ ~ -~- SJf -I I - trM..r~Y I I I ~ Art .z.0 . i -~~ 1': < ~~ ,;tX., "4~ ~ a2--J_ jJ~~~ - - L!5- _ --------- ~ ------ Utah State Historical Society Property Type: Site No. _ _ _ _.___--,- Historic Preservation Research Office Structure/Site Information Form 1 Street Address: o Name of Structure: Anders Hintze House z t- <I: U u: i= z w o UTM: 12/430400/4503350 4249 South 2300 East T. Present Owner: Glenn J. Hintze Owner Address: 4255 South 2300 East, Salt Lake City, Utah 84117 Year Built (Tax Record): Legal Description c. 1863-64 Effective Age: Kind of Building: 2 S Tax#: 120 years R. 1 E S. 3 18-1292-001 Com. 1002.54 ft S fr n 1/4 cor sec 3 T 2 S, R 1 E SL Mer S 135.18 ft E 297.75 ft N 135.18 ft W 297.75 ft to beg. 2w (/) => Original Owner: Anders Hintze Construction Date: c. 1863-64 Demolition Date: Original Use: dwelling Present Use: dwelling (/) => t- <I: t- Building Condition: Integrity: Preliminary Evaluation: o lJ Unaltered t;YSignifi ca nt C Major Alterations o o Final Register Status: (/) o o Excellent 12'"Good o 3 z o Site Ruins Deteriorated Photography: ~inor Alterations Date of Slides: Views : 0 Front 0 Side 0 Rear o o o o Not of the Historic Period Contributory Not Contributory Slide No.: 0 Other National Landmark lJ Distri ct National Register 0 Multi·Resource State Register o nematic Date of Photograph s: Views: 0 Front 0 Side U Rear 0 Other i= Research Sources: t- I:;Y"Abstract of Title ~anborn Maps 0 W ~ k3" Plat Records l Map t;;('City Directories VUtah State Historical Society 0 BYU Library Ilt" Tax Card & Photo o Building Permit o Sewer Permit Il6"'Biographical Encyclopedias 0 Personal Interviews 0 USU Libra ry 0 LOS Church Archives 0 SLC Library 0 LOS Genealogical Society 0 Other <I: Z => U oo IH Obiturary Index [t(' County & City Histories Photo No.: Newspapers 0 U of U Li brary Bibl iographical References (books, articles, records , interviews, old photographs and maps, etc.): Salt Lake County Records Hintze Family Genealogical Records LDS Mi11enia1 Star, November 6, 1882 Researcher: Tom Carter Date: ---- -- ~ --- - - - -- --- - ---- -- ~ -- Street Address: 4 w a: ;:) I- U W I:I: U a: « -- ----- ~--- Site No: Architect! Builder: Building Materials: Building Type/Style: Description of physical appearance & significant architectural features: (In c lude additions, alterations, ancillary structures, and landscaping if applicable) This house, built in the 1863-1864 period, is an example of the 'IYPE IIA pair-house. This subtype is characterized by a two room deep plan. The house is one story high and is built of locally produced adobe which was plastered over at an early date. The present stucco exterior was applied in the 1940s am remains consistent with the historic appearance of the house. A small adobe lean-to bedroom extension was appended to tre original house at the southwest corner. A scroll-bracketed porch once ran the length of the facade but was removed in the 1940s. The absence of this porch remains the only major alteration of the house. 5 >a: oI- ~ :I: Statement of Historical Significance: Construction Date: The Anders Hintze house in Holladay is significant as an example of Scandinavian vernacular architecture in Utah. The house contributes historically to the thematic nomination, "The Scandinavian-lmerican Pair-house in Utah." Additionally, the Hintze house remains as one of the few homes in the Salt Lake Valley datirg to the l860s. Arxlers Hintze was born in 1821 in Herslex, Roskilde Parish, Denmark. Hintze converted to the IDS Church in the late l850s and emigrated to Utah in the early l860s. Arriving in Salt Lake City, Hintze received a land grant which extended from 3900 South to 4500 South and from 2300 East to 2700 East. A fanner by trade, Hintze prospered and eventually married three wives. Despite the large size of the horre, only one wife, Karen Sophie Swenson, lived in the main house. The other wives occupied smaller houses located on the family property. After Anders Hintze's death in 1888, the house passed to his son, Ferdinand. The yourger Hintze married four wives and held the dubious honor of beirg the first Mormon arrested under the provisions of tre Fdnnmds Act (anti-polygamy) in 1882. 0 0 0.~ t ~ or:: 0 000 0 0 0 0 0 000 0 0 0 0 0 00 0 00 0 0 + .$ It ., e 0 q 10 II I ", I'%.", ... ~ ... 7 5 ~ .1 Ie:. I :. "\ ~ 3 :-1:ow Researcher: c· L . ,Date: 7-13-7r O~ 7 '(,0 C :Cons1:::".lC':iOll Ja':a \ STRUCTURE/SITE /f;:z~r Ol~ '"',.J. """- """- "'" .' 1"" C al ri ./ ....<, '-..- ........ c 0'= ......or.., 09 .... 0 1:1 O:r:-;'" .. >< Or. O~ C-:l 0:.\ -c 0.)( 0': 0:: Sovi 11 .1 Si:lqle-Family A _,:.ul,ti-Family , _?1Ji:llic _ Cc:mIBrI::iaJ. Building Condition: -.6 '::"v re I J ent _ . ''"-" :J ,-, \..J \; .. R. S. UTM: Tax #: Demolition Date: Occupants: vacant - 0'- -1"'\ Ulaltarad Alterat:.cns _.~jor Altaratials Z~ -~ L ~ Caaa of E'txI~ Views: E'ra1t- SiCa.- Rear- 01:bE'_ Ot:bal::..- Final Register Statu~: Sign;flcmt -Oi.st:ict CQli:::ibu-t:crT _ ,:.ul,ti-~ _'n:eDatic =NotCQn~ _ I:lt:usicn r Research Sources: _ _ .;cs~ of Title _ _ ? lat ?eo:m:!s _ _ _ i?lat /1a%) Tax ~ ~ E'~t::l 3uild:i:lq i?el:IIit _S~i?em.t _ _ Sani:e= !1a;:s ,.... '-.-. 0 T. Lot Photography: Preliminary Evaluation: -' Bl. Integrity: t"'\.".. v 1"'\- Plat -Site _auins Da1:e of SllCes Views: E'ra11:.- S.i.da- oJ FORM -Jel.iqicus _0t:C.er Q;. 1"'\'" INFOm~~TION Street address: 7' 5 c2 ,J'OO cqsf Name of Structure: Frr.li7/ F IIjlzl iI?c Present Owner: C-/ ? hl 71 Owner address: r;z~~ S . ..73 DO c. . Construction Date: I gtSOriginal Use: ;fel L Present Use: "z ~ . !J ::;i~.!::'c:ulce __ u:s _ Cit-I Oil:ec:cries _ _ B:i.ogra;iU.cal E:Ilc"jclcpedias Culrc::1 Ard:ives _L::S GanaaJ.Qqical SOc:iet:l _ _ u of t: Lil:Jl:arl _ s y o t.il:uy ' 1m t.i.Crm:y -~ t.i.i:Il:;uy --Othar - - Cbituarl Index _ _ Count"l , City Hist=ies __ !n'O!rViews ~ --~~ - - t:tah liistcrical SOc:iety Bibliographical References: C:' c 0 I) 1"'\ ,1"'\ .- r. I] 0 0 ,-. o 0 000 000 0 000 0 a 0 0 0 0 000 000 Building Type/Style: Architect/Builder: Building Materials: Description of physical appearance & significant architectural features: /llk./-,:;, ~ < !v./e , 7 !.'1Cl.uC.a aCQitials, alterat:i.cns, and JJ ary st:llCtUZ:es, and landScapi nq it applicable coW"7/ ;;7,/..1 , /"/ "j,Yl c1 . I (c . 1930). ,;1V/ 7/7/..'// /.//:71 17 Statement of Historical Significance: _ _ _ _ .;boriai:lal, AIIIIr'..c:ms Aqr"~t:ll:B ArC:.itac:cJre '!:le Arts _c:am.rce '7J~j,,/.. 4-j/.h rd7 .hfo~ _._ ....... ~Al~""; _ _Scl.enc! _Soc:io-HlDmitar:i.an _~..aticn v/1--t.f"t Hintze. Ferdinand F. Home, /JZ5J South 2300 East, Salt Lake City (SR). Ferdinand F. Hintze was born in Denmarlc in l854, the son of Anders and Karen Sophia Nickolaisen. The fam! ly emigrated to Utah in l864 and shortly thereafter settled in Big Cottonwood. Hintze was devoted to the LDS Church, serving missions to the Northwestern States (1877-78), Scandanavia (l885-87), and was president of the Turkish mi ssi on (1887-90). He was, in fact, ca lled the if "Fathee""of the Armenian Mission" for his work in that part of the world. In 1906 he translated the Book of Mormon into Turkish. in 1928. He died Hintze supervised immigration to the bench area of Salt La[ce Valley and headed the construction of the Casto Springs Ditch and the Cottonwood Canal which flowed through his property. He was also sent to Moapa Valley to supervise the irrigation system there. Hintze married four wives. The first divorced him and the other three lived in adjacent houses in 1865 in Holladay. This home was built/by Hintze iKX~i and his father tKxifixx after their arrival in the val~ey. Later it was the home of Mary Sophia Jensen, Hintze's third wife, whom he married in 1892, and her cyildren. ~leven An interesting aside is that Ferdinand Hintze was the first man to be arrested under the Edmunds Act in l882 as a result of his marriage to Mary Sophia. His wife failed to appear to testify against him and shortly after he went into hiding and then left on one of his missions. lived in the house until her death in 1919. Mary Hintze The house was built on a cobble rock foundation embedded three feet in the ground. For many years the house served as an unofficial communi ty center where church and public meet ings were held in the 20 x 20 foot living room. Every fall after the rag rugs were taken up and the old straw removed, the floors were scrubbed and waxed and a dance was held by Hintze and his wives. Family tradition says that Mormon Church authorities, including President Joseph F. Smith, were frequent guests. Woan Mary Hintze died, her nine surviving children drew lots for her property. The youngest, Glenn Jensen Hintze, drew the family home and has retained ownership since then. Although vacant the home remains basically as 8 B. Review and compliance, public info nnat ion , and legislation 1. i\Tumber of the following review and compliance activities that consumed staff time during the reporting period: a. b. c. d. e. A-95 reViel{S Environmental impact statement reviehTs Section 106 consultations Determinations of eligibility Other 510 60 400 30 o 2. Organization of the review and compliance function in the state historic preservation office: a. Staff member assigned full time to this function? Yes. Name: Wilson G. ~1artin, Preservation Planner. b. Function is shared among various staff members? Yes. Names: Allen D. Roberts, Architectural Historian; A. Kent Powell, Preservation Historian; LaMar Lindsay, Archeologist. 3. General comments on review and cornpliance--problems and accomplishments . We have incorporated the A-95 Review and 106 Consultation since most 106 Consultations take A-95 Review. Therefore Section 106 Consultation are reflected as a portion of the A-95 Review and make up about 80 percent of the A-95 Revieh' process. We have also started to apply the same criteria of review for Federal projects to private projects on state lands and state funded projects. This review is just beginning, but support has been strong from many different state agencies. 4. Number of the following public infonnation and education activities of the State historic preservation office during the reporting period. Indicate subject matter ,.mere appropriate. a. Workshops and conferences (1) Statewide--Governor's Conference on 1 Historic Preservation o (2) Regional (3) Local 15 b. Newsletters o c. "How-to" manuals o d. Survey guidelines 1 AMERICAN SAVINGS & LOAN ASSOCIATION AND SUBSIDIARIES Index to Consolidated Financial Statements and Schedules Financial Statements: Accountants' Report Consolidated Balance Sheets - December 31, 1973 and 1974 Consolidated Statements of Earnings - Years Ended December 31, 1973 and 1974 Consolidated Statements of Stockholders' Equity - Years Ended December 31, 1973 and 1974 Consolidated Statements of Changes in Financial Position - Years ended December 31, 1973 and 1974 Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements Schedules: V Consolidated Property, Plant and Equipment VI Consolidated Reserve for Depreciation of Property, Plant and Equipment XVI Consolidated Supplementary Profit and Loss Information (see note 13 to Consolidated Financial Statements) Schedules I, II, III, IV, VII, VIII, IX, X, XI, XII, XIII, XIV, XV, XVII, XVIII and XIX are omitted because they are not applicable or because the required information is shown in the financial statements or notes to fi nancial statements. Indi vi dual financial statements of the registrant are omitted since consolidated financial statements are filed and the registrant's total assets and gross revenues constitute over 75% of the total consolidated assets and gros s revenues set forth therein. j:; ~ , .... \ tt i l , {.. , L origina'Uy constructed. / It is' representative of the early stuccoed adobe vernacular style with six-over-six windows and little ornamentation. ./ ="J , 'r ~ ", ' -/ .' .' t:'~ \ ( " Anders Hintze House Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah Principal west facade from NW corner Photo: Tom Carter, February 1981 Negative: Utah State Historical Soc. 1 of 2 Anders Hintze Hous e Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah ""05 UTM Reference: 12/430400/4503350 J: f.- ::J o vl $ ).. < f.- :: 0 -- -- ------- -----l... -·-=7,C:'-!-!Il---- ..:- - ·--·---·II ......::-·-II D , ;>~o '. \ j ~:;;.,: ; i~.: :::; ~-: MURRAY .a .", '- ~ \ \ " :1 .!~ :.~,: : :: :: :.: .. .", ' '.. .. ... .. ::::: ~ ~': :.:.:.:.:.::.:.: ;~ :.:.:';'.':." ..... ,' ............... . '. II ... . ( r,. _ .. .. ,,- scon M MATH ESO"< GOVE RNOR Division of State History March 9, 1983 (UTAH STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY) STATE OF UTAH DEPARTMENT OF COMM U NITY AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT MELVIN T. SMITH, DIRECTOR 300 RIO GRANDE SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH 84101-1182 TELEPHONE 801/533-5755 Glenn Hintze 4255 South 2300 East Salt Lake City, UT 84117 Dear Mr. Hintze: It is my distinct pleasure to inform you that on February 1, 1983, the Anders Hintze House at 4249 South 2300 East, nominated by the Historic and Cultural Sites Review Committee and the Utah State Historic Preservation Officer, was officially listed in the National Register of Historic Places by the National Park Service and Ms. Carol Shull, Acting Keeper of the National Register. The National Register of Historic places is the official list of historic properties recognized by the Federal Government as worthy of preservation for their significance in American history, architecture, archeology,engineering and culture. Located in the National Park Service, Department of the Interior, the program is part of a national pol icy to coordinate and support public and private efforts to identify, evaluate, and protect our cultural and natural resources, and is maintained by the Secretary of the Interior under provisions of the National Historic Preservation Act of 1966. Listing in the National Register provides the following benefits to historic properties: -Consideration in the planning for federally assisted projects. Section 106 of the National Historic Preservation Act of 1966 provides that the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation be given an opportunity to comment on projects affecting such properties. -Eligibility for Federal tax benefits for rehabilitations of certain historic commercial, industrial and residential rental buildings. -Consideration of historic values in the decision to issue a surface coal mining permit where coal is located, in accord with the Surface Mining and Control Act of 1977. Sta te History Board: Milton C. Abrams, Chairma n • Theron H. Luke J. Eldon Dorman • Wayne K. Hinton • Helen Z. Papanikolas • • Anand A. Yang • Elizabeth Montagu e • Thomas G. Alexander DaVIS S. Monson • Elizabeth Griffith • William D. Owens This text message is used to keep the image from rotating in ocr process. Be sure to crop the top .25" off after the ocr process. CORRESPONDENCE \ -Qualification for Federal grants for historic preservation when funds are available. Listing does not mean that the Federal Government wants to acquire the property, place restrictive convenants on the land, or dictate the color or materials used on individual buildings. State and local ordinances or laws establishing restrictive zoning, special design review committees, or review of exterior alterations, are not a part of the National Register program and should be clearly separated from the function of the National Register as a tool in the Federal planning process. We would like to send you an 11" x 11" parchment certificate with the gold seal of Utah. It contains the name of the site, the nature of its significance, the date of listing, and the signatures of Governor Matheson, Milton Abrams, Chairman of the Historic and Cultural Sites Review Committee, and Melvin T. Smith, Director of the Utah State Historical Society and Utah's State Historic Preservation Officer. There is no charge. If you would like the certificate, please let us know by mail or call 533-6017. We do suggest that a marker be placed to give. your historic property . recognition. Information regarding cost and ordering and a proposed historic marker text are included if you wish to purchase a National Register marker. Sincerely, ~~/~ Melvin T. Smith Di rector, and State Historic Preservation Officer AKP/ch HISTORIC SITES MARKER ORDER FORH NAME OF SITE Anders Hintze DATE March 8, 1983 HOllse PROPOSED TEXT: Built in 1863-64, this house is significant as an example of Scandinavian vernacular architecture in Utah. Three rooms wide and two rooms deep, the house is built of locally produced adobe which was plastered over. The original owner, Anders Hintze, was born in 1821 in Denmark and emigrated to Utah in the early 1860s. The Hintze House remains as one of the few homes in the Salt Lake Valley dating to the 1860s, and is contri butory to the "Scandinavi an-Ameri can Pai r-houses Themati c Res ources. II ( ) I would like to order a marker with the text as proposed. ( ) I would like to order a marker with the following changes in the proposed text. I am enclosing my check payable to the Utah State Historical Society in the amount of 0$250 \.00 for a 19" x 15" plaque; 0$100 .00 for a 10" x 8" plague; or O$qO.OO for an 6" x 4 3/4" plaque (available only for buildings in historic districts). Remarks: Return to: Preservation Office Utah State Historical Society 300 Rio Grailde Salt Lake City, Utah 84101 Signed: Address ________________________ Phone ------------------------- scon M MA THESON GOVERNOR Division of State History (UTAH STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY) STATE OF UTA., DE PARTMENT OF COMMU NITY A ND ECONO MIC D"V" ,-OPMEN T MELVIN T. SM ITH . DIRECTOR 3OOAIOGRAND E SALT LAKE CITY. UTAH 84101 TELEPHONE 801/ 533-5755 November 30, 1981 Glenn Hintze 4255 South 2300 East Salt Lake City, Utah 84117 Dear f4r. Hintze: At long last federal regulations have been approved and authorization given to the states to resume submission of National Register Nominations. In December 1980 Congress passed ammendments to the National Historic Preservation Act of 1966. One of the ammendments required that if an owner objected his or her property would not be listed in the National Register. In order to comply with this new ammendment the Department of the Interior returned all nominations to the states that were in the National Register Office for review as of December 13, 1980 and placed a moratorium on the submission of new nomi nati ons until regul ati ons \'I'ere approved to meet the December 1980 ammendments. Your property, the Anders Hi ntze House \'1as nomi nated by the State Historic and Cultural Sites Review Committee on May 6, 1981. However, because of the moratorium on submissions it was not sent. We are now prepared to submit the nomination of your property. Enclosed is a waiver letter which, when signed and returned to us, will allow for the listing procedure to move as quickly as possible. This letter is a form letter which the Department of the Interior has submitted to us and which must be sent with the nomination for your property. If you object to the nomination of your property to the National Register of Historic Places you must submit to us a notarized statement that you are the owner of the property and that you object to its listing in the National Register of S:ate History Board: Milton C. Ab ra ms. Chairman • Theron H. Luke • Ted J . Warner • Elizabeth Montague • Thomas G. Alexander Delio G . Dayton • Wayne K. Hinton • Helen Z. Papanikolas • David S. Monson • Elizabelh Griffith • William D. Owens -2- Historic Places. If this notarized statement is provided, your property will not be listed in the National Register of Historic Places only a determination of the property's eligibility for the National Register will be made. The notarized statement objecting to the nomination must be submitted within 75 days of this letter or the nomination will be forwarded to the National Register Office for listing. If you wish to waive this 75-day comment period, please sign and return the enclosed letter and we will forward the nomination of your property for listing. If you have any questions about these procedures or your nomination please call Dr. Kent Powell or Dr. Philip Notarianni at 533-6017.Sincerely, ~WL~ Melvin T. Smith Director and State Historic Preservation Officer 1m Enc. Dr. Melvin T. Smith Director and State Historic Preservation Officer Utah State Historic Society 300 Rio Grande Salt Lake City~ Utah 84101 Dear Dr. Smith: Thi swill confi rm that I am full y aware of the effects of listing a property in the National Register of Historic Places. I recognize that~ under the National Historic Preservation Act, I am entitled to object to the proposed listing of my property by a notarized, written statement. If I am the sole owner and I object, my property will not be . listed. If there are multiple owners of this property and a majority of the owners object, the property will not be listed. Following is the address of my property: Anders Hintze House 4249 South 2300 East Salt Lake City, Utah 84117 I hereby waive my right to object to the proposed listing ~nd notify you that I request that my property be listed in the National Register at the earliest possible date. Sincerely, S(..()f'f M Glenn Hintze 1'l?!iS Sou t.h 2300 ~C\st Salt Lake City, Utah 811 117 ~.4 A TI ,:"S')", r '()\ :""'-Ir.; ) c; Division of State History (UTAH srATE HISTORICAL SOCIETYj ST:' - " OF U ft.-· C~~':' .:H M(~n Ec. r).\j(J ~..1IC r \. ,J> -:::H. I~~~UN I TY AN D C't: 'i~ \ () r) ~. Il" r j I" MELVI N T. SM'TH . DIReCTOR 300 RIO GRANDE SAL" LAKE clTY. UTAH 8·1101 TEL: 'HON:: 8e l 153'\,5755 We are pleased to report that tbe Hist.oric anrfCultllra' Sites Peview rOJTImHt.ee on ~ay 11, 1<)81 approverl the nomi nati on to the Nati ona 1 Req; ster of your property kno\'In as the Anrlers Hi ntl.e House. If the Keeper of the Nati ona' Register accepts the nomin ation, C1S I explained in pw earlier letter, the provisions of the Tax Peforrl Act of 19 7 fi will apply to your property. The act contains four main provisions for hui1dings that qualify for tax rlepreciat:ion, that is, income or commercial properties. The Act: (1) permits a five-year amortization of tertified rehabilitation expenses: '21 eliminates business expense deductions for demolition; '31 eliminates accelerated riepreciation for structures built on the site of demolisherl historic structures: (4) nrovirles special depreciation rules when the cost 6f rehahilitation exceeds $5,000 anrl the purchase price of the building. These provisions do not apply to private residences. Under present guidelines if an owner ory,iects to listing of !'tis property then it will not he listed on the National Register of Historic Places. National Register guidelines allow you thirty days in which to comment on the eligihility of your property. If you would like us to submit the nomination sooner, please sign, date, anri return the enclosed letter. If you have any questions or concerns, please contact me at the address above. Sincerely, A.. Kent PO\'Jell Historic Preservation Research rnordinator hr Enclosure Slate History tloard : DeHo G Da'l!0n C At.)farns . Chairman • Theron H. Lu~e • Ted J. Warner • Elizabeth Montague • Thomas G. Alexander W"vn,r K. Hint on • Helen Z. Papanikolas • David S Monson • Elizabeth Grittlih • William DOwen'.; M;iIOIl • sec iT M April 28, 1981 Mr. Glenn Hintz~ 42 Aq South ?300 East Salt Lak~ City, Utah 84117 Dear r~r. ',!':, TH[SON GOVERN(;R Division of State History (UTAH STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY) STh"' E 0 r l;TA .... OE PA'HME~T \.);; COV',' J NITY AND ECO~CM IC 0:: V:. lOP' .' ::', T MELVIN T . SMITH . DIRECTOR 300 RIO GRANDE SALT LAKE CITY . UTAH 84101 TELEPHONE 801/533·5755 H'intze: After visiting your house I contacted tk. Allen Roherts of Historic Utah Inc., 24 L1· West 300 North, Salt Lake City, 35~-5<)1r:;; and Mr. Philip Condra, stone and brick mason, 6411 South 1165 East, Salt Lake City, 278-67h8: concerning the work \'/e discussed. If YOll think you might be interested in their services r suggest that you get in touch with them. Phil Condra is most easily r~ached in the evenings at the above number. Concerning your cellar roof I would suggest you use the following water proofing technique using Koppers Brand roofing materials. Mr. Gary Bu 1 0vi of Gladding, McBean and Co., 2114 South 400 West, 484-6136, can advise you of firms doing this type of \IIork. First carefully remove all of the soil and vegetation from t.he top ann sides of the above ground portion of the cellar taking care to remove all loose soil from the brick. Inspect the masonry joints carefully for deterioration or missing mortar. Damaged or missing mortar should he replaced with a soft sand lime mortar (see the enclosed Preservation Brief #7. for information on repointingl.If the ends of the cellar are to be left exposerl the new mortar used here shoulrl match the existing in color, texture and hardness once the soi 1 is removed from the top of the masonry. The hr; ck surfaces to recei ve the water proofing will probably ~ave to be primed with Koopers #452 primer prior to aplying Koppers Kt-~t,1 arlhesive at the rate of 2-3 gall ons per 100 SQ. ft. Beginninq at the lowest point on the cellars vaulted roof set Koppers KMM standard Mem~rane (a 5 layer laminate composed of a plastic core protected on each side by a layer of modified. bitumen and a top and bottom layer of polyethylene film) into a full bed tacky arlhesive, smoothing it into place. The rase perimeter is heat fused along t.he edge to the masonry. The membrane is rolled out ~orizontally with su~sequent sheets applied in single fashion using 4" overlaps progressing from both sides up to the top. The overlaps are heat fused together to attain a waterproof covering of the entire roof surface. If the hrick ends of the cellar are to he left exposed then the memhrane should not be applied to these areas. To facilitate Nater runoff I would suggest that you lay a thick black plastic sheet 3 wide horizontally along the sides of the cellar roof extending 1-1/21 up onto the roof. Then carefully back fill the cellar roof taking care not to puncture the new memhrane in the process. The soil will extend nown to cover the plastic sheet along the ground level. That should take care of your moisture problems. 1 I am enclosing a Xerox of the Koppers specifications which exp'ain in more detail how their products are to be applien. Also, I am enclosing a copy of State History Board : Delio G Daylon Milton C. Abrams, Chai rman • Theron H. Luke • Ted J Warner • Elizabeth Mon !~gue • Thomas G. Alexander • Wayne K Hinton • Helen Z. Papa nikola s • Da Vid S Monson • Ellzabelh Griffith • William D. Owens the Secretary of Interiors Stanrlards for historic preservation pro.iects will assist you in the restoration of your house. I hope this infonnation will be helpful to you. further assistance. Sincerely, Larry Jones Preservation Consultant LJ:br Enclosure \1hiCh Let me know if I can be of April 27, 1981 Gl enn Hi n tze 4255 South 2~OO East Salt Lake City, Utah 84117 scon M MATHESON GOVERNOR Division of State History (UTAH STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY) STATE OF UTAH DE PARTMENT OF COMMUNITY AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT MELVIN T. SMITH . DIRECTOR" 300 RIO GRANDE SALT LAKE CITY. UTAH 84101 TELEPHONE 801/533-5755 Dear Mr. Hintze: Your property known as the Anders Hintze House, Salt Lake County, will be considered by the Historic and Cultural Sites Review Committee for nomination to the National Register of Historic Places. I am enclosing a copy of the nomination for your review. We \'1ou1 d wel come your comments on the nomi nati on and the appropri ateness of listing this property on the National Register. Please send your comments to me at the address ahove. I \'Iill need to -receive your comments before the Revi ew Commi ttee meets. The Committee wi 11 meet on Wednesday, r~ay fi, 1981 at 2:00 p.m. in the Denver and Rio Grande Depot, Salt Lake City. You are cordially invited to attend and, if you wish, comment to the committee on the nomination. A staff memher will show slides of your proper~y and briefly describe its historical sianificance. Committee members will have received and stuciied the full nominati~n before the meeting. The Review Committee's action is the most important step in pl ad ng your property on the Nati onal Reg; ster and we hope that YOIl \'Iill be able to attend. The C0mmittee' s deci s ion, however, wi 11 not he affected in any way if you are unable to attE?nd. I will be happy to forward to the committee any written comments you may wish to send. The 1980 Heritage Bill, signed by President Carter in December, enacted nevI owner consent stipulations for Nationa1 Register listings. Under present gui del i nes if an owner objects to 1i sti ng of hi s property then it wi" not he listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Until the National Register Office has approved regulations for ohtaining owner consent, the Hashington Office \'Ii11 not accept Nationa' Register nominations. If your property is approvec1 hy the Historic and Cultural Sites Review Committee, all essential work \'Ii11 be completed by our staff and the nomination submitted as soon as ,,~e are allowed to do so by ~Iashington. Sincere1 Y. A. Kent Powell Historic Preservation Research Coordinator br Enclosure State History Board : Milton C. Abrams. Chairman • Theron H. Luke • Ted J Warner • Elizabeth Montague • Thomas G. Alexander Delio G. Dayton • Wayne K. Hinton • Helen Z. Papanikolas • David S. Monson • Elizabeth Griffith • William D. Owens Dr. A. Kent Powell Preservation Office Utah State Historical Society 300 Rio Grande Salt Lake City, Utah 84101 Dear Dr. Powell: I wish my property, . located a t .JAhf-,~~~[(...L,.-J.'-'--~P'<~~~~~~~("L..-,.-......~-..- to be nomlnated by the or 1 i sti ng on the Nat i ona 1 I understand that: * * The National Register is the official list of properties and sites worthy of being preserved. Under present guidelines if an owner objects to listing of his property then it will not be listed on the National Register of Historic Places. * That owners of private properties listed on the National Register may apply for Federal matching grants for preservation and restoration * * * ~ork. That any action involving the Federal government which may affect a property on or eligible to be on the National Register must he reviewed by the Advi sory Council on Hi storic Preservati on and that the purpose of thi s review is to help avoid damage to the historic character of the property. That the Tax Reform Act of 1976 makes the following provisions for depreciable properties used for income or commercial purposes: a) permits a five-year amortization of certified rehabilitation expenses; b) eliminates business expense deduction for demolition costs; c) eliminatesaccele~ated depreciation for structures on the site of demolished historic structures. d) Provides special depreciation rules when the cost of the rehabilitation exceeds $5,000 and the purchase price of the huilding. That if the property contains coal resources and is listed in the National Register, certain provision of the Surface Management Control Act of 1977 make it less likely that surface mining of the coal will he permitted hy the State or Federal Government. I understand I will be sent a copy of the nomination for my review? weeks before it is considered by the Review Committee. Date .y - ? - &"1 I I ! 1 Ap ri 1 7, 1981 Sal t Lake County Commi ssi on City and County Ruilding Salt Lake City, Utah scon M MATHESON GOVERNO,] Division of State History (UTAH STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY) I 1)( ; . ,. ~ 1: 1) STAH:OF UT A" DEPA;:lTMf NT O ~ COMVU 'II TY AND ECONOMIC DEV=: LOi'McNT MELVIN T. SM ITH. DiRECTOR 300 RIO GRAN DE SALT LAKE CITY. UTAH e~ 101 TELEPHONE 80 "533·5755 Dear Commissioners: The property known as the Anders Hintze House, Salt La~e rounty, has been proposed for nomination t6 the National Register of Historic Places. The National Register is the nation's list of historic huildings and other cultural resources worthy of preservation. I am enclosing a copy of the standards under which properties are evaluated. I would like to inform you of several provisions of the law effecting properties on the ~lational Register: Owners of private properties listen on the National Register may apply for federal matchi n~ grants for preservati on and restorati on work. Under present guidelines if an owner ob.iects to listing of his property then it will not be listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Any action involving the Federal government which may affect a property on, or eligible to be on, the National Register must be revie\l/ed by the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation estahl ished by Congress under the National Historic Preservation Act of 1966. This review is intenrlerl to help, if possible, avoid damage to the historic character of the property. If a property listed on the Nationa' Register is depreciable, that is, an income or commercial property, there are also certain provisions of the Tax Reform Act of 1976 that may apply. Section 2124 of the Tax Reform Act of 1975 encourages preservati on of hi storie ciepreci ahl e structures by allowing favorable tax treatments for rehabilitations. In addition, it discourages destruction of historic huildings by eliminating certain other~ise available Federal tax benefits hoth for demolition of historic structures and for new construction on the site of demolisherl historic buildings. These provisions do not apply to private residences. We can supply additional information on--an in f onnal hasis, but you should consult with an official of the Internal Revenue Service about the application of the law to the property. If the property contains coal resources and is lister! in the National Register, certain provisions of the Surface Mining and Control Act of 1977 make it less likely that surface mining of the coal will be permitterl by the State or Ferleral Government. Sta te Hi story Board : Mil ton C. Ab rams, Chairman • Theron H. Luke • Ted J. Wa rner • Elizabeth Montague • Thomas G. Alexa'lder DeliOG. Dayton • Wayne K. Hinton • Helen Z. Papanikolas • David S Monson • Elizabe th Griffith • Wi lliam D. Owens If you have questions about this nomination or wouid like to comment upon it, please contact me at the address ahove or call me at 533-6017. Sincerely, A. Kent Powell Historic Preservation Research Coordinator br Enclosure March 31, 1981 Glenn Hintze 4255 South 2300 East Salt Lake City, Utah 84117 SCO TT ~l 'l ." -rle SON ::-.,r.JV::R NOR Division of State History (UTAH STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY) Sf AT E OF UTAH DEPARTMeNT OF COM~.'UNITY AN D ECO~,:A1IC DE VELOPMEN r MELVIN T. SMITH. DIRECTOR 300 RIO GRANDE SALT LAKE CITY. UTAH 8410 1 TELEPHONE 80 1/533·5755 Dear Mr. Hintze: Your property known as the Anders Hi ntze House, Sal t Lake County, has been proposed for nomination to the National Register of Historic Places. The National Register is the nation's list of historic build i ngs and other cultural resources worthy of preservation. I am enclosing a copy of the standards under which properties are evaluated. I would like to inform you of several provisions of the law effecting properties on the National Register: Ol,,"ers of private properties listed on the National Register may apply for federal matching grants for preservation and restoration work. Under present gui del i nes i f an owner oh,iects to 1i sti ng of hi s property then it will not be listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Any action invol ving the Federal government t"hich may affect a property on, or eligible to be on, the National Register must he reviewed by the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation established by Congress under the National Historic Preservation Act of 1966. This review is intended to help, if possihle, avoid damage to the historic character of the property. If a property listed on the National Register is depreciahle, that is, an income or commercial property, there are also certain provisions of the Tax Reform Act of 1976 that may apply. Section ~124 of the Tax Reform Act of 1976 encourages preservation of historic depreciable structures by allowing favorahle tax treatments for rehabilitations. In addition, it discourages destruction of historic buildings by eliminating certain otherwise available Federal tax henefits both for demolition of historic structures and for new construction on the si te of demolished historic buildings. These provisions do not apply to private residences. We can supply additional informatiOrlon an infornal basis, hut you should consult with an official of the Internal Revenue Service about the application of the law to your property. If the property contains coal resources an~ ;s listed in the National Register, .certain provisions of the Surface Mining and Control Act of 1977 make it less likely that surface mining of the coal will be pennHten hy the State or Federal Government. State HiS!ory Board: Milton C. Abrams. Chai rma n • Theron H. Luke • Delio G Dayton • Wayne K Hinton • Helen Z. Papanikolas • Tee j Warner • Elizabeth Mon tague Da 'I!G S Monson • Elizabeth Gflff;th • 0 Thomas G. Alexander William D. Owens If you wish your property to be nominatecf, please sign, ciatp., ann return the enclosed letter to me. If you have any questions about the nomination of your property or the consequences of listing on the National Register, please contact me at the address above or call me at S33-6017. Sincerely, A. Kent Powell Historic Preservation Research Coordinator br Enclosure scon M. Mh THESON GOVERNOR STATE OF UTAH DEPARTMENT OF COMM UNITY AND ECONOMIC DEVE LOPMENT January 27, 1981 Division of State History Glenn J. Hintze 4255 South 2300 East Salt Lake City, Utah (UTAH STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY) MELVIN T. SMITH , DIRECTOR 300 RIO GRANDE SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH 84101 TELEPHONE 801/533-5755 Dear Mr. Hintze: I've tried calling you this week, guess you've been out of town. I hope in some sunny, warm climate. This letter will have to do for the time being and here's some good and bad news. First the bad news. Due to the change in administrations in Washington and expected changes in the National Register procedure, our staff is having to go into a holding pattern on several large nominations. The Danish history nomination, of which the Hintze house is a part, has been shuffled from the March to the May meeting of the Governor's Historic Sites Review Committee. The Hintze house will be listed, but it will be delayed again for two months. I'm sorry because I know the high regard you hold for our state bureaucracy. I hope you will trust me to get this done right, even if it takes a little more time. Now the good news. Larry Jones, our preservation architect, has agreed to come out wi th me to look at your rouse, particularl y that sa gging corner. We were scheduled to come tomorrow, Wednesday the 28th. Since I couldn't get in touch wi th you and because Larry's time is pretty tightly managed, we have put off our visit until about the second week in February. I must be in Indiana until the 9th, but I'll call as soon as I return to set up an appointment. Again, I'm sorry for the de1a y but I am trying to do my best for your house because I think I like it as much as you do. Yours tru1 y, Torn Carter Architectural Historian TC:br State History Board Milton C. Abrams, Chairman • Theron H. Luke • Ted J. Warner • Elizabeth Montague • Thomas G. Alexander Delio G. Dayton • Wayne K. Hinton • Helen Z. Papaniko1as • David S. Monson • Elizabeth Griffith • William D. Owens |
| Reference URL | https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6xt1m91 |



