| Title | 117945 |
| State | Utah |
| County | Utah County |
| City | Lehi |
| Address | 130 W Main St |
| Scanning Institution | Utah Correctional Institute |
| Holding Institution | Utah State Historic Preservation Office |
| Collection | Utah Historic Buildings Collection |
| UTSHPO Collection | Utah County General Files |
| Rights Management | Digital Image © 2023 Utah State Historic Preservation Office. All Rights Reserved. |
| Publisher | Utah State Historic Preservation Office |
| Genre | Historic Buildings |
| Type | Text |
| Format | application/pdf |
| Date Digital | 2023-11-21 |
| Language | eng |
| ARK | ark:/87278/s6tcec21 |
| Setname | dha_uhbr |
| ID | 2381425 |
| OCR Text | Show 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. 130W MAIN WALLACE OLSEN BUILDING LEHI, UTAH COUNTY LEHI MAIN STREET HISTORIC DISTRICT UTAH STATE HISTORY 1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 3 9222 50017 5794 HISTORIC SITE FORM (UHCS version) Utah State Historic Preservation Office UHCS 10#: 1. Identification 350106 Property Name: WALLACE OLSEN BUILDING Address: 130 City: LEHI W MAIN County: UTAH COUNTY 2. Documentation/Status Dates Surveyed or Added to SHPO Filing System: 191 General/Miscellaneous File: Reconnaissance Level Survey: 09/92 Intensive Level Survey: 08/97 Evaluation: (C) INELlG.lNON-CONTRIBUTING National Register Status: LEHI MAIN STREET HISTORIC DISTRICT Delisted date: National Register Listing Date: Thematic or Multiple Property Affiliation: 3. Building Information Date(s) of Construction: 1927 1943 Original Use: COMMERCIAL (GEN.) Constr. Material(s): REGULAR BRICK Architectural Style(s): OTHER/UNCLEAR STYLE Height (# stories): 1 PlanlType: 1-PART BLOCK Theme(s): Comments: BADLY REMODELED, BLT IN 2 PRTS Outbuildings (total!contributing): 1 4. Other SHPO File Information 106 Case No.: Grant No.: HABS/HAER Record No.: State Tax Project No. (s): Federal Tax Project No.: Printout Date: 12116/98 CITY BAKERY AND CAFE LONE EAGLE TRADING POST WATTlES WALLACE OLSEN BUILDING Constructed: 1927 (west halt); 1943 (east half) Address: 126-130 West Main Present owners: Wallace/Arlene Olsen The building at 130 West Main has historically been two and sometimes three separate buildings. The lot was first owned by Hyrum F . Norton, then Ira Wines and James Harwood, who sold the eastern half to Joseph Dorton in 1882. Dorton and his son Joseph Edward established Donon & Son butcher shop on their lot. In 1886 Dorton's four sons added a second story. . From 1891 to 1.8 97 this upst8irs suite was amedical office. Dr. G. W. Caldwell, then Dr. J. B. Hoshaw, then Dr. E. C. Merrihew were the proprietors. In 1900 1. E. Anderson had a tailor shop there. The Dorton Brothers business failed in 1891. Dr. 1. B. Hoshaw established his medical practice in the old butcher shop. A year later Dorton brothers opened a general store and Dr. Hoshaw moved upstairs. In 1894 the Dorton Brothers vacated the premises. The old place became C. A. Hosier's Saloon. The following year AI Rockhill opened the The Glee Club Saloon. Heber C. Comer maintained an ice cream parlor there in 1896. In 1898 it became T. 1. Wadsworth's drugstore. Though sometimes vacant, the building was generally a barbershop from 1910-43. Basil Dorton sold the old butchershop to W. D. and Eunice Watkins in August 1943. Owners of a cafe one door west, Wattie and Eunice then demolished the run-down structure and erected a new building, the Lone Eagle Trading Post. The fIrst business on the western half of this property (130 W. Main), was James Harwood and Richard T. Bradshaw's exchange store ( 1871). Harwood and his son James T. Harwood established Harwood & Son Harness Shop in 1873. In October of 1897 postmaster S. W. Ross moved the post office into the Harwood building. Meanwhile the Harwoods moved their harness shop one door east (120 West Main). There the post office had been situated from 1882-93 in the narrow space between the harness shop and Dorton & Son. Harwood eventually sold the business to son-in-law, John T Winn. He maintained a harness shop there from 1900-1910. From 1920-26 the place was Leiter's newsstand and stationery store before becoming a confectionery. In 1927 Julius Jensen bought the 130 West property. He demolished the Harwood building and the Gudmundsen Jewelry Shop a door west. Contractors H. C. Featherstone and R J. Whipple built the twenty-four-by-sixty-five-foot bUilding which now stands on the site. For the next decade ' Jensen operated the City Bakery and Cafe ' there. He sold to Faye and Reo Evans who opened their Sparkle Inn there on June 5, 1937. In early 1939 W. D. Watkins purchased the Sparkle Inn and opened Watkins Ice Cream. Virtually everyone called the place Watlie's. After Basil Dorton sold the old Dorton butchershop to Watkins in 1943, the run-down structure was demolished. The new building, the east half of the still-standing structure became the Lone Eagle Trading Post-an Indian curio shop. Harold Hutchings later bought this portion of the business Wattie then and moved elsewhere in 1955. established a dining room where the Trading Post had originally been. For a time the place was Ron Peterson's Jewelry Shop in 1960 then later an amusement center for local youth .. Leon Brown leased Watties in July 1965, renaming it the Star Cafe. In 1971, the place came under the ownership of Richard Smith, Wayman Winslow and Ned Wilson who called it The Pelican Cafe. Mr. and Mrs. Glen Shelley renamed the place the Knotty Pine Cafe . In early 1975 Mr. and Mrs. Thomas P. Ewing reopened under the name Mr. Eggs Old Fashioned Breakfast House . On January 18, 1978, Michael and Darlene Tracy purchased both buildings from the Watkins. They remodeled the two structures into the single office complex it now is. Numerous businesses have leased various compartments there. Wallace and Arlene Olsen own the rental property today. 10 8 126-130 West Main in 1950s ~~}:-~:'. -';:..,.. ,- 126-130 West Main today 107 A GUIDE TO LEHI CITY'S HISTORICAL SITES AND PLACES Published by the Lehi Hisrorical Preservation Commission 1997 funded by grants from the l ·lah State lIistorical Society a nll I."hi CityCoqlOration /30 (J . ;o~,ii~.~~~~~·I?!~!\i4:11r~~~·-r~ •... ~! MA't 1 i - t1Jarf\ [eu/·.) ()b~ Ccunfy 1 I UTAH PRESS ASSOCIA TION Clipping Sen'ice Phone: (801) 328-8678 . . ... 'r e · l··s ,;li~'yb:rid , ~, "O ~'>'~' wn OW"~ '::.S · " ~ . -I' '"~ :'" ~ '': g; S' '' . :r~~<lf~ ·~t'·w"'· h·'l~·S:·;i'tr!~ric ,: neH.i~£~.~l . .~~, .- ' ~M~at M~rket, i: ,'I;~ n "• , d' O· ,: ,. " ·,·",::df." of:l flj,':' ' ~ '~~,\,~~;"r;,.: ':':. _ cade ·adverbsmg . n....'goods & • ', .• > \ , .. ,,-~,' ·i ..,' . ' Exchange, ULJ GONER . , ' . ,, , "',,'' -,;. ". ~ ~. Fanners " ~BY RIC~ ~AN WA. b ·ld-<'. -:"1: ' ~ Groceries.'" ' ~~ffering from . ~; . ManyofthestJll-standm~ Ul • "~5 )' er~t : ';''''1:!i:i~!'IA;\:;' ' ' ' ,: ,'In 1886 Dor~on" sh dthebusi· 'Ji'l r ' , ,,, .M. ; K~;" " ' . " . lth rebnqul An e early a d". . '.~ s I ·have wn'tte n .about .. In ·,.thIS '~ ') " c', "'.r1.,' ':'''f?: '', , ..'. , \~Ii>;j;{f , , : " , " poor h ea, ~~in' Street series have ; n~t lJe.fn \:. '?~' i!:;>t "·~l: l~ ~'e ' ·'I" a '· \~. ness to his fout: s~s't n Brothers , !.";< ."rIJrr~J :!\.-<;:l,·:r:," . > . verti~emen~ ~or teO; ~hey carried . :, the first structure ,on th\~~We~' r ':'~f!.s.. "d.ay's featured propertyh"'te ftwo :.'-;~ f...~:r.,~. i;~ .:' ."', ' , e. ,,,, . Meat ~ar e. nt~ n prime roasts :M . ' unti11978wast, eSl ? , l; ", I . '. i "beef; veal, mu 0 , dbologna." ,· \se;:;~tebu~ldings.Bynecessl!l~:r"::' in town~{~ '185? .His: ~:f~e::~l~ and s~aks, sa~:a~:;~deled thei~. !narrative will ther~f~r~. be:.!..~, ,,;~,: ~ had ~rci~ne? fOr~I?~':~?~.\:.f, . ' . , Th~ ...~rot?~:te 1880s, ~dding. ~ " lconvoluted. , . ': d d als ' -' crossmg the plams. To Lahi store m .the, 'th an extenor stalr~ ~l. In the 'e arliest recor e ann F: "~, . Brigh~,YO':lng ~nt. u.n had n~ second story W1 1 to 1897 this up"this lot was owned .~y ~yrufher's'j. 'r~gnizing the ,commumty he was' case. Fr~m :18~ a medical office fo~ ." N rt my great-gran mo . b tch r For many ·years stairs SUIte was D J B Hos· . ~b:Ot~~;. In 1872he so~d t};le prop~ r,,; ~li'a~'d with t.h"e 'U.~i !~ni~~ E~-.. ,' Dr. G.,w" C~ldwen, e;;ih~"';. ' . ; }erty'to Ira Win~s a~d James ~~[d ,~' " change';~~ W:~F,;X~'-r,",":;!$l~" ~ Jo. : haw.;;e».~ pro E,C':Vice raid, h0v.:~ \"1.... E" " ' .",.:" " :' ::.. ,.f; "rs '. ""-'h""'" • he City Bakery and •n was built 1n 1927 !or t st. :,.'1", \t:!~~~\7~f~:J~E:%!d"~!';~.~:~~~ft~~Jf~n ! ' ~~~~~i~~~:".:~~e.~ ~~~;?" The left po,:"on Of~:~:~:!i~: ::~:;·::::'e Lone ~agle Tradmg po a l'Joseph~ortonm western half. .:.. "'" Son.pl. sma atraresent 126 West tlonera;bling den y;as prompt y ·~, ~w=:;:~tr..:hi'searliestbutcher . ~:~~~~):~!\88~s photograph f~~ g~e!YESTERYEARS on page 3, Cafe. The nght po 1 ~~ ., : " _... AU, ~~I8;Micha~I ·~nd .. . d The Englishman was a :' 'ld'ng reveals a wooden .....:-. _. - " 0 ""u arcade Darlene Tracy purchased the 126 . 'Of recor.' dent when he arrive,d .-. the~ ..,'u~; , .l " . .. . : ~~:, ". '~. . :. C"~«1..-maae::ItS'l\. '·:gam.e~. _. _ ' ._ , and 130 West Main ,b uildings from , , r,deJecte g . . .' .;; , .~\,.j,>:,!{,;., . : .. . uwn lcecream --lnvitingpatrons to 'f'" UiOt:l Brown leas~Watkins qare 'y Wattie Watkins. They ext:ensiyely,~ .. .. " '. . .'. , ~ ':.. _ ~. :' _ •..•_ ...", - lOrmer Harwood come in and watch the process. ' in July 1965, changing the name.to . remodeled the two structures intoa , ~u'" oUlldmg became T. J . Wad- building. Meanwhile Harwood (his In early 1939 W. D. "Wattie" the Star Cafe. Brown added take- single office complex. In the ensuing 13 years numersworth's drugstore. . ', . j " , ",. , ' 1 ; son had left town to pursue aeareer Watkins purchased the Sparkle Inn out setyice on hamburgers; sanrl:.' Though sometimes vacant,from " " in the fine arts) moved the harness from Faye Evans and opent;!d Wat- '.: wiches, :shrimp, fish and chicken. . ous businesses have leased various ·1910-43 the building was usually a ,. shop one dooreast(120West Main), kins Ice Cream -- virtually every~ ' Fora time he also maintained the compartments there, including ,barbershop. TonsuriaJ: artists Eli ~ -" where the post office had been situ- one called the place Wattie's, ,.' catering business. formerly estab- . Jackie PricelSuellen Baum's Dance , Bachelor, Bob Roberts, ' and Roger : 'sted from 1882·93 in the narrow , When Wattie and his wife Eu· lished by Wattie. Weddings; dub Studio, Ken Chamberlain Insuranre, Price ·here snipped the hair. and . ,space between the . harness shop " nice opened.their Lehi business on groups, family reunions, and .par- Lehi Barber Stylist, The Waterbed .: shaved the stubble from Lahi men ~·and Dorton & Son . . , :, >: ; ':: " ~. . '. Feb, 9, 1939, a terrible blizzard the ties were the primary beneficiaries Store, Russell Cardon Insurance, ;' and boys. . . .. ,. . .;, Harwood eventually ,sold, the night before had dumped three,feet ofthis service. .. .' several dentallabs, Ii baseball trad.Basil Dorton sold the old Dort~n . :bu,si.rie~!; to his,son:in-Iaw John T. o~ snow on !dain Street; It wasde~- . " Beginning Fe~:" I, 1971;the ~tar ing card center, and artist George Butchershop to W. D. and ]i;unlce :Wmn" who, mamtamed a h!lrness mtely .nC?t Ice cream ,,(eatller. The Cafe came un<j,erthe. ownershIP.of Schramm. ;; .•. : ',.f" : ';~:' ,., " .. , ; . " Watkins in August 1943. OWners pf ..shop . !it that loeationfrom :1900- day's receipts werea .l1Cant $7. For· LehimE!nHichard Smith,W.ayman ::;Wallace and Arlene Olsen own ' a cafe a door west, Wattie and Eunice :1910.Fro~ . 1920 until . 1926 the tunately times improved, the menu Winslow, a~d Ned . Wilson. They the rent~l property j;oday• . ~ then demolished the run-down stiJlc-place was Leiter's news stand, whic;:h expanded, and the prices remained . . . ,. y. . ~ - ,~ f_ ., ..... . tureat 126 West Main and erected . also doubled, as 8: stationery stOre just rightt .... ....' , :: ".r ·· . I anew building whichbecarne the . before becoming a confectionery,;" : Wattie; with a sigh; still remem' Lone Eagle Trading Post ~- an .In- : . , In 1927 Julius Jensen, who had bers selling T·bone steaks for 45 " dian curio shop. . ' ' ,., . earlier operated a restaurant in Lehi, . cents a cut; And a plate of mashed ' . For clarity I will now switch mY ireturned to town and bought the . potatoes and gravy was just 10 cents. . ' narrative to the western halfofthis ,.130 West proPE!rty from the Leiter ... High school stucients,who could :', property which has the historical family,!.! ; 'i';'- ,i:" ', c, ,,' ." ' ;" : . buyahamburgerandmaltatWat~ . ,address of 130 West Main. ",:",' " :" , . .In December of that year Jensen . ties for a qu~rter, · loved the place: James Harwoo.d and his partner . demolished the old Harwood build- r". The Cozy ·OaterUtah) Theatre Richard T. Bradshaw had an ex- ing andthe Abe Gudmundsenjew- was' next door and after movies, .change store here during 187L But . elry shop a door;west at 136 West ballgames, or dances Wattie's was " ~ . ,theywere forced out of business by .· Main. Jensen then contracted with alive with teenage exuberance . •,theLehiUnionExchangelaterthat . .. H.C.FeatherstoneandRJ. Whipple . : . After Basil Dorton sold the old , '. ' . ) " . . .• .. . , . , , ,,.;., ' .,'" , .• ... . ~. " " " " ':" 7 : "" , . . . , :. ·. , :. :"'-:~t()n Butchershop to~attie and; ~ 11' ' . '~l{;;YI U~UMOp o.<i WS!lUPUBh puu awpo ,eq; al{uw uaha . 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'lsnq AUBJO lno ABM ol!al{l Anq UBO Aal{l lBl{l aolUMU A[[n) SMOPU!M .lUO WOol] s.ljn.lp [uap A[[BnSUJ sola[uap aola4,M piYA [ool{os o~uo . -!l{D uuq.lnqns u sSBd I AUUp lSOW[V ' w!l{ paau Aa4J, ·Solua1 01 saJUa!pnB . ~ a.au-[ool{JS ~U!.lq 01 alqB S! 'uald pauo!s •-sudw! Ull li1!M 'puu aalJ -~nolp MOU S! "'sa}jo.14S;luaol.lll(f~ Wl!~Old alil uo S.latS Gt Thsteryears:Buildingat 130 West Main shares \ " Con!i~.ued fromJ.r.ontpa.ge · close . : c•. : . ", year. to erect a new 24 by 65-foot build- Eunice Watkinsiri August 1943, , J.E. Anderson again legitimized Harwood and his twelve-year- ing. they demolished the run-down structhe place in 1900 by establishing a old son James T. Harwood then When the facility was completed, ture and erected a new building tailorship specializing in "suits to established Harwood & Son Har, Jensen opened the City Bakery and which became their Lone Eagle order" made offine Morris Woollen. ness Shop in a frame building at Cafe, which he operated forthenext Trading Post -- an Indian curio shop. Meanwhile Dorton Brothers was 1.73 East State. 10 years. Harold Hutchings later bought ,failing. In September 1891 the The first business of its kind in When Jensen closed out his this portion of the business and · business folded and Dr. J.B. Hos- Lehi, the harness shop was situ, business Faye and Reo Evans opened moved to 189 West Main in 1955. haw set uphis medical practice in ated within the block west of the their Sparkle Inn on the premises Wattie then established a dining the fonner butcher shop. By Ju ly of Utah Southern Railroad terminus. on June 5, 1937. "Do you prefer a room where the Trading Post had 1892 Hoshaw had moved upstairs When the line moved on towards riice sparkling, orderly atmosphere originally been. The new facility, and Joseph E.and Charles Dorton Provo in 1873, the Harwood busi e when you sit down and enjoy a dish capable of seating 60 people, was · opened a general store in their for- ness -- largely dependent on the of ice cream or sandwich?" they inaugurated by a local Jaycee ban· mer meat market> freighting and forwarding indus- asked in a June 3,1937 Lehi Ban- quet on April 21, 1955. In 1894 Dorton Brothers vacated tries -~dwindled. This area was converted into Ron ner advertisement. "Of course you · the (premises for ne~er quarters The father and son then moved do and 'The Sparkle Inn' ofTers you Peterson's Jewelry Shop in 19,60 , and the old place became C. A. their building, intact, downtown, just that. and more." and later became an amusement , Hosier's Saloon. The following year and reestablished themselves at 130 Billed as "the brightest and cheeri- center where local youth could dance ' new owner AI Rockhill renamed the West Main. est spot in town for a moments and play ping-pong and arcade · grogshop The .Glee Club Saloon. In October 1897new·1:.ehi Post- 'relaxation," the Sparkle made ..its games. Leon Brown leased Watkiils Care : Heber C. Comer opened an ice cream master S. W.Ross.movedthepost own ice cream -, inviting patrons to in July 1965, changing the name.to , parloT_there-in- 1896,-and in 1898 office into thefonner Harwood come in and watch the process. In early 1939 W. D. "Wattie" the Star Cafe. Brown added take, the building became T. J. Wad, building. Meanwhile Harwood (his son had left town to pursues career Watkins purchased the Sparkle Inn out service on hamburgers, sandsworth's drugstore. . Though sometimes vacant, from in the fine arts) moved the harness from Faye Evans and opened Wat- , wiches, shrimp, fish and chickeri. ·1910-43 the building was usually a shopone door east(120 West Main), kins Ice Cream -- virtually every- For a time he also maintained the catering business fonnerly estab· barbershop. Tonsurial . artists Eli where the post office had been situ- one called the place Wattie's .. When Wattie and his wife Eu- lished by Wattie. Weddings, club , Bachelor, Bob Roberts, and Roger ated from 1882-93 in the narrow , Price ·here snipped the hair. and space between the harness shop nice opened their Lehi business on groups, family reunions, and parFeb. 9, 1939, a terrible blizzard the ties were the primary beneficiaries · shaved the stubble from Lehi men . and Dorton & Son. Harwood eventually sold the night before had dumped three feet of this service. ,and boys . . Beginning Feb. 1, 1971, the Star Basil Dorton sold the old Dorton business to his son,in-Iaw John T. of snow on Main Street. It was defiButchershop to W. D. and Eunice Winn, who maintained a harness nitely not ice cream weather. The Cafe came under' the ownership of '. Watkins in August 1943. Owners of shop at that location .from '1900- day's reCE!ipts were a scant $7. For- Lehi men Richard Smith, Wayman a cafe a door west, Wattie and Eunice 1910. From 1920 until 1926 the tunately times improved, the menu Winslow and Ned Wilson. They ·then demolished the run-down stiuc- place was Leiter's news stand, which expanded, and the pri(;es remained ,ture at 126 West Main and erected also doubled as a stationery store just right . . Wattie, with a sigh, still remem; a new building which became the before becoming a confectionery. In 1927 Julius Jensen, who had bers sellingT-bone steaks for 45 Lone Eagle Trading Post -~ an Inearlier operated a restaurant in Lehi, cents a cut. And a plate of mashed · dian curio shop. . _ ; ' . For clarity I will now switch my returned to town and bought the potatoes and gravy was just 10 cents. .' narrative to the western half of this 130 West property from the Leiter High school students, who could buy a hamburger and malt at Wat~ . , . ' property which has the .historical .family. In December of that year JensE!n ties for a quarter, loved the place. · . address of 130 West Main. The Cozy (later Utah) Theatre James Harwood and his partner . demolished the old Harwood buildRichard T. Bradshaw had an ex- ing and the Abe Gudmundsen jew, was next door and after movies, ,change store here during 1871. But , elry shop a door west at 136 West ballgames, or dances Wattie's was ' Main. Jensen then contracted with alive with teenage exuberance. I Jhey were forced out of business by : ,the Lehi Union Exchange later that H. C. Featherstone and R J: Whipple .. . . After Basil Dorton sold the old . : . ' . . . .' . .;. . · ~ton Butchershop to Wattie and, ' closed the place for a tirr;~;'rem()del ing and reopening it as The Peli'can -- which had been the' Lehi High School mascot until 1934. The place was open seven dayss week with Kathryn Proctor as head cook. \ Mr. and Mrs. Glen Shelley leased The Pelican for a time; renaTtling it the Knotty Pine Cafe} In early 1975 Mr. and Mrs. Thomas P. Ewing purchased the facility and reopened " under the name Mr. Eggs Old Fashioned Breakfast· House. The Ewings ofTered24-hour.:St!rvice and a breakfast-anytime menu featuring , two eggs, hash browns/ toast, and jelly for 89 cents. ;> : ,. ,. . On Jan. 18, 1978,' Michael and Darlene Tracy purchased the 126 and 130 West Main buildings from Wattie Watkins. ·They extenSively> remodeled the two structures into a . single office complex. In the ensuing 13 years numerous businesses have leased various compartments there, including . Jackie Price/Suellen Baum's Dance Studio, Ken Chamberlain Insurance, Lehi Barber Stylist, The Waterbed Store, Russell Cardon Insurance, several dental labs, a baseball trad, ing card center, and artist George Schramm. _ ~ Wallace and Arlene Olsen own the rent~l ~roperty ~oday, - -- ,_:..j_ . . ~ ::'" |
| Reference URL | https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6tcec21 |



