| Title | 40619 |
| NR ID | MP100011518 |
| State | Utah |
| County | Davis County |
| City | Farmington |
| Address | 231 E 100 N |
| Listed Date | 2025/03/14 |
| Scanning Institution | borndigital |
| Holding Institution | Utah State Historic Preservation Office |
| Collection | Utah Historic Buildings Collection |
| Date | 2025-01-16 |
| Building Name | BURNS-WOOD HOUSE |
| UTSHPO Collection | National Register Files |
| Rights Management | Digital Image © 2025 Utah State Historic Preservation Office. All Rights Reserved. |
| Publisher | Utah State Historic Preservation Office |
| Genre | Historic Buildings |
| Type | Text |
| Format | application/pdf |
| Date Digital | 2025-04-10 |
| Language | eng |
| ARK | ark:/87278/s6pvmhbd |
| Setname | dha_uhbr |
| ID | 2667351 |
| OCR Text | Show NPS Form 10-900 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service NRHP Listed Date: 3/14/2025 OMB No. 1024-0018 National Register of Historic Places Registration Form This form is for use in nominating or requesting determinations for individual properties and districts. See instructions in National Register Bulletin, How to Complete the National Register of Historic Places Registration Form. If any item does not apply to the property being documented, enter "N/A" for "not applicable." For functions, architectural classification, materials, and areas of significance, enter only categories and subcategories from the instructions. 1. Name of Property Historic name: __Burns –Wood House Other names/site number: __ Name of related multiple property listing: __Settlement Era Buildings of Farmington, 1847 to 1896___________________ (Enter "N/A" if property is not part of a multiple property listing ____________________________________________________________________________ 2. Location Street & number: ___231 East 100 North_____________________________________ City or town: _Farmington State: _UT__________ County: ___Davis _____ Not For Publication: Vicinity: ____________________________________________________________________________ 3. State/Federal Agency Certification As the designated authority under the National Historic Preservation Act, as amended, I hereby certify that this X nomination ___ request for determination of eligibility meets the documentation standards for registering properties in the National Register of Historic Places and meets the procedural and professional requirements set forth in 36 CFR Part 60. In my opinion, the property _X_ meets ___ does not meet the National Register Criteria. I recommend that this property be considered significant at the following level(s) of significance: ___national ___statewide Applicable National Register Criteria: ___A ___B _X__C _X__local ___D /SHPO Signature of certifying official/Title: 1/28/2025 Date _ Utah State Historic Preservation Office ____________ State or Federal agency/bureau or Tribal Government In my opinion, the property meets does not meet the National Register criteria. Signature of commenting official: Date Title : State or Federal agency/bureau or Tribal Government 1 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Davis County, UT Name of Property County and State ______________________________________________________________________________ 4. National Park Service Certification I hereby certify that this property is: entered in the National Register determined eligible for the National Register determined not eligible for the National Register removed from the National Register other (explain:) _____________________ ______________________________________________________________________ Signature of the Keeper Date of Action 5. Classification Ownership of Property (Check as many boxes as apply.) Private: X Public – Local Public – State Public – Federal Category of Property (Check only one box.) Building(s) X District Site Structure Object Sections 1-6 page 2 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Davis County, UT Name of Property County and State Number of Resources within Property (Do not include previously listed resources in the count) Contributing Noncontributing _____1_____ _____ __3__ buildings _____0_ ____ _______ 0_ sites _____0__ ___ ____ ___0 structures _____0___ __ _______ 0 objects _____1__ _ _ ______ 3 Total Number of contributing resources previously listed in the National Register ____0_____ 6. Function or Use Historic Functions (Enter categories from instructions.) DOMESTIC/single dwelling ___________________ ___________________ ___________________ Current Functions (Enter categories from instructions.) DOMESTIC/single dwelling ___________________ ___________________ ___________________ ___________________ ___________________ Sections 1-6 page 3 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Davis County, UT Name of Property County and State _____________________________________________________________________________ 7. Description Architectural Classification (Enter categories from instructions.) MID-19th CENTURY Materials: (enter categories from instructions.) Principal exterior materials of the property: Walls: STONE, METAL/Aluminum Foundation: STONE; Roof: ASPHALT Narrative Description (Describe the historic and current physical appearance and condition of the property. Describe contributing and noncontributing resources if applicable. Begin with a summary paragraph that briefly describes the general characteristics of the property, such as its location, type, style, method of construction, setting, size, and significant features. Indicate whether the property has historic integrity.) ______________________________________________________________________________ Summary Paragraph The Burns–Wood House is a one-story single-family dwelling located on the northeast corner of 200 East and 100 North in Farmington, Davis County. This location sits in the heart of Farmington’s historical core. The overall terrain of the area slopes gently downward to the west creating a sloped yard for this property. The dwelling occupies a large rectangular lot encompassing 0.72 acres and shares the lot with a large, non-contributing modern dwelling (219 E. 100 North) and two detached garages (also modern and non-contributing) (Photograph 1). The parcel itself exhibits a mix of modern and older landscaping with mature trees along the fringes of the parcel and several concrete and concrete paver patios. The large modern dwelling occupies the western third of the parcel while the remaining buildings occupy the eastern two-thirds. This configuration may have derived from the fact that throughout the historic period, an irrigation canal ran north-south through the western part of the parcel, which prompted the original owners to construct their dwelling east of that ditch; the space west of the ditch was not particularly large and would have restricted the size and configuration of any buildings constructed there. The original stone hall-parlor dwelling, which sits just east of center on the parcel and exhibits a deep setback from the frontage road (100 North), is believed to have been constructed ca. 1861, with a rear cross-wing addition constructed prior to or around 1871 and a small side addition from the ca. 1950s-‘60s. The dwelling exhibits a vernacular Classical style and is clad in a combination of mortared random rubble stone and wide aluminum siding. The exterior of the dwelling has been altered through replacement of the original windows and some minor changes to some openings, use of the modern aluminum siding, in-period rear additions, an out-of-period side addition, and partial enclosure of a side porch. Collectively, these alterations have an impact on the dwelling’s Section 7 page 4 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Davis County, UT Name of Property County and State historic integrity. However, the house retains sufficient integrity to be eligible for listing in the National Register under Criterion C and within the registration requirements of the Settlement Era Buildings of Farmington, 1847-1896, Multiple Property Submission. Narrative Description The Burns–Wood House was originally built ca. 1861 and exhibits vernacular Classical styling that can be seen in the symmetrical façade and simple shallow eaves. The foundation was not fully visible but appears to include both stone and concrete sections. The roof of the dwelling is moderately pitched and covered in modern asphalt shingles. The walls of the original dwelling are constructed of mortared stone with later sections clad in wide aluminum siding. The aluminum siding covers a section of what is reportedly an adobe brick addition built sometime between 1861 and 1871. 1 No chimneys or similar features were observed. Exterior As noted above, the Burns–Wood House exhibits a cross-wing form created by an east-west oriented Hall-Parlor wing and a series of cross-wing rear additions. The additions also include a small side addition attached to the east elevation of the dwelling that was likely constructed during the 1950s or 1960s given the nature of the window currently present there. The south elevation of the dwelling constitutes the primary façade of the original stone hallparlor house (Photograph 2). This elevation exhibits four window openings and a doorway in the original hall-parlor section and a single window opening in the side addition. The doorway is located at center in the hall-parlor wing and is flanked on the east and west by window openings that are spaced equidistant from the door. The door is accessed by a low concrete stoop protected by a gable-front cover supported by simple 4x4 wooden columns. The porch cover was reportedly constructed during the last 10-15 years according to the current owner and was designed with its current height to cover up a former chimney opening created by a previous owner when they blocked/bricked-up the original front doorway and built a fireplace there; the current owners removed the fireplace and restored the original entry opening. The window openings near the door exhibit thick wooden lintels and thin wooden sills. The openings are rectangular in shape with the long axis oriented vertically, and they hold aluminumframed, 1-over-1, single-hung windows that replicate the type of wood-framed windows that were likely originally present at the time of construction. A third and fourth window opening are located in this portion of the elevation. They are situated immediately abutting the east and west edges of the porch/stoop and are semi-subterranean. Given the thick wooden lintels above it, these openings are likely original to the structure, but their placement is unusual. The openings were largely obscured by vegetation, and the type of windows they hold could not be discerned. The final window opening in the south elevation of the dwelling is found in the small side addition (southeast corner addition). This opening is located at center the wall of the addition and Anonymous. 2024. “Jonathan David Wood and Cathleen Blanche Bird.” Undated manuscript found on FamilySearch.org at: https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/memories/KWC6-JXY 1 Section 7 page 5 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Davis County, UT Name of Property County and State is large and rectangular in shape with the long axis oriented horizontally. It holds a modern, three-part, aluminum-framed window with a fixed central pane flanked by narrow sliders. The west elevation of the dwelling may have served as a secondary entry (Photograph 3). It exhibits a large, recessed porch area, three window openings, and a doorway. The porch sits immediately north of the original hall-parlor wing and occupies the center portion of the elevation. It is recessed by at least five feet, and the lean-to style roof section extending over it is supported by four square wooden columns. An Figure 1. Undated photo of Burns–Wood House showing west undated (but quite old) elevation photograph of this portion of the dwelling shows the porch was once longer, and the roof was supported by five square or possibly slightly tapered (i.e., battered) columns (see Figure 1). At present, the northern two columns appear to have been removed to accommodate partial infilling of the porch to expand interior living space. It is unclear when this alteration occurred, but it was most likely carried out after the period of significance for this property and for the MPS as a whole. The north elevation of the dwelling comprises a combination of the east side addition and the ca. 1871 addition (Photograph 4). The wall of the side addition is clad in wide aluminum siding while the wall of the earlier addition is clad in mortared stone. The side addition exhibits a leanto style roof as it pertains to this north elevation of the dwelling, and the earlier addition exhibits a front-gable type roof. Three window openings are present in this elevation. Two are located in the ca. 1871 addition, and one is located in the side addition. The opening in the side addition is square in shape, has a moderately thick wooden lintel, and holds a modern aluminum-framed slider. It is located within approximately one foot of the junction with the stone addition. The two openings in the ca. 1871 addition are located with one at center and one within roughly three feet of the east edge of the elevation. These openings are rectangular in shape, have thick wooden lintels and thin wooden sills, and hold aluminum-framed, one-over-one, single-hung windows. The visible east elevation of the dwelling is an addition to the structure (Photographs 5 & 6). Only a portion of the gable wall of the original stone hall-parlor structure is visible, and it does not exhibit any notable architectural detail. The side addition, portions of which appear to have been constructed before 1953 and portions of which were constructed after 1953, is clad in mortared stone veneer on its south elevation and wide aluminum siding on its east and north elevations. The structure has a steep broken cat-slide style roof created by the combination of additions comprising it. The elevation exhibits one doorway near the south end and two window openings—one near center and one in the northern third of the elevation. The window openings Section 7 page 6 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Davis County, UT Name of Property County and State are relatively large, roughly square in shape, and hold modern aluminum slider windows. The northern of the two is smaller than the other. Interior The interior of the dwelling (Photographs 8–10) consists of the main floor and a partial basement that once served as a root cellar. The basement now includes two finished rooms used for storage and a closet. The main floor of the dwelling includes both the original hall-parlor section and the two primary additions. The front hall-parlor section comprises a single room with no current interior dividing walls and a fireplace at the east end. This is an atypical arrangement for this building type and suggests the interior dividing wall separating the hall and parlor was removed. It is unclear when this may have occurred as it was prior to the current owner’s possession of the property, and no record of the interior remodel is on file with the city or county. Passing through the front wing to the north, one enters into the first of the historical additions, which comprises a large room of indeterminate function (possibly the original kitchen but now used as an office), with a bedroom and ensuite bathroom to the north and a second bathroom and hall immediately east of the bedroom. The hall leads east into another bedroom that is located in the second addition. South of this second bedroom and east of the large room of indeterminate function is a kitchen and dining room. A short stairwell extends from the kitchen into the basement. A portion of the original exterior stone masonry wall of the hall-parlor wing is exposed in the southwest corner of the kitchen. Save for the exposed stone wall in the kitchen and sections of exposed stone walls in the basement, little remains of the historical finishes except for the lath and plaster walls. Newer finishes dating to the late-1940s and more recently, include wainscoting, crown moldings and chair rails, laminate floors, and modern granite countertops and cabinetry. Historical Integrity The Burns–Wood House retains good integrity of location, materials, design, workmanship, feeling, and association. Its integrity of setting has been diminished by the construction of the large, multi-story modern dwelling immediately to the west. The exterior of the dwelling has been altered somewhat through replacement of historical windows with minor changes to some openings, minor use of the modern aluminum siding, inperiod and out-of-period rear additions, and partial enclosure of a side porch. While these changes have impacted the integrity of materials and design of the dwelling, these impacts are sufficiently minor as to not affect the ability to “read” the dwelling as dating to Farmington’s settlement period. The dwelling still retains the character-defining features of both the local architectural style and construction materials of the era but also the originally intended type and style. Most of the exterior alterations are only partially visible from the public view and, therefore, limited in their visual impact. Section 7 page 7 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Davis County, UT Name of Property County and State Property Setting The Burns–Wood House sits in the heart of Farmington’s historical core. Due to tear-down and infill, the immediate neighborhood exhibits a mix of historical (generally post-1900) and modern dwellings. The overall terrain of the area slopes gently downward to the west creating a sloped yard for this property. The parcel itself exhibits a combination of modern and older landscaping with mature trees along the fringes of the parcel and several concrete and concrete paver patios, which are located to the sides and rear of the dwellings. The large modern dwelling occupies the western half of the parcel while the remaining buildings occupy the eastern half. The historical dwelling sits just east of center on the parcel and exhibits a deep setback from the frontage road (100 North). The property location is within the primary street grid of Farmington. In this area, the grid comprises a series of east-west and north-south streets. This grid is typical of communities established by members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, especially during the settlement years. This street configuration follows what is known as the Plat of Zion—a community layout set forth by Joseph Smith, the founder of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latterday Saints. In this plat, equally sized blocks in the heart of the plat were divided into lots for residential, commercial, and public development while surrounding lands were allocated for farming, livestock grazing, and other activities. In Farmington, the core plat was a backwards Lshaped area centered along Main Street (north-south) and State Street (east-west). Ancillary Buildings Two non-contributing outbuildings and one non–contributing dwelling are located on the parcel with the eligible dwelling. These buildings include two modern detached garages and one modern single-family dwelling (Photographs 11-13). One garage was constructed between 1953 and 1970, and the other was constructed between 1997 and 2002. The modern dwelling on the western part of the parcel was constructed in 2020. All of these buildings are considered noncontributing to this National Register nomination. Section 7 page 8 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Davis County, UT Name of Property County and State _______________________________________________________________________ 8. Statement of Significance Applicable National Register Criteria (Mark "x" in one or more boxes for the criteria qualifying the property for National Register listing.) A. Property is associated with events that have made a significant contribution to the broad patterns of our history. B. Property is associated with the lives of persons significant in our past. X C. Property embodies the distinctive characteristics of a type, period, or method of construction or represents the work of a master, or possesses high artistic values, or represents a significant and distinguishable entity whose components lack individual distinction. D. Property has yielded, or is likely to yield, information important in prehistory or history. Criteria Considerations (Mark “x” in all the boxes that apply.) A. Owned by a religious institution or used for religious purposes B. Removed from its original location C. A birthplace or grave D. A cemetery E. A reconstructed building, object, or structure F. A commemorative property G. Less than 50 years old or achieving significance within the past 50 years Section 8 page 9 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Davis County, UT Name of Property County and State Areas of Significance _ARCHITECTURE _ _ _________________ Period of Significance _ca. 1861–ca. 1871 ___________________ ___________________ Significant Dates _ca. 1861_________ _ca. 1871_________ _________________ Significant Person (Complete only if Criterion B is marked above.) ___________________ ___________________ ___________________ Cultural Affiliation ___________________ ___________________ Architect/Builder ___________________ ___________________ Section 8 page 10 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Davis County, UT Name of Property County and State Statement of Significance Summary Paragraph (Provide a summary paragraph that includes level of significance, applicable criteria, justification for the period of significance, and any applicable criteria considerations.) The Burns–Wood House is a one-story single-family dwelling in Farmington, Davis County, believed to have been constructed ca. 1861, with a rear addition constructed prior to or around 1871. It is significant at the local level under Criterion C in the area of Architecture as one of only a handful of residential properties from the settlement era in Farmington to both remain standing and retain sufficient integrity to reflect its period of construction and period of significance. It is also among the oldest remaining buildings in Farmington that retains historic integrity and provides a glimpse into the pioneer period in the community when dwellings were commonly constructed of locally procured stone and followed a common architectural aesthetic. The period of significance for the dwelling is ca. 1861 to ca. 1871, which is fully within the period of significance of the Settlement Era Buildings of Farmington, 1847 to 1896 MPS under which the property is considered significant. The property’s period of significance was chosen as it represents the best estimates of when the original dwelling and its primary addition were constructed. The property is associated with Patrick Burns and John Wood during the period of significance. The construction of the earliest, ca. 1861 section of the house is attributed to Patrick Burns while the ca. 1871 section occurred while under the ownership of John Wood. ______________________________________________________________________________ Narrative Statement of Significance (Provide at least one paragraph for each area of significance.) Significance Under Criterion C The significance of the Burns–Wood House under Criterion C in the area of Architecture derives from two underlying factors within the context of the MPS. First, the dwelling was built in the heart of Farmington’s settlement period and is one of only a handful of known dwellings remaining from this era. Second, it is one of only seven settlement era dwellings that retain sufficient integrity to reflect the architectural traditions of the time and place. Specifically, the dwelling exhibits both the vernacular Classical styling of the settlement period in Farmington as well as the quintessential stonework for which the community of Farmington is known. Stone buildings are a hallmark of Farmington’s architectural heritage. Along the Wasatch Front (i.e., northern Utah), Farmington is the primary community in which stone construction of dwellings and public facilities, such as churches, is known as a character defining feature of the town and not just individual buildings. Similar stonework is known to be present in the nearby community of Bountiful as well as in the Willard and Perry areas to the north, but intact examples of this stonework are not as common in those areas as they are in Farmington. In this regard, Farmington would be more comparable to communities in Sanpete County of central Utah where limestone and “pot rock” buildings are common and considered part of the core identity of the community. In Farmington and the other nearby communities, many of the original stone dwellings have been altered significantly with cladding that obscures the stonework or large additions that relegate the original stone sections to secondary status. The Burns–Wood House defies that trend by retaining the original stonework and the original hallSection 8 page 11 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Davis County, UT Name of Property County and State parlor section as the primary component visible to the public. With only some alteration of the exterior, the dwelling still exhibits the telltale mortared local stone cladding, the heavy lintels, the raking moldings, and the close eaves known as character-defining features of Farmington’s pioneer period vernacular Classical architecture. As noted, only seven dwellings dating to the settlement era are known to exist in the community and retain a similarly high degree of architectural integrity. Another 95 buildings in Farmington are estimated to date to the settlement period of the community but have been altered too substantially to qualify for listing on the National Register. This makes the Burns–Wood House part of the mere 7-percent of pre-1896 buildings in the community with sufficient integrity to represent the city’s pioneer past. The Burns–Wood House was constructed over time and over the course of two periods of ownership—first by Patrick Burns and then by the Wood Family. The original portion of the dwelling—the front hall-parlor section—appears to have been constructed ca. 1861 according to biographical information about Jonathan David Wood, one of the subsequent owners. 2 At that time, the dwelling reportedly consisted of a combined kitchen and parlor and one bedroom. 3 The exterior was reported as being “native rock/adobe” and the interior “lath and plaster.” 4 In 1871, after the home was acquired by John Wood, a cross-wing addition was built on the rear elevation of the original hall-parlor section. That addition is said to have included two bedrooms and a parlor and also to have had porches on both the east and west elevations. 5 These two primary construction episodes, ca. 1861 and ca. 1871, bracket the date range for the period of significance and mark the most important dates relative to the dwelling’s architectural significance. Additionally, nearly all of these key elements—stone hall-parlor front section and cross-wing rear section, and side porches—remain intact. The exception is the east elevation porch, which was replaced c.1950s-‘60s with a side addition containing a modern kitchen and dining area. The combination of the original hall-parlor wing and the in-period rear addition represent a common historical trend in settlement era construction. That is, initial construction focused on the minimally necessary space to establish the homestead while the occupants established their footing in the community. As economics and social factors (e.g., family size expansion through birth and/or polygamy) progressed, additional space was needed; hence, the rear addition to this particular dwelling. While the timing of additions on these otherwise modest pioneer dwellings varied from property to property and occupant to occupant, one or more additions was the ultimate fate for nearly every building of this era in Farmington. The Burns–Wood House qualifies for consideration under the registration criteria set forth for residential properties in the associated MPS (Settlement Era Buildings of Farmington, 1847 to 1896). The significance of this property type within the MPS context includes the fact that 2 Anonymous. 2024. “Jonathan David Wood and Cathleen Blanche Bird.” Accessed at FamilySearch.org January 24 at: https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/details/KWC6-JXY 3 Ibid. 4 Ibid. 5 Ibid. Section 8 page 12 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Davis County, UT Name of Property County and State residential structures are a) the predominant extant property type associated with the period (i.e., residential properties are among the only extant hallmarks of the community’s pioneer heritage); b) reflective of the early settlement history of the community and its evolution from a relative frontier outpost to a permanent city; c) curated examples of the earliest beginnings of the Farmington community and the adaptations of architectural types and styles to the sometimes unique cultural needs and expectations of an early settlement established by members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS 6); and d) reflections of the changing access to construction materials, e.g., evolving from local fieldstone and sun-dried adobe brick to kilnfired bricks, and the introduction of “higher style” adornment following the completion of the Transcontinental Railroad in 1869 and the connection of communities along the Wasatch Front to national markets and national ideas. The Burns–Wood House satisfies the registration requirements for residential properties under Criterion C established in the Settlement Era Buildings of Farmington, 1847 to 1896 MPS. Specifically, the original part of the dwelling was constructed ca.1861, in the heart of the period of significance for the MPS (Registration Requirement 1); the historic addition also was constructed during the period of significance. The dwelling retains its original location of construction from the period of significance (Registration Requirement 2). In spite of the small mid-twentieth century addition, the house also retains sufficient integrity of type, style, materials, and manner of construction common to residential buildings in Farmington during the period of significance (Registration Requirement 3). Additional Historical Information Although the original dwelling was built by or for Patrick Burns, Burns may not have resided there all that long. Biographical information about John Wood, the subsequent owner, suggests that Wood occupied the property prior to obtaining legal title in 1871. Wood Family history indicates that John’s son, Johnathan David Wood (or JD Wood), built a barn for his father on the property in 1870; the barn has since been demolished. JD Wood, who worked at different times as a farmer and a merchant, who helped build the first electrical powerhouse in Farmington and who served 13 years as a Justice of the Peace and Deputy Sheriff, acquired the property from his father in 1874 and remained there until 1935, when he sold it to his grandson, Allen Edmond Whitaker. 7 During the ownership period of JD Wood, which occurred outside the period of significance for the property, the dwelling housed a polygamous family. JD Wood had married his cousin, Cathleen Blanche Bird, in 1871, the year JD’s father officially acquired title to the property. Eleven years later, in 1882, after having purchased the property from his father, JD married Eliza Members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints are often referred to as Mormons or LDS, and the church organization itself is frequently referred to as the Mormon Church or the LDS Church. Church leadership recently directed its membership to avoid using such terms and use the full name of the church instead. The term LDS Church is used herein solely for the purpose of brevity and ease of readability and should not be interpreted otherwise. 7 Ibid. 6 Section 8 page 13 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Davis County, UT Name of Property County and State Hess. The combined family, which had 21 children between them, reportedly lived in the house together with one family living in the front of the dwelling and the other in the rear. 8 The practice of polygamy, commonly known in LDS culture as plural marriage, began before the pioneers entered the Salt Lake Valley, but was not practiced openly until the church prospered in the relative isolation of the Intermountain West. Not all members of the LDS Church “lived the principle,” as it was called, but there was an expectation that LDS men of sufficient standing and resources within the LDS Church would have multiple wives. It was common for polygamist men to have two or three wives, but only a small percentage of church leaders had more than four wives. The manner in which the plural family interacted with each other was left up to the practitioners themselves with some families choosing to live in a single dwelling, others choosing to live in individual dwellings on communal properties, and still others choosing to live in separate dwellings on separate properties. The practice was abolished by Church President Wilford Woodruff in 1890 but continued among many practitioners for years after. Despite the ban, polygamy persisted for many years in Farmington where a small group of men, led by John Taylor, an apostle in the LDS Church, refused to abandon the practice. Taylor, who also owned multiple dwellings in Farmington for his plural wives, was later excommunicated for his continued championing of the practice. 8 Ibid. Section 8 page 14 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Davis County, UT Name of Property County and State ______________________________________________________________________________ 9. Major Bibliographical References Bibliography (Cite the books, articles, and other sources used in preparing this form.) Arrington, Leonard J. 1958. Great Basin Kingdom: Economic History of the Latter-Day Saints, 1830-1900. University of Nebraska Press: Lincoln. Barnett, Alan. 2002. “Reconnaissance Level Survey. Rock Church Neighborhood. Farmington, Utah.” On file at the Utah State Historic Preservation Office, Salt Lake City. Carter, Thomas and Peter Goss. 1991. Utah's Historic Architecture, 1847-1940: A Guide. University ofUtah Graduate School of Architecture and Utah State Historical Society: Salt Lake City, UT: Ellis, Sheri Murray. 2022. National Register of Historic Places Multiple Property Documentation Form for the Settlement Era Buildings of Farmington, 1847 to 1896. On file at the Utah State Historic Preservation Office, Salt Lake City. Hess, Margaret Steed. 1976. My Farmington: A History of Farmington, Utah, 1847-1976. Helen Mar Miller Camp of the Daughters of the Utah Pioneers: Farmington Knowlton, George Quincy. 1965. A History of Farmington, Utah. Compiled and edited by Jannetta K. Robinson. Inland Printing: Kaysville. Leonard, Glen. 1972. Historic Sites Survey form for 94 East 500 North, Farmington. On file at the Utah State Historic Preservation Office, Salt Lake City. 1994. “Farmington.” In Utah History Encyclopedia, Allan Kent Powell, editor. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City. 1999. A History of Davis County. Utah Centennial County History Series. Utah State Historical Society: Salt Lake City. Lufkin, Beatrice. 2011. National Register of Historic Places Registration Form for the Farmington Main Street Historic District (NRIS #11000756). On file at the Utah State Historic Preservation Office, Salt Lake City. Strack, Don. 2022. Utah Central Rail Road (1869-1881). Accessed online September 15, 2022, at: https://utahrails.net/utahrails/uc-rr-1869-1881.php Uffens, Karla. 1997. National Register of Historic Places Registration Form for the John W., Janet (Nettie), and May Rich Taylor House. NRIS # 97001325. On file at the Utah State Historic Preservation Office, Salt Lake City. Sections 9-end page 15 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Davis County, UT Name of Property County and State Utah Division of State History, Preservation Office. 2022. Utah’s Historic Architecture Guide. Accessed online September 15, 2022, at: https://issuu.com/utah10/docs/architectural_guide_booklet Utah State Historic Preservation Office. 2022. Utah Historic Buildings database. Accessed online September 15, 2022, at: https://shpo.utah.gov/portal/apps/webappviewer/index.html?id=8e218e18c2b74477b5f520e5617 bebaf Van Cott, John W. 1990. Utah Place Names. University of Utah Press. __________________________________________________________________________ Previous documentation on file (NPS): ____ preliminary determination of individual listing (36 CFR 67) has been requested ____ previously listed in the National Register ____ previously determined eligible by the National Register ____ designated a National Historic Landmark ____ recorded by Historic American Buildings Survey #____________ ____ recorded by Historic American Engineering Record # __________ ____ recorded by Historic American Landscape Survey # ___________ Primary location of additional data: _X__ State Historic Preservation Office ____ Other State agency ____ Federal agency ____ Local government ____ University __X__ Other: Name of repository: Farmington Historic Preservation Commission Historic Resources Survey Number (if assigned): ________________ Sections 9-end page 16 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Davis County, UT Name of Property County and State ______________________________________________________________________________ 10. Geographical Data Acreage of Property __0.72 acres_____________ Use either the UTM system or latitude/longitude coordinates Latitude/Longitude Coordinates Datum if other than WGS84:__________ (enter coordinates to 6 decimal places) 1. Latitude: 40.982297 Longitude: -111.882651 Or UTM References Datum (indicated on USGS map): NAD 1927 1. Zone: or NAD 1983 Easting: Northing: Verbal Boundary Description (Describe the boundaries of the property.) This registration applies to the entirety of the existing property as denoted in Davis County records. The legal parcel (#070270101) boundary description, as retrieved from the Davis County Recorder’s Office on March 24, 2024, is as follows: A PARCEL OF LAND SIT IN THE NW 1/4 & THE NE 1/4 OF SEC 19-T3N-R1E, SLB&M, SD PARCEL MORE PART'LY DESC AS FOLLOWS: BEG AT THE INTERSECTION OF THE E LINE OF 200 EAST STR & THE N LINE OF 100 NORTH STR DESC IN A RECORDED DOCUMENT FOR THE 100 NORTH STR DEDICATION RECORDED ON 08/21/2000 AS E# 1608956 BK 2683 PG 69 & BEING AT A PT S 0^17'15" W 29.50 FT FR THE SW COR OF LOT 3, BLK 12, PLAT B, FARMINGTON TS SURVEY, SD POB ALSO BEING S 89^39'30" E 33.00 FT ALG THE CENTER LINE OF 100 NORTH STR & N 0^17'15" E 20.00 FT FR A FARMINGTON CITY SURVEY MONU IN THE INTERSECTION OF 200 EAST STR & 100 NORTH STR & ALSO SD TO BE N 695.78 FT & W 165.46 FT & N 0^17'15" E 20.00 FT FR THE CENTER OF SEC 19-T3N-R1E, SLB&M; & RUN TH N 0^17'15" E 125.25 FT ALG THE E LINE OF 200 EAST STR TO & ALG THE W LINE OF LOT 3, BLK 12, PLAT B, FARMINGTON TS SURVEY TO A BNDRY LINE AGMT RECORDED ON 08/06/2018 AS E# 3109309 BK 7071 PG 247; TH S 89^20'29" E 255.41 FT ALG THE LINE DEFINED IN THE AFOREMENTIONED BNDRY LINE AGMT TO THE END THEREOF; TH S 0^17'15" W 123.83 FT TO THE N LINE OF 100 NORTH STR AS Sections 9-end page 17 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Davis County, UT Name of Property County and State DESC ON THE AFOREMENTIONED DOCUMENT OF THE 100 NORTH STR DEDICATION; TH N 89^39'30" W 255.40 FT ALG THE N LINE OF THE AFOREMENTIONED DOCUMENT OF THE 100 NORTH STR DEDICATION TO THE E LINE OF 200 EAST STR TO THE POB. CONT. 0.72 ACRES. See map for boundary detail. Boundary Justification (Explain why the boundaries were selected.) This boundary represents the entirety of the remaining portion of the historical parcel on which the subject building was constructed and contains other non-contributing buildings. Sections 9-end page 18 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Davis County, UT Name of Property County and State ______________________________________________________________________________ 11. Form Prepared By name/title: ___Sheri Murray Ellis/Consultant_____________________________ organization: _Certus Environmental Solutions___________________________ street & number: _____________________________________________________ city or town: _Salt Lake City________ state: __Utah_____ zip code:__84103 ____ e-mail__Sheri@certussolutionsllc.com___ telephone:_________________________ date: January 16, 2025 ___________________________________________________________________________ Additional Documentation Submit the following items with the completed form: • Maps: A USGS map or equivalent (7.5 or 15 minute series) indicating the property's location. • Sketch map for historic districts and properties having large acreage or numerous resources. Key all photographs to this map. • Additional items: (Check with the SHPO, TPO, or FPO for any additional items.) Property Owner information: (Complete this item at the request of the SHPO or FPO.) Name ____Michael James & Chaney Kiel Packer Address ___219 East 100 North_____________________________________ City or Town __Farmington_______ State_ UT____ Zip code__84025_________ Telephone/email (801) 451-4528/chaneypacker@icloud.com Paperwork Reduction Act Statement: This information is being collected for applications to the National Register of Historic Places to nominate properties for listing or determine eligibility for listing, to list properties, and to amend existing listings. Response to this request is required to obtain a benefit in accordance with the National Historic Preservation Act, as amended (16 U.S.C.460 et seq.). Estimated Burden Statement: Public reporting burden for this form is estimated to average 100 hours per response including time for reviewing instructions, gathering and maintaining data, and completing and reviewing the form. Direct comments regarding this burden estimate or any aspect of this form to the Office of Planning and Performance Management. U.S. Dept. of the Interior, 1849 C. Street, NW, Washington, DC. Sections 9-end page 19 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Davis County, UT Name of Property County and State MAPS United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Davis County, UT Name of Property County and State MAPS United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Davis County, UT Name of Property County and State MAPS United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Davis County, UT Name of Property County and State MAPS United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Davis County, UT Name of Property County and State MAPS United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Davis County, UT Name of Property County and State Photographs Submit clear and descriptive photographs. The size of each image must be 1600x1200 pixels (minimum), 3000x2000 preferred, at 300 ppi (pixels per inch) or larger. Key all photographs to the sketch map. Each photograph must be numbered and that number must correspond to the photograph number on the photo log. For simplicity, the name of the photographer, photo date, etc. may be listed once on the photograph log and doesn’t need to be labeled on every photograph. Photo Log Name of Property: Burns–Wood House City or Vicinity: Farmington County: Davis County State: Utah Photographer: Sheri Murray Ellis Date Photographed: November 28, 2023 (exterior); March 30, 2024 (interior) Description of Photograph(s) and number: Photograph 1. Overview of property; camera facing northeast Photograph 2. East elevation (primary façade); camera facing north Photograph 3. West elevation; camera facing southeast Photograph 4. North (rear) elevation; camera facing south-southwest Photograph 5. South (left) and north (right) elevations; camera facing northwest Photograph 6. East elevation; camera facing west Photograph 7. Window detail (south elevation); camera facing north Photograph 8. Current interior of hall-parlor wing; camera facing east Photograph 9. Interior – possible former kitchen in rear addition; camera facing west Photograph 10. Interior – current kitchen in rear-east addition; camera facing south. Note exposed exterior rock wall of original hall-parlor wing. PHOTOGRAPHS United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Davis County, UT Name of Property County and State Photograph 1. Overview of property; camera facing northeast Photograph 2. South elevation (primary façade); camera facing north PHOTOGRAPHS United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Name of Property Davis County, UT County and State Photograph 3. West elevation; camera facing southeast Photograph 4. North (rear) elevation; camera facing south-southwest PHOTOGRAPHS United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Davis County, UT Name of Property County and State Photograph 5. South (left) and east (right) elevations; camera facing northwest Photograph 6. East elevation; camera facing west PHOTOGRAPHS United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Davis County, UT Name of Property County and State Photograph 7. Window detail (south elevation); camera facing north PHOTOGRAPHS United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Name of Property Davis County, UT County and State Photograph 8. Current interior of hall-parlor wing; camera facing east Photograph 9. Interior – possible former kitchen in rear addition; camera facing west PHOTOGRAPHS United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Davis County, UT Name of Property County and State Photograph 10. Interior – current kitchen in rear-east addition; camera facing south. Note exposed exterior rock wall of original hall-parlor wing. PHOTOGRAPHS United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Davis County, UT Name of Property County and State Photograph 11. Non-contributing modern dwelling on parcel; camera facing northwest Photograph 12. Non-contributing garage immediately east of dwelling; camera facing north PHOTOGRAPHS United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Davis County, UT Name of Property County and State Photograph 13. Non-contributing garage near east edge of parcel; camera facing northeast PHOTOGRAPHS 3/25/25, 10:16 AM State of Utah Mail - National Register Weekly List 3/21/2025 NE of Johnson City, Johnson City vicinity, OT80003878, REMOVED, 3/17/2025 UTAH, DAVIS COUNTY, Burns-Wood House, 231 East 100 North, Farmington, MP100011518, LISTED, 3/14/2025 (Settlement Era Buildings of Farmington, 1847 to 1896) UTAH, DAVIS COUNTY, Chaffin, Henry and Leatha, House, 189 North 100 East, Farmington, MP100011530, LISTED, 3/17/2025 (Settlement Era Buildings of Farmington, 1847 to 1896) UTAH, DAVIS COUNTY, Van Fleet, Elias and Lucy, House, 93 East 300 North, Farmington, MP100011532, LISTED, 3/17/2025 (Settlement Era Buildings of Farmington, 1847 to 1896) UTAH, DAVIS COUNTY, Miller, William H. and Helen, House, 147 North 100 East, Farmington, MP100011544, LISTED, 3/17/2025 (Settlement Era Buildings of Farmington, 1847 to 1896) UTAH, DAVIS COUNTY, Van Fleet, Elias and Mary Ann, House, 463 North 100 East, Farmington, MP100011545, LISTED, 3/17/2025 (Settlement Era Buildings of Farmington, 1847 to 1896) UTAH, DAVIS COUNTY, Smith, Jesse Wells and Miriam, House, 93 East 200 North, Farmington, MP100011546, LISTED, 3/17/2025 (Settlement Era Buildings of Farmington, 1847 to 1896) UTAH, SALT LAKE COUNTY, https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/?ik=76f70e1a09&view=pt&search=all&permthid=thread-f:1827477407771195826&simpl=msg-f:1827477407771195826 6/7 3/25/25, 10:16 AM State of Utah Mail - National Register Weekly List 3/21/2025 The Nettie Gregory Center, 742 W. South Temple Street, Salt Lake City, SG100011531, LISTED, 3/17/2025 Key to Prefix Codes: AD - Additional documentation BC - Boundary change (increase, decrease, or both) FD - Federal DOE property under the Federal DOE project FP - Federal DOE Project MC - Multiple cover sheet MP - Multiple nomination (a nomination under a multiple cover sheet) MPS - Multiple Property Submission MV - Move request NL – NHL ADNL-Updated documentation (NHL) OT - All other requests (appeal, removal, delisting, direct submission) RS - Resubmission https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/?ik=76f70e1a09&view=pt&search=all&permthid=thread-f:1827477407771195826&simpl=msg-f:1827477407771195826 7/7 National Register Review Committee Meeting Agenda Thursday, January 16, 2025, 10:00 am – 1:00 pm This is a hybrid meeting with anchor location at the Utah State Historic Preservation Office 3760 South Highland Drive • Salt Lake City, Utah 84106 Public attendees: please RSVP Cory Jensen at coryjensen@utah.gov for a Zoom link 10:00 am - Welcome – Anya Grahn-Federmack, Committee Chair 10:05 am – Introductions 10:10 am - Meeting Minutes Approval of Last Committee Meeting ((9/19/2024) All NRHP Listings for Review: https://ushpo.utah.gov/shpo/national-register/nominations-tobe-reviewed/ 10:15 am – Action Items ● ACTION: Approval of new committee member ● ACTION: Approval of the National Register Nominations for Historic Places – Cory Jensen o Burns-Wood House, Farmington, Davis County (Farmington MPS) o Elias & Lucy Van Fleet House, Farmington, Davis County (Farmington MPS) o Elias & Mary Ann Van Fleet House, Farmington, Davis County (Farmington MPS) o Henry & Leatha Chaffin House, Farmington, Davis County (Farmington MPS) o Jesse & Miriam Smith House, Farmington, Davis County (Farmington MPS) o William & Helen Miller House, Farmington, Davis County (Farmington MPS) o Mountair Acres Subdivision HD, Millcreek, Salt Lake County o Nettie Gregory Center, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County o Canaan Gap Archaeological District, Washington County ● Public comment 1:00 pm (or thereabouts)– Adjourn Notice of Special Accommodations (ADA) In accordance with the Americans with Disabilities Act, individuals requiring special accommodation during this meeting should notify Christopher Merritt (801) 245-7263 at least two working days prior to the meeting. Notice of Electronic or Telephone Participation Notice of Electronic Meeting: This meeting may be convened as an electronic meeting under the provisions of Utah Code Annotated Section 52-4-207 with the above listed location as the anchor location. Committee members are advised that they may participate in the meeting through electronic means and be counted as present for all purposes, including the determination that a quorum is present. Those members wishing to participate through electronic means may make arrangements to do so by calling Christopher Merritt at (801) 245-7263 in advance of the meeting. Christopher Merritt State Historic Preservation Officer Utah State Historic Preservation Office Spencer J. Cox Governor Deidre M. Henderson Lieutenant Governor November 19, 2024 Donna Law Executive Director Utah Department of Cultural and Community Engagement MICHAEL JAMES, CHANEY KIEL PACKER 219 EAST 100 NORTH FARMINGTON, UT 84025 Dear Michael and Chaney: We are pleased to inform you that the historic property listed below will be considered by the Utah National Register Review Committee for nomination to the National Register of Historic Places: BURNS-WOOD HOUSE, 231 EAST 100 NORTH, FARMINGTON, UT The National Register of Historic Places is the federal government's official list of historic properties worthy of preservation. Listing on the National Register provides recognition and assists in preserving our Nation's heritage. Listing of a property provides recognition of its historic significance and assures protective review of federal projects that might adversely affect the character of the historic property. If the property is listed on the National Register, tax credits for rehabilitation and other beneficial provisions may apply. Listing in the National Register does not place limitations on the property by the federal or state government. Public visitation rights are not required of owners. The government will not attach restrictive covenants to the property or seek to acquire them. Enclosed please find a notice that explains, in greater detail, the results of listing in the National Register. It also describes the rights and procedures by which an owner may comment on or object to listing on the National Register. You are invited to attend the National Register Review Committee meeting at which the nomination will be considered. The Board will meet virtually on Thursday, January 16, 2025, at 10:00 AM. You may join Zoom Meeting at: https://utah-gov.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_prs5VkhPQpuS2RuTpyGWYA Should you have any questions about this nomination before the meeting, please contact Cory Jensen of the Historic Preservation Office at 801/245-7242, or coryjensen@utah.gov. Sincerely, Christopher W. Merritt, Ph.D. State Historic Preservation Officer Enclosures 3760 South Highland Drive • Salt Lake City, Utah 84106 • history.utah.gov RIGHTS OF OWNERS TO COMMENT ON AND/OR OBJECT TO LISTING IN THE NATIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES Owners of private properties nominated to the National Register have an opportunity to concur with or object to listing in accord with the National Historic Preservation Act and 36 CFR 60. Any owner or partial owner of private property who chooses to object to listing may submit to the State Historic Preservation Officer a statement certifying that the party is the sole or partial owner of the private property and objects to the listing. Each owner or partial owner of private property has one vote regardless of the portion of the property that the party owns. If a majority of private property owners object, a property will not be listed. However, the State Historic Preservation Office shall submit the nomination to the Keeper of the National Register of Historic Places for a determination of eligibility of the property rather than a listing in the National Register. If you choose to object to the listing of your property, the objection must be submitted to Christopher Merritt (cmerritt@utah.gov), State Historic Preservation Officer, 3760 S. Highland Drive, Salt Lake City, Utah 84106, before the scheduled date of the Utah Board of State History meeting to consider the nomination. Other comments regarding the nomination of this property should also be directed to Mr. Merritt prior to the meeting date. A copy of the nomination, along with information on the National Register and the Federal and State tax provisions, is available at https://ushpo.utah.gov/shpo/preservation/ or from the above address on request. If you support the listing of your property, you may send a letter or email to that effect to Mr. Merritt at either the mailing or email address listed above, though there is no requirement that you respond in support. Lack of a response from a property owner is considered a sign of support or lack of opposition. NATIONAL REGISTER--BENEFITS AND RESTRICTIONS What is the National Register? The National Register of Historic Places is the official federal list of properties that are significant in American history, architecture, archeology, and engineering. It was established by the federal government in 1966 as part of the National Historic Preservation Act. Why would someone list their property on the National Register? While listing on the National Register is primarily an honorary recognition of the historic or architectural significance of a property, owners also list their buildings to qualify for federal and/or state rehabilitation tax credits or grants, when available (see below). Listing on the National Register can also help educate the public and change a community's perception of its historic and cultural resources. Does listing limit an owner's property rights? Listing in the National Register does not interfere with a private property owner's right to alter, manage or dispose of the listed property. The owner is not required to restore or maintain the property or open it to the public. Local preservation ordinances, where present, may have some implication for a property owner. Local ordinances are not associated with the National Register. Who can nominate properties to the National Register? Any interested person can research and nominate any property to the National Register. The legal owner has the right to comment on or object to and prevent the listing of their private property. For historic districts, each property owner is provided an opportunity to comment on/object to the nomination. However, at least 51% of property owners must object to prevent the listing of a district. Is there money available for restoration? Limited matching grants are occasionally available for the preservation of properties listed on the National Register -- contact the State Historic Preservation Office for more information. RESULTS OF LISTING IN THE NATIONAL REGISTER Eligibility for Federal tax provisions: If a property is listed in the National Register, federal law potentially allows for a 20 percent investment tax credit with a full adjustment to basis for the “substantial rehabilitation” of historic commercial, industrial, and rental residential buildings. Whether these provisions are advantageous to a property owner is dependent upon the particular circumstances of the property and the owner. For further information on certification requirements, please refer to 36 CFR 67. More information on federal tax credits is available at this link https://ushpo.utah.gov/shpo/financialincentives/ Eligibility for State tax provisions: The Utah State Legislature created a state income tax credit for the rehabilitation of historic (i.e., National Register listed) residential buildings, either owner-occupied or rental. The credit is 20% of the cost of rehabilitation work totaling more than $10,000. All of the proposed rehabilitation work must meet the Secretary of the Interior’s “Standards for Rehabilitation” and must be pre-approved by the State Historic Preservation Office. More information on the state tax credits is available at this link: https://ushpo.utah.gov/shpo/financial-incentives/ Consideration in planning for Federal, federally licensed and federally assisted projects: Section 106 of the National Historic Preservation Act of 1966 requires that Federal agencies to take account their actions on those resources eligible or listed on the National Register of Historic Places. For further information, please refer to 36 CFR 800. More information on compliance projects is available at this link: https://ushpo.utah.gov/shpo/shpo-compliance/ Qualification for Federal or State grants for historic preservation when available: Presently, limited funding may be available through the Certified Local Government (CLG) program. Direct grants to property owners are also occasionally available. For information about possible grants, contact the State Historic Preservation Office. Where do I go for National Register forms, bulletins, answers, etc.? Contact: Cory Jensen National Register Coordinator Utah State Historic Preservation Office 3760 S. Highland Drive Salt Lake City, Utah 84106 801/245-7242 coryjensen@utah.gov Our website: https://ushpo.utah.gov/shpo/national-register/ National Register website: https://www.nps.gov/subjects/nationalregister/index.htm Christopher Merritt State Historic Preservation Officer Utah State Historic Preservation Office Spencer J. Cox Governor Deidre M. Henderson Lieutenant Governor March 26, 2025 Donna Law Executive Director Utah Department of Cultural and Community Engagement MICHAEL JAMES, CHANEY KIEL PACKER 219 EAST 100 NORTH FARMINGTON, UT 84025 Dear Michael and Chaney: It is my distinct pleasure to inform you that the historic property listed below, nominated by the State National Register Review Committee and the Utah State Historic Preservation Officer, was officially listed in the National Register of Historic Places by the National Park Service on March 14, 2025: BURNS-WOOD HOUSE, 231 EAST 100 NORTH, FARMINGTON, DAVIS COUNTY Listing in the National Register is intended to encourage preservation as well as provide recognition of a property's significance. A major benefit of listing on the National Register is the availability of tax credits for qualified restoration work on residential or income-producing properties (see attached fact sheets). It is important to apply for the historic tax credits prior to starting any work. We would be pleased to assist you with the application process should you wish to apply. Also, an officially signed National Register certificate is available upon request. You may also purchase a National Register marker. Please contact Cory Jensen of the Office of Historic Preservation at coryjensen@utah.gov if you have any questions regarding the National Register or if we may be of other assistance to you. Sincerely, Christopher W. Merritt, Ph.D. State Historic Preservation Officer Enclosures 3760 South Highland Drive • Salt Lake City, Utah 84106 • history.utah.gov The Utah Historic Preservation Tax Credit http://ushpo.utah.gov/shpo/financial-incentives/ What is the Utah Historic Preservation Tax Credit? A 20 % non-refundable state income tax credit for the rehabilitation of historic buildings that are used as owneroccupied residences or residential rentals. Twenty percent of all* qualified rehabilitation costs may be subtracted from taxes owed on your Utah income or corporate franchise tax. Example: $22,000 in qualified rehabilitation costs = $4,400 state income tax credit Does my building qualify? Buildings listed in the National Register of Historic Places, which, after rehabilitation, are used as a residence(s) qualify. The credit is not available for any property used for commercial purposes including hotels or bed-andbreakfasts. (If the historic B&B is also owner-occupied, this portion of the rehabilitation may qualify.) The building does not need to be listed in the National Register at the beginning of the project, but a complete National Register nomination must be submitted when the project is finished. The property must be officially listed in the National Register within three years of the approval of the completed project. Staff of the Historic Preservation Office can evaluate the eligibility of your building and provide instructions on nomination requirements. *What rehabilitation work qualifies? The work may include interior and/or exterior repair, rehabilitation or restoration, including historic, decorative, and structural elements as well as mechanical systems. All of the proposed, on-going or completed work must meet the Secretary of the Interior's Standards for Rehabilitation (Standards) and be approved by the State Historic Preservation Office (SHPO). Depending on the historic conditions and the specifics of the proposed rehab work, some examples of eligible work items include: • Repairing/upgrading windows • Repointing masonry • Repairing or replacing roofs • New floor and wall coverings before • Pointing walls, trim, etc. • Refinishing floors, handrails, etc. • Electrical updates • New furnace, A/C, boiler, etc. • Plumbing repairs and fixtures • Reconstructing historic porches • Compatible new kitchens & baths • Architectural, engineering, and permit fees • Purchase and installation of moveable furnishings (window coverings, rugs, furniture, etc.) • Site work (landscaping, sidewalks, fences, driveways, etc.) What work does not qualify? • Purchase price of building • New additions • Work on outbuildings after All of the work must meet the Standards, or the tax credit cannot be taken on any portion of the work. A complete application should be submitted to the SHPO as early as possible. The state law requires application and approval by the SHPO prior to completion of the project. Photographs showing all areas of work (interior and exterior) prior to the beginning of the rehabilitation and any construction drawings or other technical information necessary to completely understand the proposed project are also required as part of the application. Utah State Historic Preservation Office, Utah Division of State History, 3760 S. Highland Drive, Millcreek, UT 84106 Phone 801/245-7277 It is strongly recommended that the application be submitted before starting work to ensure that it meets the Standards. Any work begun without prior SHPO approval is done at the owner’s own risk. Once work is underway, changes to bring the project into conformance with the Standards can be difficult, expensive, or occasionally impossible to make. How much money must I spend to qualify? Total rehabilitation expenditures must exceed $10,000. The purchase price of the building and any donated labor cannot be included. The project must be completed within 36 months of your project preapproval. (There is no limit to subsequent $10,000+ projects; separate applications are required.) When can I claim the credit? The credit may be taken for the tax year in final approval is given by the SHPO. A unique certification number will be issued to the owner at that time. Credit amounts greater than the amount of tax due in that year may be carried forward up to five years. Are there any restrictions placed on my building? All work done to the building during the rehabilitation project, and for three years following the certification of the project, must meet the Secretary of the Interior's Standards for Rehabilitation. Please consult with the State Historic Preservation Office if you have any questions. What if I already have approval from my local Landmarks Commission? The local review process will be helpful to tax credit application process but state law requires application to the State Historic Preservation Office. Local preservation commissions sometimes have different requirements and other considerations than the Secretary of the Interior’s Standards for Rehabilitation. To qualify for the state tax credit, all of the work must meet the Standards and receive state approval. How do I claim the tax credit? After the work is completed and certified, the SHPO will provide you with a TC-40H tax form with instructions for calculating your credit. Do not submit this form with your tax return; keep it and all related documents with your tax records. If you carryforward any excess tax credit, you must attach a copy of the original TC-40H form, with the new carryforward amount, to your subsequent tax return(s). Carryforward amounts must be applied against tax due before the application of any historic preservation tax credits earned in the current year and on a first-earned, first-used basis. Please consult with the State Tax Commission (801/297-2200) if you have any questions. Original records supporting the credit claimed must be maintained for three years following the date the return was filed claiming the credit. For more information or a state tax credit application contact: Amber Anderson (amberanderson@utah.gov or 801/245-7277) Utah State Historic Preservation Office 3760 S. Highland Drive Millcreek, UT 84106 Additional local preservation requirements may also apply. Contact your city or county government for more information: Salt Lake City Landmark Commission 801/535-6189 or www.slcgov.com/ced/hlc Park City Planning Department 435/615-5060 Ogden Planning Department 801/629-8930 For tax-related questions contact: Utah State Tax Commission Technical Research Unit at 801/297-2200 For a list of preservation contractors see Preservation Utah’s Directory: https://preservationutah.org/resources/tools-for-property-owners/ut-preservation-directory Federal Historic Building Rehabilitation Tax Credit https://ushpo.utah.gov/shpo/financial-incentives https://www.nps.gov/subjects/taxincentives/index.htm What is the Federal Historic Building Rehabilitation Tax Credit? A 20% non-refundable federal income tax credit for the rehabilitation of historic buildings that are used as incomeproducing properties, including commercial or residential rental use. Twenty percent of all qualified rehabilitation costs may be subtracted from taxes owed on your federal income or corporate franchise tax. Example: $75,000 in qualified rehabilitation costs = $15,000 federal income tax credit (not just a deduction) Does my building qualify? Buildings listed in the National Register of Historic Places, which, after rehabilitation, are used as a business or other income-producing purpose qualify. The building does not need to be listed in the National Register at the beginning of the project, but a preliminary determination of significance must be issued by the National Park Service (NPS) prior to project approval and a complete National Register nomination must be submitted in a timely manner. Staff of the State Historic Preservation Office can evaluate the eligibility of your building and provide instructions on nomination requirements. What rehabilitation work qualifies? The work may include interior and/or exterior repair, rehabilitation or restoration, including historic, decorative, and structural elements as well as mechanical systems. All of the proposed, on-going or completed work must meet the Secretary of the Interior's Standards for Rehabilitation (Standards) and be approved by the National Park Service (NPS). Depending on the historic conditions and the specifics of the proposed rehab work, some examples of eligible work items include: • • • • • • • • Repairing/upgrading windows Repointing masonry Repairing or replacing roofs New floor and wall coverings Painting walls, trim, etc. Refinishing floors, handrails, etc. Electrical updates New furnace A/C boiler, etc. • Plumbing repairs and fixtures • Reconstructing historic porches • Compatible new kitchens & baths • Architectural, engineering & permit fees before (top) and after (bottom) What work does not qualify? • Purchase price of building • New Additions • Purchase and installation of moveable furnishings or equipment (window coverings, refrigerators, etc.) • • Site work (landscaping, sidewalks, fences, driveways, etc.) Other items as determined by the IRS The National Park Service requires that you work through us (the State Historic Preservation Office, or SHPO) on your application. You should submit the first two sections of the NPS’s three-part application to us as early as possible. Photographs showing all areas of work (interior and exterior) prior to the beginning of the rehabilitation and any construction drawings or other technical information necessary to completely understand the proposed project are also required as part of the application. Utah State Historic Preservation Office, Utah Division of State History, 3760 S. Highland Drive, Millcreek, UT 84106 Phone 801/245-7277 It is strongly recommended that the application be submitted before starting work to ensure that it meets the Standards. Any work begun without prior NPS approval is done at the owner’s own risk. Once work is underway, changes to bring the project into conformance with the Standards can be difficult, expensive, or occasionally impossible to make. How much money must I spend to qualify? The Federal program requires your project to meet the "Substantial Rehabilitation Test." This requires you to be respending the greater of your building's "adjusted basis" or $5,000, typically within a 24 month measuring period of your choosing. A 60 month measuring period may be available if your project meets certain requirements (consult with SHPO early if you think you might need this). The formula for calculating "adjusted basis" is A - B - C + D, where A = purchase price of the property, B = the cost of the land at the time of purchase, C = depreciation taken for an income-producing property, and D = cost of any capital improvements made since purchase. Example 1 (a recent purchase): Example 2 (long-time ownership): $130,000 (purchase price) – $33,000 (land) = $97,000 (adjusted basis) $130,000 (purchase price) – $70,000 (depreciation) – $33,000 (land) + $15,000 (capital improvements) = $42,000 (adjusted basis) Rehabilitation expenses must exceed the adjusted basis ($97,000). Rehabilitation expenses must exceed the adjusted basis ($42,000). As long as your project meets the Substantial Rehabilitation Test, you can claim costs prior to your selected measuring period and up through the end of the year in which your measuring period ends. Your project does not have to be finished within the 24 or 60 month window, but the building does have to be placed "back in service" before you can claim the credit. Fees are charged by the NPS to process parts of the federal historic rehabilitation tax credit application, except for projects under $80,000. For more information on the fee structure, see: https://www.nps.gov/tps/tax-incentives/app-process/fees.htm Are there any restrictions placed on my building? All work done to the building during the rehabilitation project, and for five years following the certification of the project, must meet the Secretary of the Interior's Standards for Rehabilitation. Unapproved changes within that five year postproject period could result in recapture of the tax credit by the IRS. Similarly, you must keep the building for at least five years from the date you complete the project. The tax credit recapture amount ranges from 100% if the building is sold within the first year, to 20% if it is sold within the fifth year. For more information or application instructions contact: Amber Anderson (amberanderson@utah.gov or 801/245-7277) Utah State Historic Preservation Office 3760 S. Highland Drive Millcreek, UT 84106 Additional local preservation requirements may also apply. Contact your city or county government for more information. For tax-related questions, see: *https://www.irs.gov/businesses/small-businesses-self-employed/taxaspects-of-the-historic-preservation-tax-incentives-faqs *https://www.nps.gov/tps/tax-incentives/before-apply/qualifiedexpenses.htm before (top) and after (bottom) For a list of preservation contractors see Preservation Utah’s Directory: *https://preservationutah.org/resources/tools-for-property-owners/ut-preservation-directory Christopher Merritt State Historic Preservation Officer Utah State Historic Preservation Office Spencer J. Cox Governor Deidre M. Henderson Lieutenant Governor January 16, 2025 Donna Law Executive Director Utah Department of Cultural and Community Engagement MICHAEL JAMES, CHANEY KIEL PACKER 219 EAST 100 NORTH FARMINGTON, UT 84025 Dear Michael and Chaney: We are pleased to report that the following property has been approved by the Utah National Register Review Committee for nomination to the National Register of Historic Places: BURNS-WOOD HOUSE, 231 EAST 100 NORTH, FARMINGTON, UT Within the next few weeks, we will submit the nomination and documentation to the National Register office in Washington, DC, for final approval. This review typically occurs within six to eight weeks. If you have any questions or concerns about this National Register nomination, please contact Cory Jensen of the Historic Preservation Office at 801/245-7242 or at coryjensen@utah.gov. We appreciate your interest in and support of historic sites in Utah. Sincerely, Christopher W. Merritt, Ph.D. State Historic Preservation Officer 3760 South Highland Drive • Salt Lake City, Utah 84106 • history.utah.gov Christopher Merritt State Historic Preservation Officer Utah State Historic Preservation Office Spencer J. Cox Governor Deidre M. Henderson Lieutenant Governor November 16, 2024 Donna Law Executive Director Utah Department of Cultural and Community Engagement DAVID BARNEY FARMINGTON CITY CLG Dear David: We are pleased to inform you that the historic property listed below will be considered by the Utah National Register Review Committee for nomination to the National Register of Historic Places: BURNS-WOOD HOUSE, 231 E 100 N, FARMINGTON, UT ELIAS & LUCY VAN FLEET HOUSE, 93 E 300 N, FARMINGTON, UT ELIAS & MARY ANN VAN FLEET HOUSE, 463 N 100 E, FARMINGTON, UT HENRY & LEATHA CHAFFIN HOUSE, 189 N 100 E, FARMINGTON, UT JESSE WELLS & MIRIAM SMITH HOUSE, 93 E 200 N, FARMINGTON, UT WILLIAM H. & HELEN MILLER HOUSE, 147 N 100 E, FARMINGTON, UT The National Register of Historic Places is the federal government's official list of historic properties worthy of preservation. Listing on the National Register provides recognition and assists in preserving our Nation's heritage. Listing of a property provides recognition of its historic significance and assures protective review of federal projects that might adversely affect the character of the historic property. If the property is listed on the National Register, tax credits for rehabilitation and other beneficial provisions may apply. Listing in the National Register does not place limitations on the property by the federal or state government. Public visitation rights are not required of owners. The government will not attach restrictive covenants to the property or seek to acquire them. One of your responsibilities as a Certified Local Government (CLG) is to review pending National Register nominations of properties within your community. This is required, in part, to detect any errors in fact, but also to provide local insight or knowledge concerning the property. Please have your historic preservation commission review the enclosed draft nomination and return the enclosed review form with the appropriate signatures. We would appreciate hearing back from you prior to the board meeting. You are invited to attend the National Register Review Committee meeting at which the nomination will be considered. The Board will meet virtually on Thursday, January 16, 2025, at 10:00 AM. You may join Zoom Meeting at: https://utah-gov.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_prs5VkhPQpuS2RuTpyGWYA 3760 South Highland Drive • Salt Lake City, Utah 84106 • history.utah.gov November 16, 2024 Page 2 Should you have any questions about this nomination before the meeting, please contact Cory Jensen of the Historic Preservation Office at 801/245-7242, or coryjensen@utah.gov. Sincerely, Christopher W. Merritt, Ph.D. State Historic Preservation Officer Enclosures Christopher Merritt State Historic Preservation Officer Utah State Historic Preservation Office Spencer J. Cox Governor Deidre M. Henderson Lieutenant Governor November 18, 2024 Donna Law Executive Director Utah Department of Cultural and Community Engagement MAYOR BRETT ANDERSON FARMINGTON CITY 160 S MAIN STREET FARMINGTON, UT 84025 Dear Mayor Anderson: We are pleased to inform you that the historic properties listed below will be considered by the Utah National Register Review Committee for nomination to the National Register of Historic Places: BURNS-WOOD HOUSE, 231 E 100 N, FARMINGTON, UT ELIAS & LUCY VAN FLEET HOUSE, 93 E 300 N, FARMINGTON, UT ELIAS & MARY ANN VAN FLEET HOUSE, 463 N 100 E, FARMINGTON, UT HENRY & LEATHA CHAFFIN HOUSE, 189 N 100 E, FARMINGTON, UT JESSE WELLS & MIRIAM SMITH HOUSE, 93 E 200 N, FARMINGTON, UT WILLIAM H. & HELEN MILLER HOUSE, 147 N 100 E, FARMINGTON, UT The National Register of Historic Places is the federal government's official list of historic properties worthy of preservation. Listing on the National Register provides recognition and assists in preserving our Nation's heritage. Listing of a property provides recognition of its historic significance and assures protective review of federal projects that might adversely affect the character of the historic property. If the property is listed on the National Register, tax credits for rehabilitation and other beneficial provisions may apply. Listing in the National Register does not place limitations on the property by the federal or state government. Public visitation rights are not required of owners. The government will not attach restrictive covenants to the property or seek to acquire them. Enclosed please find a notice that explains, in greater detail, the results of listing in the National Register. It also describes the rights and procedures by which an owner may comment on or object to listing on the National Register. You are invited to attend the National Register Review Committee meeting at which the nomination will be considered. The Board will meet virtually on Thursday, January 16, 2025, at 10:00 AM. You may join Zoom Meeting at: https://utah-gov.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_prs5VkhPQpuS2RuTpyGWYA 3760 South Highland Drive • Salt Lake City, Utah 84106 • history.utah.gov November 18, 2024 Page 2 Should you have any questions about this nomination before the meeting, please contact Cory Jensen of the Historic Preservation Office at 801/245-7242, or coryjensen@utah.gov. Sincerely, Christopher W. Merritt, Ph.D. State Historic Preservation Officer Enclosures RIGHTS OF OWNERS TO COMMENT ON AND/OR OBJECT TO LISTING IN THE NATIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES Owners of private properties nominated to the National Register have an opportunity to concur with or object to listing in accord with the National Historic Preservation Act and 36 CFR 60. Any owner or partial owner of private property who chooses to object to listing may submit to the State Historic Preservation Officer a statement certifying that the party is the sole or partial owner of the private property and objects to the listing. Each owner or partial owner of private property has one vote regardless of the portion of the property that the party owns. If a majority of private property owners object, a property will not be listed. However, the State Historic Preservation Office shall submit the nomination to the Keeper of the National Register of Historic Places for a determination of eligibility of the property rather than a listing in the National Register. If you choose to object to the listing of your property, the objection must be submitted to Christopher Merritt (cmerritt@utah.gov), State Historic Preservation Officer, 3760 S. Highland Drive, Salt Lake City, Utah 84106, before the scheduled date of the Utah Board of State History meeting to consider the nomination. Other comments regarding the nomination of this property should also be directed to Mr. Merritt prior to the meeting date. A copy of the nomination, along with information on the National Register and the Federal and State tax provisions, is available at https://ushpo.utah.gov/shpo/preservation/ or from the above address on request. If you support the listing of your property, you may send a letter or email to that effect to Mr. Merritt at either the mailing or email address listed above, though there is no requirement that you respond in support. Lack of a response from a property owner is considered a sign of support or lack of opposition. NATIONAL REGISTER--BENEFITS AND RESTRICTIONS What is the National Register? The National Register of Historic Places is the official federal list of properties that are significant in American history, architecture, archeology, and engineering. It was established by the federal government in 1966 as part of the National Historic Preservation Act. Why would someone list their property on the National Register? While listing on the National Register is primarily an honorary recognition of the historic or architectural significance of a property, owners also list their buildings to qualify for federal and/or state rehabilitation tax credits or grants, when available (see below). Listing on the National Register can also help educate the public and change a community's perception of its historic and cultural resources. Does listing limit an owner's property rights? Listing in the National Register does not interfere with a private property owner's right to alter, manage or dispose of the listed property. The owner is not required to restore or maintain the property or open it to the public. Local preservation ordinances, where present, may have some implication for a property owner. Local ordinances are not associated with the National Register. Who can nominate properties to the National Register? Any interested person can research and nominate any property to the National Register. The legal owner has the right to comment on or object to and prevent the listing of their private property. For historic districts, each property owner is provided an opportunity to comment on/object to the nomination. However, at least 51% of property owners must object to prevent the listing of a district. Is there money available for restoration? Limited matching grants are occasionally available for the preservation of properties listed on the National Register -- contact the State Historic Preservation Office for more information. RESULTS OF LISTING IN THE NATIONAL REGISTER Eligibility for Federal tax provisions: If a property is listed in the National Register, federal law potentially allows for a 20 percent investment tax credit with a full adjustment to basis for the “substantial rehabilitation” of historic commercial, industrial, and rental residential buildings. Whether these provisions are advantageous to a property owner is dependent upon the particular circumstances of the property and the owner. For further information on certification requirements, please refer to 36 CFR 67. More information on federal tax credits is available at this link https://ushpo.utah.gov/shpo/financialincentives/ Eligibility for State tax provisions: The Utah State Legislature created a state income tax credit for the rehabilitation of historic (i.e., National Register listed) residential buildings, either owner-occupied or rental. The credit is 20% of the cost of rehabilitation work totaling more than $10,000. All of the proposed rehabilitation work must meet the Secretary of the Interior’s “Standards for Rehabilitation” and must be pre-approved by the State Historic Preservation Office. More information on the state tax credits is available at this link: https://ushpo.utah.gov/shpo/financial-incentives/ Consideration in planning for Federal, federally licensed and federally assisted projects: Section 106 of the National Historic Preservation Act of 1966 requires that Federal agencies to take account their actions on those resources eligible or listed on the National Register of Historic Places. For further information, please refer to 36 CFR 800. More information on compliance projects is available at this link: https://ushpo.utah.gov/shpo/shpo-compliance/ Qualification for Federal or State grants for historic preservation when available: Presently, limited funding may be available through the Certified Local Government (CLG) program. Direct grants to property owners are also occasionally available. For information about possible grants, contact the State Historic Preservation Office. Where do I go for National Register forms, bulletins, answers, etc.? Contact: Cory Jensen National Register Coordinator Utah State Historic Preservation Office 3760 S. Highland Drive Salt Lake City, Utah 84106 801/245-7242 coryjensen@utah.gov Our website: https://ushpo.utah.gov/shpo/national-register/ National Register website: https://www.nps.gov/subjects/nationalregister/index.htm Christopher Merritt State Historic Preservation Officer Utah State Historic Preservation Office Spencer J. Cox Governor Deidre M. Henderson Lieutenant Governor Donna Law Executive Director Utah Department of Cultural and Community Engagement March 25, 2025 DAVID BARNEY FARMINGTON CITY CLG Dear David: We are pleased to inform you that the historic properties listed below, nominated by the State National Register Review Committee and the Utah State Historic Preservation Officer, were officially listed in the National Register of Historic Places by the National Park Service on March 17, 2025: BURNS-WOOD HOUSE, 231 E 100 N, FARMINGTON, UT ELIAS & LUCY VAN FLEET HOUSE, 93 E 300 N, FARMINGTON, UT ELIAS & MARY ANN VAN FLEET HOUSE, 463 N 100 E, FARMINGTON, UT HENRY & LEATHA CHAFFIN HOUSE, 189 N 100 E, FARMINGTON, UT JESSE WELLS & MIRIAM SMITH HOUSE, 93 E 200 N, FARMINGTON, UT WILLIAM H. & HELEN MILLER HOUSE, 147 N 100 E, FARMINGTON, UT Listing in the National Register is intended to provide recognition of a property's significance. Please contact Cory Jensen of the Office of Historic Preservation at coryjensen@utah.gov if you have any questions or if we may be of assistance to you. Sincerely, Christopher W. Merritt, Ph.D. State Historic Preservation Officer 3760 South Highland Drive • Salt Lake City, Utah 84106 • history.utah.gov Christopher Merritt State Historic Preservation Officer Utah State Historic Preservation Office Spencer J. Cox Governor Deidre M. Henderson Lieutenant Governor March 25, 2025 Donna Law Executive Director Utah Department of Cultural and Community Engagement MAYOR BRETT ANDERSON FARMINGTON CITY 160 S MAIN STREET FARMINGTON, UT 84025 Dear Mayor Anderson: We are pleased to inform you that the historic properties listed below, nominated by the State National Register Review Committee and the Utah State Historic Preservation Officer, were officially listed in the National Register of Historic Places by the National Park Service on March 17, 2025: BURNS-WOOD HOUSE, 231 E 100 N, FARMINGTON, UT ELIAS & LUCY VAN FLEET HOUSE, 93 E 300 N, FARMINGTON, UT ELIAS & MARY ANN VAN FLEET HOUSE, 463 N 100 E, FARMINGTON, UT HENRY & LEATHA CHAFFIN HOUSE, 189 N 100 E, FARMINGTON, UT JESSE WELLS & MIRIAM SMITH HOUSE, 93 E 200 N, FARMINGTON, UT WILLIAM H. & HELEN MILLER HOUSE, 147 N 100 E, FARMINGTON, UT Listing in the National Register is intended to provide recognition of a property's significance. Listing of a property provides recognition of its historic significance and assures protective review of federal projects that might adversely affect the character of the historic property. Listing in the National Register is completely honorific and does not place limitations on the property by the federal or state government. Please contact Cory Jensen at the Historic Preservation Office at coryjensen@utah.gov if you have any questions or if we may be of assistance to you. Sincerely, Christopher W. Merritt, Ph.D. State Historic Preservation Officer 3760 South Highland Drive • Salt Lake City, Utah 84106 • history.utah.gov NATIONAL REGISTER NOMINATION EVALUATION SHEET NRHP Review Committee Meeting Date: 1/16/25 PROPERTY NAME: ADDRESS: 231 East 100 North, Farmington EVALUATOR: ✔ OK DESCRIPTION: Is the property adequately described? Too general? Too specific? Have contribution and non-contribution features been clearly identified? Concerns SIGNIFICANCE and CONTEXT: Concerns ✔ OK Concerns Are the appropriate and best sources used? Are key dates and facts accurate and supported with references? Concerns ✔ OK FACTS AND SOURCES: Has the appropriate Criterion been used? Has it been justified? Is the context sufficient in breadth and depth to support the claims of significance? Is the narrative history complete and of the appropriate detail? Are there Sanborn maps available for Farmington? They may provide additional info about the evolution of the property, the location of the barn, an answer to why a house on a corner lot was not built on the corner as they often were (was there an earlier building or house on the corner that has since been removed?). TECHNICAL: Typos, grammar, organization and flow of the narrative, etc. ✔ OK Major alterations or additions? New materials? Altered setting? Moved? etc. Concerns ✔ OK DATE: 1/11/25 Anne Oliver INTEGRITY: ✔ OK Burns-Wood House Concerns SUPPORTING MATERIALS: Adequate photos, maps, drawings, etc.? OTHER ISSUES AND COMMENTS: Solid nomination. I'm really curious about the basement windows on the primary facade. Any evidence of what they might have been on the interior? (And it seems like the window types, although obscured by vegetation on the exterior, could be determined from the interior- did the author have access to the basement?) Has Cory or anyone else seen similar basement windows anywhere else in the state? NATIONAL REGISTER NOMINATION EVALUATION SHEET NRHP Review Committee Meeting Date: 1/16/2025 PROPERTY NAME: Burns-Woods House ADDRESS: 231 East 100 North, Farmington, UT EVALUATOR: Anya Grahn-Federmack DATE: 1/12/2025 OK Concerns INTEGRITY: Major alterations or additions? New materials? Altered setting? Moved? etc. Constructed c.1861 o Rear cross wing added c.1871, presumed to be adobe brick o Small side addition from 1950s-1960s Clad in mortared rubble stone and aluminum siding Replacement windows Partial enclosure of the side porch Stone and concrete foundation Curious that the side addition has one stone veneered wall on the south elevation built before 1953 and the other walls are clad in aluminum siding reflecting post-1953 addition Garages built after 1953 While this one has enough historic integrity for consideration, there have been significant changes to the form and materials of the building; however, the 1867 and 1871 exterior walls and overall form are still visible from the exterior. It appears that none of the original materials are evident on the interior. OK Concerns DESCRIPTION: Is the property adequately described? Too general? Too specific? Have contrib. and non-contrib. features been clearly identified? Page 7 – Consider how the floor plan is described. o Your floor plan shows an office but the description is a “large room of indeterminate function.” o You also describe the two bedrooms and bathrooms but mention “the hall leads east to another bedroom in the second addition.” This makes it sound like there are 3 bedrooms, but the floor plan only shows 2. o Also consider labeling the kitchen as “kitchen/dining” on the floor plan since that is how it’s described in the narrative. Stairs are also shown in the floor plan but it’s unclear from the description if those lead to a root cellar or attic space. OK Concerns SIGNIFICANCE AND CONTEXT: Has the appropriate Criterion been used? Has it been justified? Is the context sufficient in breadth and depth to support the claims of significance? Is the narrative history complete and of the appropriate detail? Deemed contributing to the “Settlement Era Buildings of Farmington, 1847-1896” NRHP nomination Criterion C o Period of significance: ca. 1861–ca. 1871 o One of only seven dwellings dating to the settlement era are known to exist in the community and retain a similarly high degree of architectural integrity. OK Concerns FACTS AND SOURCES: Are the appropriate and best sources used? Are key dates and facts accurate and supported with references? Good amount of research. Do you want to reference the “Settlement Era Buildings of Farmington, 1847 to 1896” MPS in your list of citations? OK Concerns TECHNICAL: Typos, grammar, organization and flow of the narrative, etc. Page 4 – Consider adding the construction date of the non-contributing structures NATIONAL REGISTER NOMINATION EVALUATION SHEET NRHP Review Committee Meeting Date: 1/16/2025 Page 6 – Do you know the year or approximate year of the photograph? Page 9 – Double-check your formatting. Extra space in Tom Carter’s entry. Van Cott’s entry is also indented. OK Concerns SUPPORTING MATERIALS: Adequate photos, maps, drawings, etc.? See comments above. COMMENTS/QUESTIONS: Meets the criteria for listing as outlined in the Settlement Era Buildings of Farmington, 1847 to 1896 “If the building is a rare intact example of a particular house type in Farmington, a greater degree of alteration may be acceptable. For example, a Settlement Era single cell house that has been covered with newer siding but generally retains its original form, massing, and a few windows or other significant architectural features may be considered eligible. Similarly, one of these house types that retains its original siding but has newer windows or a new porch, or an addition on the side or rear of the house, may also be considered eligible.” NATIONAL REGISTER NOMINATION EVALUATION SHEET NRHP Review Committee Meeting Date: PROPERTY NAME: ADDRESS: EVALUATOR: DATE: INTEGRITY: OK Major alterations or additions? New materials? Altered setting? Moved? etc. Concerns DESCRIPTION: Is the property adequately described? Too general? Too specific? Have OK Concerns SIGNIFICANCE and CONTEXT: OK Concerns FACTS AND OK Are the appropriate and best sources used? Are key dates and facts Concerns TECHNICAL: Typos, grammar, organization and flow of the narrative, etc. OK OK Concerns Concerns SUPPORTING MATERIALS: Adequate photos, maps, drawings, etc.? OTHER ISSUES AND COMMENTS: NATIONAL REGISTER NOMINATION EVALUATION SHEET NRHP Review Committee Meeting Date: PROPERTY NAME: ADDRESS: EVALUATOR: DATE: INTEGRITY: OK Major alterations or additions? New materials? Altered setting? Moved? etc. Concerns DESCRIPTION: Is the property adequately described? Too general? Too specific? Have OK Concerns SIGNIFICANCE and CONTEXT: OK Concerns FACTS AND OK Are the appropriate and best sources used? Are key dates and facts Concerns TECHNICAL: Typos, grammar, organization and flow of the narrative, etc. OK OK Concerns Concerns SUPPORTING MATERIALS: Adequate photos, maps, drawings, etc.? OTHER ISSUES AND COMMENTS: NATIONAL REGISTER NOMINATION EVALUATION SHEET NRHP Review Committee Meeting Date: PROPERTY NAME: ADDRESS: EVALUATOR: DATE: INTEGRITY: OK Major alterations or additions? New materials? Altered setting? Moved? etc. Concerns DESCRIPTION: Is the property adequately described? Too general? Too specific? Have OK Concerns SIGNIFICANCE and CONTEXT: OK Concerns FACTS AND OK Are the appropriate and best sources used? Are key dates and facts Concerns TECHNICAL: Typos, grammar, organization and flow of the narrative, etc. OK OK Concerns Concerns SUPPORTING MATERIALS: Adequate photos, maps, drawings, etc.? OTHER ISSUES AND COMMENTS: NATIONAL REGISTER NOMINATION EVALUATION SHEET NRHP Review Committee Meeting Date: PROPERTY NAME: ADDRESS: EVALUATOR: DATE: INTEGRITY: OK Major alterations or additions? New materials? Altered setting? Moved? etc. Concerns DESCRIPTION: Is the property adequately described? Too general? Too specific? Have OK Concerns SIGNIFICANCE and CONTEXT: OK Concerns FACTS AND OK Are the appropriate and best sources used? Are key dates and facts Concerns TECHNICAL: Typos, grammar, organization and flow of the narrative, etc. OK OK Concerns Concerns SUPPORTING MATERIALS: Adequate photos, maps, drawings, etc.? OTHER ISSUES AND COMMENTS: NATIONAL REGISTER NOMINATION EVALUATION SHEET NRHP Review Committee Meeting Date: PROPERTY NAME: ADDRESS: EVALUATOR: DATE: INTEGRITY: OK Major alterations or additions? New materials? Altered setting? Moved? etc. Concerns DESCRIPTION: Is the property adequately described? Too general? Too specific? Have OK Concerns SIGNIFICANCE and CONTEXT: OK Concerns FACTS AND OK Are the appropriate and best sources used? Are key dates and facts Concerns TECHNICAL: Typos, grammar, organization and flow of the narrative, etc. OK OK Concerns Concerns SUPPORTING MATERIALS: Adequate photos, maps, drawings, etc.? OTHER ISSUES AND COMMENTS: NATIONAL REGISTER NOMINATION EVALUATION SHEET NRHP Review Committee Meeting Date: PROPERTY NAME: ADDRESS: EVALUATOR: DATE: INTEGRITY: OK Major alterations or additions? New materials? Altered setting? Moved? etc. Concerns DESCRIPTION: Is the property adequately described? Too general? Too specific? Have OK Concerns SIGNIFICANCE and CONTEXT: OK Concerns FACTS AND OK Are the appropriate and best sources used? Are key dates and facts Concerns TECHNICAL: Typos, grammar, organization and flow of the narrative, etc. OK OK Concerns Concerns SUPPORTING MATERIALS: Adequate photos, maps, drawings, etc.? OTHER ISSUES AND COMMENTS: NATIONAL REGISTER NOMINATION EVALUATION SHEET NRHP Review Committee Meeting Date: PROPERTY NAME: ADDRESS: EVALUATOR: DATE: INTEGRITY: OK Major alterations or additions? New materials? Altered setting? Moved? etc. Concerns DESCRIPTION: Is the property adequately described? Too general? Too specific? Have OK Concerns SIGNIFICANCE and CONTEXT: OK Concerns FACTS AND OK Are the appropriate and best sources used? Are key dates and facts Concerns TECHNICAL: Typos, grammar, organization and flow of the narrative, etc. OK OK Concerns Concerns SUPPORTING MATERIALS: Adequate photos, maps, drawings, etc.? OTHER ISSUES AND COMMENTS: Christopher Merritt State Historic Preservation Officer Utah State Historic Preservation Office Spencer J. Cox Governor Deidre M. Henderson Lieutenant Governor January 28, 2025 Donna Law Executive Director Utah Department of Cultural and Community Engagement TO: Ms. Joy Beasley National Register of Historic Places Mail Stop 7228 1849 C St, NW Washington, D.C. 20240 FROM: Cory Jensen, National Register Coordinator, Utah State Historic Preservation Office RE: Burns-Wood House National Register of Historic Places nomination Ms. Beasley, The submission contains a signed true and correct copy of the National Register of Historic Places nomination form for the Burns-Wood House, Davis County. Also included are the TIF digital image files. Should you have any questions, please contact me at coryjensen@utah.gov. Thank you, J. Cory Jensen Enclosures: 1 NRHP nomination form with attached physical signature page 1 Digital images folder (TIF image files) 1 Physical transmission letter Physical Signature Page, with original signature Other: Comments: 1 0 X Please ensure that this nomination receives substantive review Property owners Property owners who object MPS/MPDF Cover name: Settlement Era Buildings of Farmington, 1847 to 1896 NPS Grant Fund: This nomination is PDIL for a State/Federal Tax Credit project Other: 3760 South Highland Drive • Salt Lake City, Utah 84106 • history.utah.gov NATIONAL REGISTER NOMINATION EVALUATION SHEET NRHP Review Committee Meeting Date: 1/16/25 PROPERTY NAME: ADDRESS: 231 East 100 North, Farmington EVALUATOR: ✔ OK DESCRIPTION: Is the property adequately described? Too general? Too specific? Have contribution and non-contribution features been clearly identified? Concerns SIGNIFICANCE and CONTEXT: Concerns ✔ OK Concerns Are the appropriate and best sources used? Are key dates and facts accurate and supported with references? Concerns ✔ OK FACTS AND SOURCES: Has the appropriate Criterion been used? Has it been justified? Is the context sufficient in breadth and depth to support the claims of significance? Is the narrative history complete and of the appropriate detail? Are there Sanborn maps available for Farmington? They may provide additional info about the evolution of the property, the location of the barn, an answer to why a house on a corner lot was not built on the corner as they often were (was there an earlier building or house on the corner that has since been removed?). TECHNICAL: Typos, grammar, organization and flow of the narrative, etc. ✔ OK Major alterations or additions? New materials? Altered setting? Moved? etc. Concerns ✔ OK DATE: 1/11/25 Anne Oliver INTEGRITY: ✔ OK Burns-Wood House Concerns SUPPORTING MATERIALS: Adequate photos, maps, drawings, etc.? OTHER ISSUES AND COMMENTS: Solid nomination. I'm really curious about the basement windows on the primary facade. Any evidence of what they might have been on the interior? (And it seems like the window types, although obscured by vegetation on the exterior, could be determined from the interior- did the author have access to the basement?) Has Cory or anyone else seen similar basement windows anywhere else in the state? NATIONAL REGISTER NOMINATION EVALUATION SHEET NRHP Review Committee Meeting Date: 1/16/2025 PROPERTY NAME: Burns-Woods House ADDRESS: 231 East 100 North, Farmington, UT EVALUATOR: Anya Grahn-Federmack DATE: 1/12/2025 OK Concerns INTEGRITY: Major alterations or additions? New materials? Altered setting? Moved? etc. Constructed c.1861 o Rear cross wing added c.1871, presumed to be adobe brick o Small side addition from 1950s-1960s Clad in mortared rubble stone and aluminum siding Replacement windows Partial enclosure of the side porch Stone and concrete foundation Curious that the side addition has one stone veneered wall on the south elevation built before 1953 and the other walls are clad in aluminum siding reflecting post-1953 addition Garages built after 1953 While this one has enough historic integrity for consideration, there have been significant changes to the form and materials of the building; however, the 1867 and 1871 exterior walls and overall form are still visible from the exterior. It appears that none of the original materials are evident on the interior. OK Concerns DESCRIPTION: Is the property adequately described? Too general? Too specific? Have contrib. and non-contrib. features been clearly identified? Page 7 – Consider how the floor plan is described. o Your floor plan shows an office but the description is a “large room of indeterminate function.” o You also describe the two bedrooms and bathrooms but mention “the hall leads east to another bedroom in the second addition.” This makes it sound like there are 3 bedrooms, but the floor plan only shows 2. o Also consider labeling the kitchen as “kitchen/dining” on the floor plan since that is how it’s described in the narrative. Stairs are also shown in the floor plan but it’s unclear from the description if those lead to a root cellar or attic space. OK Concerns SIGNIFICANCE AND CONTEXT: Has the appropriate Criterion been used? Has it been justified? Is the context sufficient in breadth and depth to support the claims of significance? Is the narrative history complete and of the appropriate detail? Deemed contributing to the “Settlement Era Buildings of Farmington, 1847-1896” NRHP nomination Criterion C o Period of significance: ca. 1861–ca. 1871 o One of only seven dwellings dating to the settlement era are known to exist in the community and retain a similarly high degree of architectural integrity. OK Concerns FACTS AND SOURCES: Are the appropriate and best sources used? Are key dates and facts accurate and supported with references? Good amount of research. Do you want to reference the “Settlement Era Buildings of Farmington, 1847 to 1896” MPS in your list of citations? OK Concerns TECHNICAL: Typos, grammar, organization and flow of the narrative, etc. Page 4 – Consider adding the construction date of the non-contributing structures NATIONAL REGISTER NOMINATION EVALUATION SHEET NRHP Review Committee Meeting Date: 1/16/2025 Page 6 – Do you know the year or approximate year of the photograph? Page 9 – Double-check your formatting. Extra space in Tom Carter’s entry. Van Cott’s entry is also indented. OK Concerns SUPPORTING MATERIALS: Adequate photos, maps, drawings, etc.? See comments above. COMMENTS/QUESTIONS: Meets the criteria for listing as outlined in the Settlement Era Buildings of Farmington, 1847 to 1896 “If the building is a rare intact example of a particular house type in Farmington, a greater degree of alteration may be acceptable. For example, a Settlement Era single cell house that has been covered with newer siding but generally retains its original form, massing, and a few windows or other significant architectural features may be considered eligible. Similarly, one of these house types that retains its original siding but has newer windows or a new porch, or an addition on the side or rear of the house, may also be considered eligible.” NATIONAL REGISTER NOMINATION EVALUATION SHEET NRHP Review Committee Meeting Date: PROPERTY NAME: ADDRESS: EVALUATOR: DATE: INTEGRITY: OK Major alterations or additions? New materials? Altered setting? Moved? etc. Concerns DESCRIPTION: Is the property adequately described? Too general? Too specific? Have OK Concerns SIGNIFICANCE and CONTEXT: OK Concerns FACTS AND OK Are the appropriate and best sources used? Are key dates and facts Concerns TECHNICAL: Typos, grammar, organization and flow of the narrative, etc. OK OK Concerns Concerns SUPPORTING MATERIALS: Adequate photos, maps, drawings, etc.? OTHER ISSUES AND COMMENTS: NATIONAL REGISTER NOMINATION EVALUATION SHEET NRHP Review Committee Meeting Date: PROPERTY NAME: ADDRESS: EVALUATOR: DATE: INTEGRITY: OK Major alterations or additions? New materials? Altered setting? Moved? etc. Concerns DESCRIPTION: Is the property adequately described? Too general? Too specific? Have OK Concerns SIGNIFICANCE and CONTEXT: OK Concerns FACTS AND OK Are the appropriate and best sources used? Are key dates and facts Concerns TECHNICAL: Typos, grammar, organization and flow of the narrative, etc. OK OK Concerns Concerns SUPPORTING MATERIALS: Adequate photos, maps, drawings, etc.? OTHER ISSUES AND COMMENTS: NATIONAL REGISTER NOMINATION EVALUATION SHEET NRHP Review Committee Meeting Date: PROPERTY NAME: ADDRESS: EVALUATOR: DATE: INTEGRITY: OK Major alterations or additions? New materials? Altered setting? Moved? etc. Concerns DESCRIPTION: Is the property adequately described? Too general? Too specific? Have OK Concerns SIGNIFICANCE and CONTEXT: OK Concerns FACTS AND OK Are the appropriate and best sources used? Are key dates and facts Concerns TECHNICAL: Typos, grammar, organization and flow of the narrative, etc. OK OK Concerns Concerns SUPPORTING MATERIALS: Adequate photos, maps, drawings, etc.? OTHER ISSUES AND COMMENTS: NATIONAL REGISTER NOMINATION EVALUATION SHEET NRHP Review Committee Meeting Date: PROPERTY NAME: ADDRESS: EVALUATOR: DATE: INTEGRITY: OK Major alterations or additions? New materials? Altered setting? Moved? etc. Concerns DESCRIPTION: Is the property adequately described? Too general? Too specific? Have OK Concerns SIGNIFICANCE and CONTEXT: OK Concerns FACTS AND OK Are the appropriate and best sources used? Are key dates and facts Concerns TECHNICAL: Typos, grammar, organization and flow of the narrative, etc. OK OK Concerns Concerns SUPPORTING MATERIALS: Adequate photos, maps, drawings, etc.? OTHER ISSUES AND COMMENTS: NATIONAL REGISTER NOMINATION EVALUATION SHEET NRHP Review Committee Meeting Date: PROPERTY NAME: ADDRESS: EVALUATOR: DATE: INTEGRITY: OK Major alterations or additions? New materials? Altered setting? Moved? etc. Concerns DESCRIPTION: Is the property adequately described? Too general? Too specific? Have OK Concerns SIGNIFICANCE and CONTEXT: OK Concerns FACTS AND OK Are the appropriate and best sources used? Are key dates and facts Concerns TECHNICAL: Typos, grammar, organization and flow of the narrative, etc. OK OK Concerns Concerns SUPPORTING MATERIALS: Adequate photos, maps, drawings, etc.? OTHER ISSUES AND COMMENTS: NATIONAL REGISTER NOMINATION EVALUATION SHEET NRHP Review Committee Meeting Date: PROPERTY NAME: ADDRESS: EVALUATOR: DATE: INTEGRITY: OK Major alterations or additions? New materials? Altered setting? Moved? etc. Concerns DESCRIPTION: Is the property adequately described? Too general? Too specific? Have OK Concerns SIGNIFICANCE and CONTEXT: OK Concerns FACTS AND OK Are the appropriate and best sources used? Are key dates and facts Concerns TECHNICAL: Typos, grammar, organization and flow of the narrative, etc. OK OK Concerns Concerns SUPPORTING MATERIALS: Adequate photos, maps, drawings, etc.? OTHER ISSUES AND COMMENTS: NATIONAL REGISTER NOMINATION EVALUATION SHEET NRHP Review Committee Meeting Date: PROPERTY NAME: ADDRESS: EVALUATOR: DATE: INTEGRITY: OK Major alterations or additions? New materials? Altered setting? Moved? etc. Concerns DESCRIPTION: Is the property adequately described? Too general? Too specific? Have OK Concerns SIGNIFICANCE and CONTEXT: OK Concerns FACTS AND OK Are the appropriate and best sources used? Are key dates and facts Concerns TECHNICAL: Typos, grammar, organization and flow of the narrative, etc. OK OK Concerns Concerns SUPPORTING MATERIALS: Adequate photos, maps, drawings, etc.? OTHER ISSUES AND COMMENTS: PROPERTY TITLE SEARCH Property Description: 219 E 100 NORTH WEST RESIDENCE c. 1861 Date: 02/28/2023 Property Serial Number: 070270101 Name of Researcher: David Barney Legal Description: A PARCEL OF LAND SIT IN THE NW 1/4 & THE NE 1/4 OF SEC 19-T3N-R1E, SLB&M, SD PARCEL MORE PART'LY DESC AS FOLLOWS: BEG AT THE INTERSECTION OF THE E LINE OF 200 EAST STR & THE N LINE OF 100 NORTH STR DESC IN A RECORDED DOCUMENT FOR THE 100 NORTH STR DEDICATION RECORDED ON 08/21/2000 AS E# 1608956 BK 2683 PG 69 & BEING AT A PT S 0^17'15" W 29.50 FT FR THE SW COR OF LOT 3, BLK 12, PLAT B, FARMINGTON TS SURVEY, SD POB ALSO BEING S 89^39'30" E 33.00 FT ALG THE CENTER LINE OF 100 NORTH STR & N 0^17'15" E 20.00 FT FR A FARMINGTON CITY SURVEY MONU IN THE INTERSECTION OF 200 EAST STR & 100 NORTH STR & ALSO SD TO BE N 695.78 FT & W 165.46 FT & N 0^17'15" E 20.00 FT FR THE CENTER OF SEC 19-T3N-R1E, SLB&M; & RUN TH N 0^17'15" E 125.25 FT ALG THE E LINE OF 200 EAST STR TO & ALG THE W LINE OF LOT 3, BLK 12, PLAT B, FARMINGTON TS SURVEY TO A BNDRY LINE AGMT RECORDED ON 08/06/2018 AS E# 3109309 BK 7071 PG 247; TH S 89^20'29" E 255.41 FT ALG THE LINE DEFINED IN THE AFOREMENTIONED BNDRY LINE AGMT TO THE END THEREOF; TH S 0^17'15" W 123.83 FT TO THE N LINE OF 100 NORTH STR AS DESC ON THE AFOREMENTIONED DOCUMENT OF THE 100 NORTH STR DEDICATION; TH N 89^39'30" W 255.40 FT ALG THE N LINE OF THE AFOREMENTIONED DOCUMENT OF THE 100 NORTH STR DEDICATION TO THE E LINE OF 200 EAST STR TO THE POB. CONT. 0.72 ACRES Grantor Grantee Date Instrument Notes John Wood 11-1-1871 Deed $130.00 Book A of deeds Page 353 John Wood Jonathan David Wood 8-27-1874 Deed $100.00 Book D of deeds Page 85 Jonathan David Wood Allen Whitaker 12-24-1935 Deed $10.00 Book 1-N of deeds Page 234 Hector C. Haight – Probate Judge Patrick Burns Patrick Burns 11-20-1871 Town Site Deed $3.50 Book of Deeds Page 348 PROPERTY TITLE SEARCH NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service National Register of Historic Places Registration Form This form is for use in nominating or requesting determinations for individual properties and districts. See instructions in National Register Bulletin, How to Complete the National Register of Historic Places Registration Form. If any item does not apply to the property being documented, enter "N/A" for "not applicable." For functions, architectural classification, materials, and areas of significance, enter only categories and subcategories from the instructions. 1. Name of Property Historic name: __Patrick Burns - and John and Cathleen Wood House Other names/site number: __ DRAFT #1 Reviewed 4/3/2024 Name of related multiple property listing: __Settlement Era Buildings of Farmington, 1847 to 1896___________________ (Enter "N/A" if property is not part of a multiple property listing ____________________________________________________________________________ 2. Location Street & number: ___231 East 100 North_____________________________________ City or town: _Farmington State: _UT__________ County: ___Davis _____ Not For Publication: Vicinity: ____________________________________________________________________________ 3. State/Federal Agency Certification As the designated authority under the National Historic Preservation Act, as amended, I hereby certify that this X nomination ___ request for determination of eligibility meets the documentation standards for registering properties in the National Register of Historic Places and meets the procedural and professional requirements set forth in 36 CFR Part 60. In my opinion, the property _X_ meets ___ does not meet the National Register Criteria. I recommend that this property be considered significant at the following level(s) of significance: ___national ___statewide Applicable National Register Criteria: _X__A ___B ___C _X__local ___D /SHPO Signature of certifying official/Title: Date _ Utah State Historic Preservation Office ____________ State or Federal agency/bureau or Tribal Government In my opinion, the property meets does not meet the National Register criteria. Signature of commenting official: Date Title : State or Federal agency/bureau or Tribal Government 1 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Davis County, UT Name of Property County and State ______________________________________________________________________________ 4. National Park Service Certification I hereby certify that this property is: entered in the National Register determined eligible for the National Register determined not eligible for the National Register removed from the National Register other (explain:) _____________________ ______________________________________________________________________ Signature of the Keeper Date of Action 5. Classification Ownership of Property (Check as many boxes as apply.) Private: X Public – Local Public – State Public – Federal Category of Property (Check only one box.) Building(s) X District Site Structure Object Sections 1-6 page 2 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Davis County, UT Name of Property County and State Number of Resources within Property (Do not include previously listed resources in the count) Contributing Noncontributing _____1_____ _____ __3__ buildings _____0_____ _______ 0_ sites _____0_____ ____ ___0 structures _____0____ _ _______ 0 objects _____1_____ ______ 3 Total Number of contributing resources previously listed in the National Register ____0_____ 6. Function or Use Historic Functions (Enter categories from instructions.) _DOMESTIC/single dwelling ___________________ ___________________ ___________________ Current Functions (Enter categories from instructions.) _DOMESTIC/single dwelling ___________________ ___________________ ___________________ ___________________ ___________________ _____________________________________________________________________________ Sections 1-6 page 3 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Davis County, UT Name of Property County and State 7. Description Commented [CJ1]: Please refer to Bulletin 16A for proper terminology for this section Architectural Classification (Enter categories from instructions.) CLASSICAL_MID-19TH CENTURY__________________ Formatted: Superscript Materials: (enter categories from instructions.) Principal exterior materials of the property: SWalls: STONE, METAL/Aluminum VENEER; Foundation: STONE; Roof: ASPHALT Narrative Description (Describe the historic and current physical appearance and condition of the property. Describe contributing and noncontributing resources if applicable. Begin with a summary paragraph that briefly describes the general characteristics of the property, such as its location, type, style, method of construction, setting, size, and significant features. Indicate whether the property has historic integrity.) ______________________________________________________________________________ Summary Paragraph The Burns–Wood House is a 1one-story single-family dwelling located on the northeast corner of 200 East and 100 North in Farmington, Davis County. The dwelling occupies a large rectangular lot encompassing 0.72 acres and shares the lot with a large, non-contributing modern dwelling (219 E. 100 N.) and two detached garages (also modern and non-contributing). The dwelling is believed to have been constructed ca. 1861 with a rear addition constructed prior to 1871 and a small side addition from the c.1960s. It sits on a large rectangular lot of 0.72 acres and shares the lot with a large, modern dwelling and two detached garages (also modern). The dwelling exhibits a vernacular Classical style and is clad in a combination of mortared random rubble stone and wide aluminum siding. The exterior of the dwelling has been altered through replacement of historical windows with minor changes to some openings, use of the modern aluminum siding, in-period rear additions, an out-of-period side addition, and partial enclosure of a side porch. Collectively, these alterations are sufficientlyhave a minor impact on as to not affect the dwelling’s historic integrity. It retains sufficient integrity to be eligibleility for listing oin the National Register under Criterion A and within the integrityregistration requirements of the Settlement Era Buildings of Farmington MPS. _____________________________________________________________________________ Narrative Description Section 7 page 4 Commented [CJ2]: This is a choice name! Burns wood…. Commented [CJ3]: Need to briefly note the landscaping and the broader neighborhood setting here Commented [CJ4]: You will need to provide a brief discussion on how it meets (or how it has been impacted) each of the 7 aspects of integrity in the narrative below. Use a separate heading for this discussion. United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Davis County, UT Name of Property County and State The Burns–Wood House is a 1one-story single-family dwelling located on the northeast corner of 200 East and 100 North in Farmington, Davis County. The property qualifies for nomination under the Settlement Era Buildings of Farmington, 1847 to 1896 MPS. The dwelling is believed to have been constructed ca. 1861 with a rear addition constructed prior to 1871. It sits on a large rectangular lot of 0.72 acres and shares the lot with a large, modern dwelling and two detached garages (also modern). The historical dwelling sits in the approximate center of the parcel and exhibits a deep setback from the frontage road (100 North). The parcel exhibits a mix of modern and older landscaping with mature trees along the fringes of the parcel and several concrete and concrete paver patios. The dwelling exhibits vernacular Classical style that can be seen in the symmetrical façade and simple shallow eaves. The foundation was not fully visible but appears to include both stone and concrete sections. The roof of the dwelling is moderately pitched and covered in modern asphalt shingles. The walls of the dwelling are clad in a combination of mortared stone and wide aluminum siding. The aluminum siding covers what is reportedly an adobe brick addition that was built between 1861 and 1871. 1 No chimneys or similar features were observed. The exterior of the dwelling has been altered somewhat through replacement of historical windows with minor changes to some openings, use of the modern aluminum siding, in-period rear additions, and partial enclosure of a side porch. These alterations are discussed in more detail below. Collectively, these alterations are sufficiently minor as to not affect the dwelling’s eligibility for listing on the National Register under Criterion A and within the integrity requirements of the MPS. Exterior As noted above, the Burns–Wood House exhibits a cross-wing form created by an east-west oriented Hall-Parlor wing and a series of cross-wing rear additions. The additions also include a small side addition attached to the east elevation of the dwelling that was likely constructed during the 1950s or 1960s given the nature of the window currently present there. The east elevation of the dwelling constitutes the original primary façade. This elevation exhibits four window openings and a doorway in the original hall-parlor section and a single window opening in the side addition. The doorway is located at center in the hall-parlor wing and is flanked on the east and west by window openings that are spaced equidistant from the door. The door is accessed by a low concrete stoop protected by a gable-front cover supported by simple 4x4 wooden columns. The porch cover was reportedly constructed during the last 10-15 years according to the current owner and was designed with its current height to cover up a former chimney opening created by a previous owner when they blocked/bricked-up the original front doorway and built a fireplace there; the current owners removed the fireplace and restored the original entry opening. The window openings near the door exhibit thick wooden lintels and thin wooden sills. The openings are rectangular in shape with the long axis oriented vertically, and Anonymous. 2024. “Jonathan David Wood and Cathleen Blanche Bird.” Undated manuscript found on FamilySearch.org at: https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/memories/KWC6-JXY 1 Section 7 page 5 Commented [CJ5]: Most of this isn’t really necessary as it’s just repeating the summary paragraph. I suggest keeping the basic descriptive information (cladding materials, roof, chimneys, etc.) Commented [CJ6]: Be sure to key the photos in the text United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Davis County, UT Name of Property County and State they hold aluminum-framed, 1-over-1, single-hung windows that mimic the wood-framed windows that were likely originally present at the time of construction. A third and fourth window opening are located in this portion of the elevation. They are situated immediately abutting the east and west edges of the porch/stoop and are semi-subterranean. Given the thick wooden lintels above it, these openings are likely original to the structure, but their placement is unusual. The openings were largely obscured by vegetation, and the type of windows they hold could not be discerned. The final window opening in the south elevation of the dwelling is found in the small side addition (southeast corner addition). This opening is located at center the wall of the addition and is large and rectangular in shape with the long axis oriented horizontally. It holds a modern, three-part, aluminum-framed window with a fixed central pane flanked by narrow sliders. The visible east elevation of the dwelling is an addition to the structure. Only a portion of the gable wall of the original hall-parlor structure is visible, and it does not exhibit any notable architectural detail. The side addition, portions of which appear to have been constructed before 1953 and portions of which were constructed after 1953, is clad in mortared stone veneer on its south elevation and wide aluminum siding on its east and north elevations. The structure has a steep broken cat-slide style roof created by the combination of additions comprising it. The elevation exhibits one doorway near the south end and two window openings—one near center and one in the northern third of the elevation. The window openings are relatively large, roughly square in shape, and hold modern aluminum slider windows. The northern of the two is smaller than the other. The north elevation of the dwelling comprises a combination of the east side addition and the pre-1871 addition. The wall of the side addition is clad in wide aluminum siding while the wall of the earlier addition is clad in mortared stone. The side addition exhibits a lean-to style roof as it pertains to this north elevation of the dwelling, and the earlier addition exhibits a front-gable type roof. Three window openings are present in this elevation. Two are located in the pre-1871 addition, and one is located in the side addition. The opening in the side addition is square in shape, has a moderately thick wooden lintel, and holds a modern aluminum-framed slider. It is located within approximately 1 foot of the junction with the stone addition. The two openings in the pre-1871 addition are located with one at center and one within roughly 3 feet of the east edge of the elevation. These openings are rectangular in shape, have thick wooden lintels and thin wooden sills, and hold aluminum-framed, 1-over-1, single-hung windows. The west elevation of the dwelling may have served as a secondary entry. It exhibits a large, recessed porch area, three window openings, and a doorway. The porch sits immediately north of the original hall-parlor wing and occupies the center portion of the elevation. It is recessed by at least 5 feet, and the lean-to style roof section extending over it is supported by four square wooden columns. An undated (but quite old) photograph of this portion of the dwelling shows the porch was once longer, and the roof was supported by five square or possibly slightly tapered (i.e., battered) columns. At present, the northern two columns appear to have been removed to accommodate partial infilling of the porch to expand interior living space. It is unclear when this alteration occurred, but it was most likely carried out after the period of significance for this property and for the MPS as a whole. Section 7 page 6 Commented [CJ7]: I don’t see the photo included in the nomination. Please include this as a Figure United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Davis County, UT Name of Property County and State Interior The interior of the dwelling consists of the main floor and a partial basement that once served as a root cellar. The basement now includes two finished rooms used for storage and a closet. The main floor of the dwelling includes both the original hall-parlor section and the two primary additions. The front hall-parlor section comprises a single room with no interior dividing walls and a fireplace at the east end. Passing through the front wing to the north, one enters into the first of the historical additions, which comprises a large room of indeterminate function (possibly the kitchen), with a bedroom and ensuite bathroom to the north and a second bathroom and hall immediately east of the bedroom. The hall leads east into another bedroom that is located in the second addition. South of this second bedroom and east of the large room of indeterminate function is a kitchen and dining room. A short stairwell extends from the kitchen into the basement. A portion of the original exterior stone masonry wall of the hall-parlor wing is exposed in the southwest corner of the kitchen. Commented [CJ8]: Any idea when the partition wall was removed? Other than the exposed stone wall in the kitchen and sections of exposed stone walls in the basement, little remains of the historical finishes save for the lath and plaster walls. Newer finishes dating to the late-1940s and beyond include wainscoting, crown moldings and chair rails, laminate floors, and modern granite countertops and cabinetry. Ancillary Buildings Two non-contributing outbuildings and one non–contributing dwelling are located on the parcel with the eligible dwelling. These buildings include two modern detached garages and one modern single-family dwelling. Both garages were constructed after 1953, and the dwelling was constructed in 2020. All of these buildings are considered noncontributing to this National Register nomination. Historic Integrity Discussion Commented [CJ9]: Again, provide a discussion on each of the 7 aspects of integrity and what the impacts are. This can be brief—focusing primarily on what the impacts are. Setting Commented [CJ10]: Describe in more detail the property, landscaping and the neighborhood setting Section 7 page 7 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Davis County, UT Name of Property County and State 8. Statement of Significance Applicable National Register Criteria (Mark "x" in one or more boxes for the criteria qualifying the property for National Register listing.) X A. Property is associated with events that have made a significant contribution to the broad patterns of our history. B. Property is associated with the lives of persons significant in our past. C. Property embodies the distinctive characteristics of a type, period, or method of construction or represents the work of a master, or possesses high artistic values, or represents a significant and distinguishable entity whose components lack individual distinction. D. Property has yielded, or is likely to yield, information important in prehistory or history. Criteria Considerations (Mark “x” in all the boxes that apply.) A. Owned by a religious institution or used for religious purposes B. Removed from its original location C. A birthplace or grave D. A cemetery E. A reconstructed building, object, or structure F. A commemorative property G. Less than 50 years old or achieving significance within the past 50 years Section 8 page 8 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Davis County, UT Name of Property County and State Areas of Significance _EXPLORATION/SETTLEMENT _ _ ARCHITECTURE_________________ Period of Significance _1863–1898 ___________________ ___________________ Commented [CJ11]: Unless you are going to use Criterion A or B, then just include Architecture as an area of significance Commented [CJ12]: If the construction date is c.1861, then use that as the beginning of the POS Commented [CJ13]: Why was this year chosen? Also under Significant Dates? I don’t see a discussion of this anywhere. You will need to discuss the Period of Significance below and make a good argument for the years chosen Significant Dates _1863______________ _1898_________ ___________________ Commented [CJ14]: Change these accordingly based on the Period of Signifance Significant Person (Complete only if Criterion B is marked above.) ___________________ ___________________ ___________________ Cultural Affiliation ___________________ ___________________ Architect/Builder ___________________ ___________________ Section 8 page 9 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Davis County, UT Name of Property County and State Statement of Significance Summary Paragraph (Provide a summary paragraph that includes level of significance, applicable criteria, justification for the period of significance, and any applicable criteria considerations.) The Burns–Wood House is a one1-story single-family dwelling in Farmington, Davis Coungy, believed to have been constructed ca. 1861, with a rear addition constructed prior to 1871. It is significant at the local level under Criterion A (in the area of Exploration/Settlement) as one of only a handful of residential properties from the Settlement Era in Farmington to both remain standing and retain sufficient integrity to reflect its period of construction and period of significance. It is also among the oldest remaining buildings in Farmington that retains architectural integrity and provides a glimpse into the pioneer period in the community. ______________________________________________________________________________ Narrative Statement of Significance (Provide at least one paragraph for each area of significance.) The Settlement Era Buildings of Farmington, 1847 to 1896 MPS establishes the context and registration requirements for buildings built during the period of significance for the MPS. The Burns–Wood House qualifies for consideration under the registration criteria set forth in the MPS for residential properties. The significance of this property type within the MPS context includes the fact that residential structures are a) the predominant extant property type associated with the period (i.e., residential properties are among the only extant hallmarks of the community’s pioneer heritage) ; b) reflective of the early settlement history of the community and its evolution from a relative frontier outpost to a permanent city; c) curated examples of the earliest beginnings of the Farmington community and the adaptations of architectural types and styles to the sometimes unique cultural needs and expectations of an early settlement established by members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS 2); and d) reflections of the changing access to construction materials, e.g., evolving from local fieldstone and sun-dried adobe brick to kiln-fired bricks, and the introduction of “higher style” adornment following the completion of the Transcontinental Railroad in 1869 and the connection of communities along the Wasatch Front to national markets and national ideas. As discussed in more detail below, the Burns–Wood House meets the first three (items a–c) of these considerations. The Burns–Wood House satisfies the registration requirements for residential properties under Criterion A established in the Settlement Era Buildings of Farmington, 1847 to 1896 MPS. Specifically, the original part of the dwelling was constructed ca.1861, in the heart of the period of significance for the MPS (Registration Requirement 1); the addition also was constructed during the period of significance. The dwelling retains its original location of construction from the period of significance (Registration Requirement 2). It also retains sufficient integrity of type, style, materials, and manner of construction common to residential buildings in Farmington during the period of significance (Registration Requirement 3). 2 Members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints are often referred to as Mormons or LDS, and the church organization itself is frequently referred to as the Mormon Church or the LDS Church. Church leadership recently directed its membership to avoid using such terms and use the full name of the church instead. The term LDS Church is used herein solely for the purpose of brevity and ease of readability and should not be interpreted otherwise. Section 8 page 10 Commented [CJ15]: This paragraph is supposed to be an executive summary of that covers all of the basic NRHP aspects of the property. I don’t see anything here about the Burns or the Woods? Your argument focuses on the architecture here, so that would be Criterion C/Architecture, Not Criterion A. Is there a case to be made for the Burns and Woods? If not, you still need to note them here and their association with the property. Also, you need to discuss the period of significance and why it was chosen. And note that it is being nominated under the MPS and specific context era (if there is one) Commented [CJ16]: Move this after the discussion on the house’s areas of significance United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Davis County, UT Name of Property County and State Significance Under Criterion A The significance of the Burns–Wood House under Criterion A derives from two key factors within the context of the MPS. First, the dwelling was built in the heart of Farmington’s settlement period and is one of a small number of dwellings remaining from this era. Second, it is one of an even smaller number of settlement era dwellings that retain sufficient integrity, for both the original section and the later addition, to reflect the culture and tradition of the time. The property developed over time and over the course of two periods of ownership—first by Patrick Burns and then by the Wood Family. The original portion of the dwelling—the front hallparlor section—appears to have been constructed ca. 1861 according to biographical information about Jonathan David Wood, one of the subsequent owners. 3 At that time, the dwelling reportedly consisted of a combined kitchen and parlor and one bedroom. 4 The exterior was reported as being “native rock/adobe” and the interior “lath and plaster.” 5 In 1871, after the home was acquired by John Wood, a cross-wing addition was built on the rear elevation of the original hall-parlor section. That addition is said to have included two bedrooms and a parlor and also to have had porches on both the east and west elevations. 6 Commented [CJ17]: This needs to decide what it wants to be? Is it significant for the house/architecture? If so, it needs to be under Criterion C in the Area of Architecture and then you need to make a compelling argument for that, provide supporting information on the early architecture of Farmington and Why it is significant. If you want to claim Exploration/Settlement it needs to be under Criterion A or B for either an association with a significant event or pattern of events or for a significant person. But you need to provide supporting evidence and an focused argument on why it’s significant. Although the original dwelling was built by or for Patrick Burns, Burns may not have resided there all that long. Biographical information about John Wood, the subsequent owner, suggests that Wood occupied the property prior to obtaining legal title in 1871. Wood Family history indicates that John’s son, Johnathan David Wood (or JD Wood), built a barn for his father on the property in 1870; the barn has since been demolished. JD Wood, who worked at different times as a farmer and a merchant and who helped build the first electrical power house in Farmington and served 13 years as a Justice of the Peace and Deputy Sheriff, acquired the property from his father in 1874 and remained there until 1935, when he sold it to his grandson, Allen Edmond Whitaker. 7 During the period of significance for this dwelling and during the ownership period of JD Wood, the dwelling housed a polygamous family. JD Wood had married his cousin, Cathleen Blanche Bird, in 1871, the year JD’s father officially acquired title to the property. Eleven years later, in 1882, after having purchased the property from his father, JD married Eliza Hess. The combined family, which had 21 children between them, reportedly lived in the house together with one family living in the front of the dwelling and the other in the rear. 8 The practice of polygamy, commonly known in LDS culture as plural marriage, began before the pioneers entered the Salt Lake Valley, but was not practiced openly until the church prospered in the relative isolation of the Intermountain West. Not all members of the LDS Church “lived the principle,” as it was 3 Anonymous. 2024. “Jonathan David Wood and Cathleen Blanche Bird.” Accessed at FamilySearch.org January 24 at: https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/details/KWC6-JXY 4 Ibid. 5 Ibid. 6 Ibid. 7 Ibid. 8 Ibid. Section 8 page 11 Commented [CJ18]: Are there other houses in Farmington that housed polygamists and that retain good historical integrity? If not, this could be an area of significance under either A or B for Social History. If there are others, how does this one compare/contrast? United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Davis County, UT Name of Property County and State called, but there was an expectation that LDS men of sufficient standing and resources within the LDS Church would have multiple wives. It was common for polygamist men to have two or three wives, but only a small percentage of church leaders had more than four wives. The manner in which the plural family interacted with each other was left up to the practitioners themselves with some families choosing to live in a single dwelling, others choosing to live in individual dwellings on communal properties, and still others choosing to lives in separate dwellings on separate properties. The practice was abolished by Church President Wilford Woodruff in 1890 but continued among many practitioners for years after. Section 8 page 12 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Davis County, UT Name of Property County and State ______________________________________________________________________________ 9. Major Bibliographical References Bibliography (Cite the books, articles, and other sources used in preparing this form.) Arrington, Leonard J. 1958. Great Basin Kingdom: Economic History of the Latter-Day Saints, 1830-1900. University of Nebraska Press: Lincoln. Barnett, Alan. 2002. “Reconnaissance Level Survey. Rock Church Neighborhood. Farmington, Utah.” On file at the Utah State Historic Preservation Office, Salt Lake City. Carter, Thomas and Peter Goss. 1991. Utah's Historic Architecture, 1847-1940: A Guide. University of Utah Graduate School of Architecture and Utah State Historical Society: Salt Lake City, UT: Hess, Margaret Steed. 1976. My Farmington: A History of Farmington, Utah, 1847-1976. Helen Mar Miller Camp of the Daughters of the Utah Pioneers: Farmington Knowlton, George Quincy. 1965. A History of Farmington, Utah. Compiled and edited by Jannetta K. Robinson. Inland Printing: Kaysville. Leonard, Glen. 1972. Historic Sites Survey form for 94 East 500 North, Farmington. On file at the Utah State Historic Preservation Office, Salt Lake City. 1994. “Farmington.” In Utah History Encyclopedia, Allan Kent Powell, editor. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City. 1999. A History of Davis County. Utah Centennial County History Series. Utah State Historical Society: Salt Lake City. Lukin, Beatrice. 2011. National Register of Historic Places Registration Form for the Farmington Main Street Historic District (NRIS #11000756). On file at the Utah State Historic Preservation Office, Salt Lake City. Strack, Don. 2022. Utah Central Rail Road (1869-1881). Accessed online September 15, 2022 at: https://utahrails.net/utahrails/uc-rr-1869-1881.php Uffens, Karla. 1997. National Register of Historic Places Registration Form for the John W., Janet (Nettie), and May Rich Taylor House. NRIS # 97001325. On file at the Utah State Historic Preservation Office, Salt Lake City. Utah Division of State History, Preservation Office. 2022. Utah’s Historic Architecture Guide. Accessed online September 15, 2022 at: https://issuu.com/utah10/docs/architectural_guide_booklet Sections 9-end page 13 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Davis County, UT Name of Property County and State Utah State Historic Preservation Office. 2022. Utah Historic Buildings database. Accessed online September 15, 2022 at: https://shpo.utah.gov/portal/apps/webappviewer/index.html?id=8e218e18c2b74477b5f520e5617 bebaf Van Cott, John W. 1990. Utah Place Names. University of Utah Press. __________________________________________________________________________ Previous documentation on file (NPS): ____ preliminary determination of individual listing (36 CFR 67) has been requested ____ previously listed in the National Register ____ previously determined eligible by the National Register ____ designated a National Historic Landmark ____ recorded by Historic American Buildings Survey #____________ ____ recorded by Historic American Engineering Record # __________ ____ recorded by Historic American Landscape Survey # ___________ Primary location of additional data: _X__ State Historic Preservation Office ____ Other State agency ____ Federal agency ____ Local government ____ University __X__ Other: Name of repository: Farmington Historic Preservation Commission Historic Resources Survey Number (if assigned): ________________ ______________________________________________________________________________ Sections 9-end page 14 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Davis County, UT Name of Property County and State 10. Geographical Data Acreage of Property __0.72 acres_____________ Use either the UTM system or latitude/longitude coordinates Latitude/Longitude Coordinates Datum if other than WGS84:__________ (enter coordinates to 6 decimal places) 1. Latitude: 40.982297 Longitude: -111.882651 Or UTM References Datum (indicated on USGS map): NAD 1927 1. Zone: or NAD 1983 Easting: Northing: Verbal Boundary Description (Describe the boundaries of the property.) This registration applies to the entirety of the existing property as denoted in Davis County records. The legal parcel (#070270101) boundary description, as retrieved from the Davis County Recorder’s Office on March 24, 2024, is as follows: A PARCEL OF LAND SIT IN THE NW 1/4 & THE NE 1/4 OF SEC 19-T3N-R1E, SLB&M, SD PARCEL MORE PART'LY DESC AS FOLLOWS: BEG AT THE INTERSECTION OF THE E LINE OF 200 EAST STR & THE N LINE OF 100 NORTH STR DESC IN A RECORDED DOCUMENT FOR THE 100 NORTH STR DEDICATION RECORDED ON 08/21/2000 AS E# 1608956 BK 2683 PG 69 & BEING AT A PT S 0^17'15" W 29.50 FT FR THE SW COR OF LOT 3, BLK 12, PLAT B, FARMINGTON TS SURVEY, SD POB ALSO BEING S 89^39'30" E 33.00 FT ALG THE CENTER LINE OF 100 NORTH STR & N 0^17'15" E 20.00 FT FR A FARMINGTON CITY SURVEY MONU IN THE INTERSECTION OF 200 EAST STR & 100 NORTH STR & ALSO SD TO BE N 695.78 FT & W 165.46 FT & N 0^17'15" E 20.00 FT FR THE CENTER OF SEC 19-T3NR1E, SLB&M; & RUN TH N 0^17'15" E 125.25 FT ALG THE E LINE OF 200 EAST STR TO & ALG THE W LINE OF LOT 3, BLK 12, PLAT B, FARMINGTON TS SURVEY TO A BNDRY LINE AGMT RECORDED ON 08/06/2018 AS E# 3109309 BK 7071 PG 247; TH S 89^20'29" E 255.41 FT ALG THE LINE DEFINED IN THE AFOREMENTIONED BNDRY LINE AGMT TO THE END THEREOF; TH S 0^17'15" W 123.83 FT TO THE N LINE OF 100 NORTH STR AS DESC ON THE AFOREMENTIONED DOCUMENT OF THE 100 NORTH STR DEDICATION; TH N 89^39'30" W 255.40 FT ALG THE N LINE Sections 9-end page 15 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Davis County, UT Name of Property County and State OF THE AFOREMENTIONED DOCUMENT OF THE 100 NORTH STR DEDICATION TO THE E LINE OF 200 EAST STR TO THE POB. CONT. 0.72 ACRES. See map for boundary detail. Boundary Justification (Explain why the boundaries were selected.) This boundary represents the entirety of the remaining portion of the historical parcel on which the subject building was constructed and contains other non-contributing buildings. ______________________________________________________________________________ Sections 9-end page 16 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Davis County, UT Name of Property County and State 11. Form Prepared By name/title: ___Sheri Murray Ellis/Consultant_____________________________ organization: _Certus Environmental Solutions___________________________ street & number: _____________________________________________________ city or town: _Salt Lake City________ state: __Utah_____ zip code:__84103 ____ e-mail__Sheri@certussolutionsllc.com___ telephone:_________________________ date:__March 27, 2024 ___________________________________________________________________________ Additional Documentation Submit the following items with the completed form: • Maps: A USGS map or equivalent (7.5 or 15 minute series) indicating the property's location. • Sketch map for historic districts and properties having large acreage or numerous resources. Key all photographs to this map. • Additional items: (Check with the SHPO, TPO, or FPO for any additional items.) All the maps should go here, before the photos Photographs Submit clear and descriptive photographs. The size of each image must be 1600x1200 pixels (minimum), 3000x2000 preferred, at 300 ppi (pixels per inch) or larger. Key all photographs to the sketch map. Each photograph must be numbered and that number must correspond to the photograph number on the photo log. For simplicity, the name of the photographer, photo date, etc. may be listed once on the photograph log and doesn’t need to be labeled on every photograph. Photo Log Name of Property: Burns–Wood House City or Vicinity: Farmington County: Davis County State: Utah Photographer: Sheri Murray Ellis Date Photographed: November 28, 2023 (exterior); March 30, 2024 (interior) Sections 9-end page 17 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Davis County, UT Name of Property County and State Description of Photograph(s) and number: Photograph 1. Overview of property; camera facing northeast Photograph 2. East elevation (primary façade); camera facing north Photograph 3. West elevation; camera facing southeast Photograph 4. North (rear) elevation; camera facing south-southwest Photograph 5. South (left) and north (right) elevations; camera facing northwest Photograph 6. East elevation; camera facing west Photograph 7. Window detail (south elevation); camera facing north Photograph 8. Current interior of hall-parlor wing; camera facing east Photograph 9. Interior – possible former kitchen in rear addition; camera facing west Photograph 10. Interior – current kitchen in rear-east addition; camera facing south. Note exposed exterior rock wall of original hall-parlor wing. Property Owner information: (Complete this item at the request of the SHPO or FPO.) Name ____Michael James & Chaney Kiel Packer Address ___219 East 100 North_____________________________________ City or Town __Farmington_______ State_ UT____ Zip code__84025_________ Telephone/email (801) 451-4528/chaneypacker@icloud.com Paperwork Reduction Act Statement: This information is being collected for applications to the National Register of Historic Places to nominate properties for listing or determine eligibility for listing, to list properties, and to amend existing listings. Response to this request is required to obtain a benefit in accordance with the National Historic Preservation Act, as amended (16 U.S.C.460 et seq.). Estimated Burden Statement: Public reporting burden for this form is estimated to average 100 hours per response including time for reviewing instructions, gathering and maintaining data, and completing and reviewing the form. Direct comments regarding this burden estimate or any aspect of this form to the Office of Planning and Performance Management. U.S. Dept. of the Interior, 1849 C. Street, NW, Washington, DC. Sections 9-end page 18 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Davis County, UT Name of Property County and State MAPS United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Davis County, UT Name of Property County and State MAPS United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Davis County, UT Name of Property County and State MAPS United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Name of Property Davis County, UT County and State Photograph 1. Overview of property; camera facing northeast Commented [CJ19]: I don’t suppose you have photos without a date stamp on them? Photograph 2. East elevation (primary façade); camera facing north PHOTOGRAPHS United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Name of Property Davis County, UT County and State Photograph 3. West elevation; camera facing southeast Photograph 4. North (rear) elevation; camera facing south-southwest PHOTOGRAPHS United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Davis County, UT Name of Property County and State Photograph 5. South (left) and north (right) elevations; camera facing northwest Photograph 6. East elevation; camera facing west PHOTOGRAPHS United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Name of Property Davis County, UT County and State Photograph 7. Window detail (south elevation); camera facing north PHOTOGRAPHS United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Name of Property Davis County, UT County and State Photograph 8. Current interior of hall-parlor wing; camera facing east Photograph 9. Interior – possible former kitchen in rear addition; camera facing west PHOTOGRAPHS United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Davis County, UT Name of Property County and State Photograph 10. Interior – current kitchen in rear-east addition; camera facing south. Note exposed exterior rock wall of original hall-parlor wing. PHOTOGRAPHS United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Davis County, UT Name of Property County and State Photograph 11. Non-contributing modern dwelling on parcel; camera facing northwest Photograph 12. Non-contributing garage immediately east of dwelling; camera facing north PHOTOGRAPHS United States Department of the Interior National Park Service / National Register of Historic Places Registration Form NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 Burns–Wood House Davis County, UT Name of Property County and State Photograph 13. Non-contributing garage near east edge of parcel; camera facing northeast PHOTOGRAPHS |
| Reference URL | https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6pvmhbd |



