Showing posts with label Thompson & Wiegel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Thompson & Wiegel. Show all posts

17 May 2021

History of the Salt Lake Hot Springs Sanitarium Building at 52 West 300 South

Exterior of building. The long 2 story back of the building is hidden behind foreground structures. 1912. From UDSH.

The Salt Lake Hot Springs Sanitarium that was the setting of the 1893 civil rights lawsuit (see previous post) has an interesting history.

The building was located at 52 W 300 South and was built in 1890 as a modern Livery Stable by Mark McKimmins at a cost of $80K (~2.3M today) and designed by Thompson & Wiegel.

McKimmins wanted a building outfitted with new electric inventions and he built one of the largest liveries west of Chicago and named it the Palace Livery. It was built of St Louis pressed brick and Kyune sandstone (same as the SLC City and County building). It was 3 stories tall in the front and the back half was 2 stories and extend an entire half-block deep.

One arched entrance housed a veterinarian surgeon and the other arched entrance led to the stables. Carriages were kept on the ground floor and the 180 horses were on the 2nd floor with a long ramp that allowed the horses to walk to the upper story. Drains were incorporated in each stall and the flooring was coated in waterproof tar to allow for easy cleaning.

There was also a separate room which featured an automatic horse cleaner described as “electrical brushes [that] ply around their backs twice a day, an hour each turn” (Image 2). An elevator allowed hay to be moved from the basement to the 2nd floor. And electric lights and call bells were incorporated throughout the building.

McKimmins was only in this new building for 3 years when his bank, American National Bank- run by brothers James H Bacon (president) and Harvey M Bacon (vice president), foreclosed on him in 1893.

The foreclosure was rather shady, and it was a large part of the 1897 trial of James H Bacon who was convicted of falsifying reports and financial mismanagement. James was convicted, and later pardoned by President McKinley. His brother and VP of the bank, Harvey M Bacon, acquired the building during the foreclosure and converted it into a Sanitarium. Harvey invested an additional $150K into the building (~$4.5M today).

The buildings served as a Sanitarium until 1919 and then it was converted into the Broadway Parking Garage. It was demolished about 1974. Broadway Media now occupies the site.

Sources: SL Herald 1890-02-27; SL Times 1890-10-01; SL Herald 1897-12-10


Possible type of automatic horse cleaning apparatus used in the building: Ellis Pennington Grooming Machine. From The Street Railway Journal v1 Nov 1884-Oct 1885.


Possible type of automatic horse cleaning apparatus used in the building: Clark's Patent Power Grooming Machine. From The Street Railway Journal v1 Nov 1884-Oct 1885.

12 May 2020

These Row House Apartments at 620 S Park St Housed Jewish Refugees after WWII

Historic Row Houses apartment building at 620 S Park Street SLC

This row house apartment complex located at 620 S Park Street was built in 1890 for Dr. Patrick J. McKenna and designed by Thompson & Weigel.

Dr. McKenna was an Irish allopath who, in 1890, had just moved to SLC from New Orleans and could not find any suitable (new, nice, and large) rental housing, so he and his wife built their own which they named Bellevue Terrace. Originally the complex consisted of 6 apartments of 7-rooms each.

In 1901, Dr. McKenna died in a freak accident in which he fell from a train in Parley’s Canyon during an Elks Club excursion to Park City. A few years later his widow married Dr. McKenna’s cousin and moved to Ireland, selling Bellevue Terrace.

Bellevue Terrace changed ownership and the name Bellevue was dropped around the time the street was renamed Park Street The complex was also remodeled into 22 studio apartments during the Great Depression.

Mary and Ben Davis purchased the apartment complex in 1946 and renamed it the Davis Apartments. Both Mary and Ben were Jewish immigrants from Europe (Mary from Lithuania and Ben from Austria) and they arranged through the United Jewish Appeal to rent the apartments to refugees from WWII concentration camps.

Their daughter, Helen Barr, took over ownership of the complex in 1984 and she received $224K from the SLC Redevelopment Agency (RDA) to rehab and remodel the building. The building was remodeled into a 12-unit apartment and renamed Mary’s Manor in honor of Ms. Barr’s mother.

Ms. Barr is still the owner of the apartment complex.