Renaissance & Revitalization
HISTORIC JEFFERSON AVENUE
By James Bohne
In the late 19th century this town flourished. The railroad
brought salaries and freight. Salaries brought business, and freight a means of
commercial trade. Bankers and business entrepreneurs became wealthy. So wealthy
that they could have established their estates anywhere they pleased, and
enjoyed peaceful solitude. But the wealthy are pragmatic and understand their
interdependence; they congregate together to foster relation ships.
Some 100 years later, the homes that once housed Ogden’s original elite
families stand along Jefferson Avenue between 25th and 27th Streets. Ogden City
recently renovated the street and public utilities and is looking to attract
investors to do the same for the district’s historic homes.
The $325,000 project was financed by a federal Community Development Block
Grant. Public improvements included replacing sidewalks, installing new
crosswalks, exposing historic trolley tracks that ran down that portion of
Jefferson Avenue, installing historic-styled street lamps, and performing
landscape work. According to Ward Ogden of Neighborhood Development, the goal of
the district program is to attract owner-occupants into the neighborhood and
encourage private renovation of 16 existing historic homes, hopefully restoring
those converted into multiple units back into single family homes.
Jefferson Avenue is a wide, well landscaped residential street lined with
mature trees. It was a grand avenue of mansions for the city’s turn-of-the-20th
century aristocracy. It is one of the first established neighborhoods that
steadily progressed from west to east up the valley bench area. Most of the
houses are substantial Victorian homes reflecting the economic backgrounds of
their original owners. Some of the other houses are larger bungalow and Four
Square styles.
The most
recognizable landmark is the Bertha Eccles Community Art Center on the corner of
Jefferson and 26th Street. David and Bertha Eccles purchased this massive
Victorian structure in 1896. At that time the neighborhood was already occupied
by several influential community leaders including Thomas Jordan Spencer and
Hiram Spencer, whose historical homes, together with that of Isadore Marks, are
the initial focus of the Jefferson Avenue project.
Ogden City currently owns the former home of Thomas Jordan Stevens, who was
executive vice-president of Utah Loan and Trust Company, City Commissioner, and
one-time Weber County Sheriff. The city plans to renovate the 3,002 square foot
Victorian house, or find a buyer who will do the same.
Hiram Spencer was manager of Eccles Lumber Company, president of Ogden Rapid
Transit, and vice president of Amalgamated Sugar, all business interests of
David Eccles. He served two terms on the city council, and the year the Eccles
moved to his neighborhood he began a term as Ogden City mayor.
In 1903, David and Bertha’s son William bought Hiram Spencer’s two- story
Victorian home at 2555 Jefferson. During a trip to the Southern United States,
Mrs. Eccles became enamored with Colonial Greek Revival styled mansions of that
region. As a result, their Victorian styled home was retrofitted with a squared
portico surrounding the front facade with large Greek Ionic styled columns. The
house is now a 13- unit multi-family apartment complex. The city currently has
an option to purchase the house and hopes to interest an owner to convert the
building to fewer apartment units--or even back to single family use--remove the
portico and rebuild the original porch.
Several executives of Commercial National Bank made Jefferson Avenue their
home. The first was Thomas Whalen, who was a member of the Bank’s executive
committee and a City Council member. Three vice presidents later joined Mr.
Whalen and built their homes in the Jefferson District: Patrick Healy; Abbott R.
Heywood, who was also an Ogden City mayor; and Isadore Marks.
The city has an option to purchase the Isadore Marks home at 2547 Jefferson,
which is currently a boarding house. They would like to make this house
available to an owner wishing to restore the house to single family or convert
to a lower density multiple unit, remove a front extension added in 1977 and
rebuild the porch and front entry.
After her husband’s death in 1912, Bertha Eccles traveled widely, collecting
art along the way for her Jefferson Avenue home. She must have truly loved her
home, as she instructed her children to keep it intact and used for educational
and cultural purposes.
Bertha Eccles' concern that progress would overcome her home was well
founded. As the city grew, the commercial district began to encroach on the
Jefferson District. The original residents and their children moved to
residences eastward up the valley bench. Some of the larger homes in the
Jefferson District were converted into office complexes or apartments. However,
many older homes remain, or have been returned to single family use after many
years of being subdivided. According to Ward Ogden, half of the 16 historical
houses in the district are currently single-family homes occupied by the owners.
Special low interest financing is available to purchase or renovate the grand
homes within the Historic Jefferson Avenue District. Design and construction
management services are also available. Interested owners, buyers and investors
can get information on the program from Ogden City Neighborhood Development by
calling (801) 629-8942.
James Bohne - Winter 2003