Brigham Young University - Banyan Yearbook (Provo, UT)

 - Class of 1911

Page 17 of 288

 

Brigham Young University - Banyan Yearbook (Provo, UT) online collection, 1911 Edition, Page 17 of 288
Page 17 of 288



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Page 17 text:

Homes of the School N historical sketch of the Brigham Young University takes the reader back to a time when Provo was a country village. The city is not yet completely urban- ized? for the meek-eyed cow still pays the land-tax, even on our fine cement side-walks. But in 1875, and even for a decade thereafter, the threshing ma- chine hummed on more than one spot where now clicks the typewriter, and the old-fashioned horse power cumbered Main street at many a front gate, for brief intervals. the preeminence which Provo is destined to at- a swift growth of the city, built a structure Nevertheless, men foresaw even then tain. One man in particular, believing which must have surprised and delighted the sturdy pioneers, and encouraged them to shed their log cabins and put on adobe. The Lewis block, for so it was called, occu- pied the ground now partly covered by the Farmers ' and Merchants ' bank. It abut- ted on the sidewalk, and consisted of two long store-rooms below, with office rooms at the back, and a public hall above. Di- rectly over the two offices was a stage which was elevated four feet above the main upper floor. Three feet more had been taken from the height of the ceiling in the offices below; and the space thus cre- ated midway between the ground and the roof, made room for actors to drown or hoist ore, or be hurled down rocky preci- pices, to soft bed-springs below. This cellar in mid-air is of historic significance, in The Lewis Block [9]

Page 16 text:

- ?5 ' ' -=w fe ' ' %C ' « ' THE BOARD OFTEtJSTEES



Page 18 text:

.Msda 1. j . X— aiUBiii iHa ' ' .»5 m i for it was here on the night of January 24, 1884, that the first home of our beloved institution caught fire and burned to the ground. But I anticipate my story. The owners had no sooner completed this excellent commercial block, than they discovered it to be the proverbial white elephant on their hands. It was by reason of this fact that Brigham Young found occasion to pur- chase the property. And so it happened that by a deed of trust, executed October 16, 1875, he found- ed the Brigham Young Academy. A pie- liminary session had already been held the previous year, with Messrs. Warren N. and Wilson H. Dusenberry, two young college- bred men recently from the East, as teach- ers; they were succeeded in the spring by Dr. Karl G. Maeser. But the academic year is reckoned from August 25, 1875, when the school was formally opened, the dedicatory prayer having been offered by President Daniel H. Wells. The enrollment increased so that during the fourth year the average attendance was about 250; but in the years following it grew to 350; and during one year to 400. This in- crease lead A. O. Smoot, President of the board, to build two additions, one on the north and one on the east, thus furnishing four new class rooms. The school had grown very rapidly, and was rejoicing in its new found opportunities, when the great fire came. That was a momentous episode, not only for the four hundred students in attendance, but for the entire city. About midnight of January 24, 1884, the flames burst through the roof, startling the neighborhood. The lurid glare lit up the snow for blocks around. The meeting house bell clamored out the terrifying news, and soon bucket brigades were formed; but the flames had gained too much headway, and fed by the keen frosty air, they made a most magnificent pyrotechnic display. Nor was there ever a more fascinated audience than that made up of the saddened faces upturned to this funeral pyre of their Alma Mater. [10] The Z. C. M. I. Building

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