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Clearfield, Utah

1877 establishments in Utah TerritoryCities in Davis County, UtahCities in UtahClearfield, UtahOgden–Clearfield metropolitan area
Populated places established in 1877Use mdy dates from July 2023Wasatch Front
Clearfield Utah City Center
Clearfield Utah City Center

Clearfield (Shoshone: Gu-ta-nu-a-de, “Place where the wind blows hard”) is a city in Davis County, Utah, United States. The population was 31,909 at the 2020 census. The city grew rapidly during the 1940s, with the formation of Hill Air Force Base, and in the 1950s with the nationwide increase in suburb and "bedroom" community populations and has been steadily growing since then. Clearfield is a principal city of the Ogden–Clearfield, Utah Metropolitan Statistical Area, which includes all of Davis, Morgan, and Weber counties.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Clearfield, Utah (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Clearfield, Utah
East 500 South,

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Wikipedia: Clearfield, UtahContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 41.106388888889 ° E -112.02416666667 °
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Address

East 500 South
84089
Utah, United States
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Clearfield Utah City Center
Clearfield Utah City Center
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Nearby Places

George W. Layton House
George W. Layton House

The George W. Layton House, in Davis County, Utah near Layton, Utah, was built around 1897. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982.It is a two-story red brick house with a stone foundation designed by architect William Allen. It was deemed "significant as one of a very limited number of houses designed by the Kaysville architect William Alien, that is virtually unaltered. William Alien was the only architect in Davis County at the time that the Layton house was designed by, and he continued to be the leading architect in the county until the 1920s. The Layton house also documents the use of pattern book house types in the late nineteenth century, and it is the same pattern that Allen used in the John Henry Layton house in West Layton, and possibly in the Joseph Adams house in East Layton. Of the three houses, the George W. Layton house received the most ornate program of ornament, and thereby records one extreme of the stylistic possibilities of pattern book design. The complexity of the brick and wood ornamentation, and its unaltered and well preserved condition make the George W. Layton house one of the most distinctive Victorian pattern book houses in Utah. In addition, Layton, who is credited with the resident's actual construction, served in a number of capacities within the community."It is Late Victorian in style and is located at 2767 W. Gentile St.Its pattern book design has an "impressive program of East lake and Queen Anne ornamentation. The pattern Alien chose for this house is almost exactly the same as the one he used for the John Henry Layton house which is several miles east on West Gentile Street. The John H. Layton house has longer proportions, but in general massing it is the mirror image of the George W. Layton house."In 2019 it was billed as The Grand Victorian and is available for weddings and receptions, having apparently served as a wedding venue since 2002. The venue includes a waterfall and bridge, despite the flat terrain.