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Bogan Boarding House

Buildings and structures in Park City, UtahHotel buildings completed in 1904Hotel buildings on the National Register of Historic Places in UtahIndividually listed contributing properties to historic districts on the National Register in UtahNational Register of Historic Places in Summit County, Utah
Utah Registered Historic Place stubs
Bogan Boarding House Park City Utah
Bogan Boarding House Park City Utah

The Bogan Boarding House, at 221 Main St. in Park City, Utah, was built in c. 1904. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1984.It was deemed significant as one of only four boarding houses surviving in Park City from its mining era, and also as one of only four built in town after a 1901 legislative bill cancelled the right of mine owners to require miners to live in company-owned boarding houses up near their mines (unless married and living with wife/family in town).

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Bogan Boarding House (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Bogan Boarding House
Sandridge Avenue,

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Wikipedia: Bogan Boarding HouseContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 40.641388888889 ° E -111.49361111111 °
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Address

Upper Sandridge Parking

Sandridge Avenue
84060
Utah, United States
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Bogan Boarding House Park City Utah
Bogan Boarding House Park City Utah
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Nearby Places

Nicholas Rowe House
Nicholas Rowe House

The Nicholas Rowe House, at 150 Main St. in Park City, Utah, was built around 1885. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1984. It was built as a hall and parlor plan house but later (probably between 1907 and 1910) was converted to a two-story commercial building, with the second floor projecting forward, supported by front porch pillars. In 1984 it was deemed:significant as one of three extant buildings in Park City which document the method of expanding a small mining town cottage by adding a full second story to an existing hall and parlor house. The addition of a shed extension to the rear of a house or a cross-wing to one end of a hall and parlor house were the preferred methods of expanding Park City's tiny houses. Because there are only three extant examples of houses that were expanded by the addition of a second story, it is likely that this type of expansion may have been more difficult to do, and therefore was less popular. All three houses were originally one story residences. Two of the three houses were changed to two story residences with gable roofs typical of hall and parlor houses. The flat roof of the addition on this house gives it the appearance of a commercial building. This is the only extant example in Park City of a building that was converted from a residence to a commercial building. Its first known owner was Nicholas Rowe, who with his wife Carrie sold the house in 1909. Nicholas (Nick) Rowe was born in 1850 in England in 1850 and immigrated in 1869. In Park City, he worked as a miner. Carrie Rowe, born in England c.1866, immigrated in 1887. They married less than a year later.