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Centerfield School and Meetinghouse

Buildings and structures completed in 1886National Register of Historic Places in Sanpete County, UtahSchools in UtahSecond Empire architecture in UtahUse mdy dates from August 2023
Utah Registered Historic Place stubs
Centerfield Utah School
Centerfield Utah School

The Centerfield School and Meetinghouse, also known as the Centerfield Rock Church, is a historic structure located at 140 S. Main St. in Centerfield, Utah. Built between 1886 and 1889, it was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2000.It is a one-story oolitic limestone building, built by stonemasons Chris Tollstrup and Gustav Nielsen. A mansard roof on the east portion of the building was added in 1897 to give it Second Empire style.

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Centerfield School and Meetinghouse
South Main Street,

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Latitude Longitude
N 39.123623 ° E -111.81971 °
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Address

South Main Street 160
84622
Utah, United States
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Centerfield Utah School
Centerfield Utah School
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Nearby Places

Oberg-Metcalf House
Oberg-Metcalf House

The Oberg-Metcalf House, at 12 N 100 E in Gunnison, Utah, in Sanpete County, Utah, was built around 1880 and expanded with a rear ell in the 1890s. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1997.It was probably built by Johan Oberg, about whom not much is known, and it was sold by his daughter, Agnes Alexsandra Giles, in 1905. By 1909 it was home of Sylvia Eliza Sanford Metcalf and her husband Anthony Metcalf. Sylvia was born November 16, 1845, in Hancock County, Illinois, and came with her parents to Utah in Captain Snow's Company in 1850. Anthony was born in Belfast, Ireland on September 5, 1843, and came to Utah in 1853 with the Claudis Spencer Company. In 1866 Anthony and Sylvia moved to Warm Creek (now Fayette, Utah) in Sanpete County; Anthony operated a flour mill there.The house appears to have fulfilled Brigham Young's proscription to build well, if you are going to build a house. This one, along with others built during the later settlement period in the Sanpete Valley, reflected Classical style plus local materials to make a harmonious whole.It is a one-and-one-half story cross-wing house. Its original 1880s hall and parlor plan unit was built of local oolitic limestone. Its foundation of same is covered by concrete. Classical features of the house include its symmetrical facade, its simple cornice, and the raised mortar joints in its coursed ashlar stone walls. The Victorian extension to the rear, in the 1890s, was built of bricks.The house was deemed significant "as one of only ten remaining Classically detailed stone residences built prior to 1900 in Gunnison. The Victorian detailed rear ell contributes to the significance of the house by describing a period when rural Utah was becoming less isolated and pattern book designs and manufactured materials were more readily available."