564 W. 400 North, Salt Lake City, Utah. County/parish: Salt Lake.
Added to the National Register of Historic Places September 26, 1979. NRIS 79002506.
1 contributing building.
The Nelson Wheeler Whipple House is an adobe house in Salt Lake City, Utah, built in 1854. Whipple kept a diary that has become an important historical resource for information on the construction of the house. He bought the lot, situated on parcel 4 of block 134, from Heber C. Kimball for $1.50. Whipple built the house with over a thousand cubic feet of stone, twenty-five thousand adobe bricks 700 board feet of lumber and ten thousand shingles. It cost him $2,000 in 1854, equating to a bit over $7.5 million in 2025's currency. The story has been repeated in recent decades that Whipple lived in the house with his three plural wives and seventeen children. However, his first wife died in 1856 and could only have lived there for two years with her four children. Moreover, the 1860, 1870 and 1880 censuses show only Whipple's third wife living with him with her nine children. His second wife lived nearby with her three.
The house measures about 28 feet (8.5 m) by 35 feet (11 m). Unlike most homes of this period, which consisted of two rooms, the Whipple home is two stories high and contains eight rooms. Instead of following mainstream architectural trends in the United States this home's designed bowed to the taste of the city's residents and the resources available to them before the coming of the railroad. Its eight rooms on multiple stories place it at the high end of this type of vernacular architecture in this period of relative isolation. It contained two front rooms, a kitchen with buttery, and a small bedroom on the ground floor. The second floor contained four more rooms. The house also had a granary. The exterior adobes are covered with stucco, the entrance was in the Federal style and the roof was a gabled, not hipped. It was placed on the National Register of Historic Places on September 26, 1979. It is notable for being one of the oldest surviving homes in the Salt Lake Valley, having been built in 1854, and demonstrates the preferences and aspirations of the inhabitants at that time. It was renovated in 1992 and has been occupied by Signature Books since 1994.
(read more...)National Park Service documentation: https://catalog.archives.gov/id/72001427