Author and wife, LeAnn, at the former Ogden Temple in 2010.
THE lengthy history
of Ogden’s Tabernacle Square reveals a potpourri of events, even changes in
ownership and failed dreams for some never-materialized projects.
Here’s just a
sampling of the Square's rich and diverse history:
-The
original Ogden Pioneer Tabernacle, on the southeast corner of the block, was
began in 1855 and finally opened on Oct. 10, 1869, seating 1,250 people.
-However,
soon after the railroad came to Ogden, work began on a new, larger tabernacle
and the old one was to be a concert hall. The sandstone foundation actually
reached a height of 4 feet before such plans were completely abandoned, for a
lack of funds.
(The leftover blocks were sold or given to
nearby property owners and their use was visible in the foundation or steps of
some downtown Ogden homes.)
-In the
early 1890s, the LDS Church actually gave Ogden City the deed to the property
that is now Tabernacle Square.
A report in
the Standard on Dec. 20, 1893 stated: “The city gives it up. City Council gives
back the Tabernacle Square to the church.”
-Also, in
1890, classes for Weber Academy students (forerunner to WSU) were held in the
Pioneer Tabernacle.
-Next, the
Pioneer Tabernacle was completely remodeled in 1896 at a cost of $15,000. A
county-wide “Tabernacle Fair” helped raise the funds needed.
-There must
have still been plenty of open space, because “Football on the Tabernacle
Square,” was a May 2, 1897 headline in the Standard-Examiner. The Gordon Stake
and Weber Stake boys teams played for the pennant.
A week
later, the May 9 Standard reported a baseball game being held on Tabernacle
Square, with the YMCA beating the Quincy Schools by a score of 11-6.
-Despite the
presence of sporting events on the Square, it wasn’t until the spring of 1913
that the area was fully leveled and made into a park. Some 4,000 loads of dirt
were brought in, as the ground level was still low. Grass was planted and water
lines for irrigation were installed.
The
Tabernacle building itself was spruced up and an electric blowing apparatus
replaced the old water-powered one for the organ. More than $13,000 in improvements
were made.
-The April 28, 1913 Standard report mentioned
each area stake wanting its own building on the square and that a $100,000
tri-stake tabernacle should be built at the center of the lot.
In fact, a
Dec. 27, 1907 Standard article mentioned earlier plans for a $200,000 new
Tabernacle. None of that new
construction happened.
(However, the Ogden 3rd Ward Chapel and
amusement hall resided on the southwest corner of the square for many years. In addition, the Relief Building, now DUP Museum, resided on Tabernacle Choir for many decades, as did the Miles Goodyear Cabin, with both now moved to 2100 Lincoln Avenue.)
-By 1921,
LDS Church members in the Ogden area were eager for their own temple. However, Church President Heber J. Grant made a special visit to Ogden’s Tabernacle Square that
year and left indicating it was not the
proper time to have a temple there.
-Despite
Ogden City having given back Tabernacle Square to the Church in 1893, the
Standard of May 7, 1924 reported the new possibility of the Church trading Tabernacle
Square for Lester Park, 663 24th Street (near today’s downtown main library). Then, the Church would perhaps construct an Ogden Temple there, while
Ogden City and Weber County would build a joint city and county facility on
Tabernacle Square. (Of course, that never happened either.)
-The next proposal
for Tabernacle Square was outlined in the March 11, 1925 Standard, where Weber
College wanted to create a first-class 440-yard running track, plus goal posts,
bleachers and a football field on the interior. (That proposal never happened
either.)
-Elder
Harold B. Lee finally broke ground on July 24, 1953 for a new Tabernacle on
Ogden’s Temple Square. The $723.000 building was dedicated on Feb. 12, 1956 by
President David O. McKay.
-When word
of a future LDS Temple planned for Ogden hit the downtown business district in
the mid-1960s, businessmen lobbied Church leaders to be sure and have the
Temple built downtown, to help bolster the struggling city center.
There
apparently had been some serious consideration by the Church to have the Ogden
Temple built on the east bench, somewhere just south of today’s Weber State
University, in a location similar to that of the Provo Temple.
-How would
the original temple have appeared, if it had been built on the Ogden hillside instead?
Keith W. Wilcox's "What If?" Painting.
The late Keith W. Wilcox
of Ogden actually inadvertently painted a striking scene of the original Ogden
LDS Temple as if it were sitting along the Wasatch Mountains of Ogden.
(Wilcox was
architect of the Washington, D.C. LDS Temple, a general authority and also a former
president of the Ogden Temple.)
That
painting now resides in the primary room of an LDS Chapel in South Weber,
though some ward members there mistakenly believe the painting is of the Provo
Temple.
(Wilcox's wife said her husband just liked the closer Ogden mountains in his painting ...)
-Sadly, the
Pioneer Tabernacle was razed in August of 1971 to make way for the first Ogden
Temple. Officially, the Church said it was removed because of its very visible
conflict with Ogden Temple. (This was in an era when the Church tore down many old buildings, whereas restoration would more likely happen now.)
-Now the
revamped Tabernacle and the totally remodeled Ogden Temple are almost completed
as the latest anchors to Ogden’s historic Tabernacle Square.
The now steeple-less Ogden Tabernacle, next to the Ogden Temple, in February of 2014.
The Tabernacle does look a little odd now, being steeple-less, apparently permanently. It makes sense not to have a taller steeple on the Tabernacle than the new Temple, but I wish the top half of the Tabernacle steeple have been saved and used on the top of the building (at a height lower than the revamped Temple's steeple), or even cemented in the ground next to the structure?
Steeples are standard for religious buildings and outside the Salt Lake Tabernacle, is there a large LDS Church building out there without one, except the Ogden Tabernacle?
Anyone who reads the 1956 Souvenir program of the Ogden Tabernacle's original dedication will realize back then that Church members described that now missing steeple as simply a gleaming marvel.
Other source: “Souvenir Program” for the Ogden
Tabernacle, Feb, 12, 1956; and personal interviews.
(-Originally published in the Ogden Standard Examiner, March 21, 2014. Note: This is an expanded version over the original.)
-NOTE: The author, Lynn Arave, is available to speak to groups, clubs, classes or other organizations about Utah history at no charge. He can be contacted by email at: lynnarave@comcast.net