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2.
Council Hall
PI-60 Building Stones of Downtown
Salt Lake City, A Walking Tour
300 North State Street
The
Salt Lake Fire Crew lined up in front of City Hall (now Council
Hall) in the 1880s at its original location on the southeast corner
of 100 South and State Street. The octagonal clock tower contained
a fire alarm bell. This building was constructed of Nugget Sandstone
quarried in Red Butte Canyon, Salt Lake County and was moved to
its present location in 1961-62.
Photo courtesy of Utah State Historical Society.
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Formerly the old Salt Lake City Hall, this building was constructed
in 1864-66 with the reddish-brown Nugget Sandstone. This sandstone
was quarried in Red Butte Canyon located on the northeastern edge
of the Salt Lake Valley and brought down on railroad flat cars (the
railroad spur was removed years ago).
The Nugget Sandstone in northern Utah and the Navajo Sandstone
of southern and eastern Utah were part of a large sand dune field
that covered almost all of Utah during the Early Jurassic Period
(208 to 187 million years ago).
This building housed offices of the Salt Lake City government and
meetings of the Territorial Legislature for nearly 30 years. Initially
located on the southeast corner of 100 South and State Street, it
was dismantled stone by stone and reconstructed at its present site
in 1961-62. The original octagonal clock tower contained a fire
alarm bell.
Today, Council Hall is home to the Utah Travel Council and the
Utah Tourism and Recreation Information Center which provide information
on Utah's public lands and tourist attractions. Council Hall is
open Monday through Friday 8:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.; Saturday, Sunday,
and holidays 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Stone
(possibly Nugget Sandstone) being transported by Emigration Canyon
Railway Company to the Salt Lake Valley, July 1909. Photo
courtesy of Utah State Historical Society.
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As you continue south down the east (left) side of State Street,
notice the use of local Nugget Sandstone for steps, retaining walls,
and basements built in the early 1890s to early 1900s (especially
at 214, 204, and across the street at 225 North).
Tour
Stops
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