Devereaux House: Salt Lake City's stately estate

Historic mansion has hosted U.S. presidents and other dignitaries

Published: Monday, Oct. 19 2009 12:00 a.m. MDT

Salt Lake City's Devereaux Mansion in January 1990. The home was used as a reception center.

Gerald Silver, Deseret News Archives

For decades, Devereaux House was one of Utah Territory's toniest addresses.

Built in 1855 as a two-story home, it was expanded in 1867 to become Utah's first mansion. In its heyday, Devereaux House hosted the territory's most prestigious visitors, including presidents and generals, foreign dignitaries and the celebrities of the time.

In an article in the Nov. 29, 1963, Deseret News, Dexter Ellis summed up the building's glory years:

"This pretentious manor, built by the Hon. William Jennings, pioneer industrial leader, occupied one half of one of the city's big 10-acre blocks between 2nd and 3rd West.

"The Jennings' parties were, understandably, the last word in genteel socializing. People of the highest rank both from within and without the state were guests there."

After the Denver & Rio Grande Railroad Depot was built, the mansion lost its appeal as a residence. Over the years, when it didn't lie vacant, it housed a clinic to treat alcoholics, a mining equipment office and warehouse, restaurants and reception centers.

It was purchased by the state in 1978 and almost destroyed by fire in 1979. The Devereaux House was painstakingly restored with public funds in 1984, when it regained its place as one of the jewels of Salt Lake City's historic buildings.

Photo researcher Ron Fox has found dozens of photos of the Devereaux House in the Deseret News archives. Many of these photos can been seen now at the newspaper Web site, deseretnews.com.

The original two-story, adobe residence was built in 1855 by William C. Staines, a convert to the LDS Church from England.

The home earned a place in Utah history when it became the site of the 1858 meeting between Brigham Young and Gov. Alfred Cumming during the "Utah War" when Young told Cumming and Thomas Kane that if the U.S. Army, which had been sent to Utah to quell a purported uprising, entered Salt Lake City, "they will find here only a charred and barren waste." As a result of the meeting, a major confrontation was avoided.

Ed D. Penrose wrote about the mansion in the June 21, 1930, Deseret News Saturday Magazine:

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