Newhouse Hotel — a landmark to explosive end

Published: Sunday, Nov. 8, 2009 10:15 p.m. MST
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For 71 years, the Newhouse Hotel was one of downtown Salt Lake City's distinctive landmarks.

On a Sunday morning in June 1983, it went out with style, crumbling "to the thud of 100 pounds of well-placed explosives."

The 12-story hotel, built in 1912 on the southwest corner of 400 South and Main Street, was identified in a June 24, 1983, Deseret News editorial as "a monument to the early boom-and-bust days of mining in Utah, a story of sudden wealth, lavish spending and a lifestyle that has vanished from the American scene."

It was the site of countless political meetings and community gatherings. In the 1940s and '50s, the hotel hosted the Salt Lake Flower and Garden Club, the Utah Fur Breeders Agricultural Cooperative Association, the International Union of Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers, and the 1952 Junior Fat Stock Show, to name a few.

Deseret News photographers took many pictures of the Newhouse over the years, including a dramatic photo series of the hotel collapsing in sections as demolition charges were triggered. Photo researcher Ron Fox has collected many of these photos, which can now be seen at deseretnews.com.

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When mining magnate Samuel Newhouse arrived in Utah in 1896, he had already transformed a modest investment in mining property at Ouray, Colo., into millions of dollars.

In Utah, Newhouse continued making money in the mining industry. In 1907, he launched a building program that was designed to move the city's financial center from Temple Square to Exchange Place. He built the city's first skyscrapers, the Boston and Newhouse buildings, and donated property for the Salt Lake Stock Exchange and Commercial Club buildings. The Newhouse Hotel, separate from the Newhouse building, was to be the final jewel in Salt Lake's little "Wall Street."

But Newhouse's financial empire crumbled after construction was started on the hotel. His mines couldn't support his elaborate building plans, World War I dried up potential loans, and his marriage fell apart. The hotel turned out nice but not as nice as he had hoped.

"Although it was a beautiful hotel … it was never really built the way its founder had planned," a Deseret News editorial said. "The 13th floor, some wings and the fancy towers and flagged minarets to top the building were left off. For several years, the windows were without glass. Eventually the building was finished in more modest style."

Newhouse sold the hotel in 1919, and over the years the building saw several renovations.

Recent comments

I would love to see more pictures of this wonderful old hotel in its...

Tracy | Nov. 14, 2009 at 2:43 p.m.

You haven't a clue. It is funny how clueless you are.

RE RE Scott | Nov. 9, 2009 at 6:10 p.m.

Why didn't anyone think of building a new office tower or a...

Jordan T. | Nov. 9, 2009 at 5:55 p.m.

Image
O. Wallace Kasteler, Deseret News Archives

A giant cloud of debris engulfs the Newhouse Hotel as it implodes June 26, 1983.

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