Showing posts with label Truman Angell. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Truman Angell. Show all posts

Saturday, August 17, 2019

The Old Adobe Tabernacle on Temple Square




Work began in 1851.  It was dedicated April 6, 1852.  Truman O. Angell was the architect.  


The Old Adobe Tabernacle with a Bowery.   By 1854 the congregations had already outgrown the Old Tabernacle so they built a bowery over the outdoor space.  

Joseph Ridges installed his pipe organ in the Old Tabernacle in 1857.  This is the organ Connal Lee heard.  

The adobe Tabernacle was used until 1877 when it was razed to make way for the Assembly Hall built on the same site.  

(The following examples of construction techniques were photographed in the new Tabernacle, completed in 1867.  The notes refer to the old Adobe Tabernacle.)


Since metal nails were a rare and expensive commodity in the newly settled Great Basin, the Saints often used other means of binding timbers, such as the wooden pegs visible in this photo.




Grow notes, "Wherever they were cracked the timbers were wrapped with green rawhide, which contracted when dry and made a tight binding. This rawhide is still steel tight" (original thesis, 74). The builders used leather strips to strengthen timbers without adding excess weight.


Mary Ann Angell Young - known to the Mormons as 'Mother Young'


After Brigham Young's first wife died, Mary Ann married Brigham Young on March 31, 1834.  She had six children with Brigham.  Mary Ann was a skilled herbalist and folk doctor.  During her trek across the plains to the Salt Lake Valley in 1848, she used these skills to treat many fellow pioneers. She also brought many seeds with her and is credited with planting the beautiful trees that grow along the eastern end of South Temple Street in Salt Lake City, which was once known as Brigham Street.  



A daguerreotype taken around the time Connal Lee met her.  She was 57 in 1859 when she introduced Connal Lee to her brother, Truman Osborn Angell, who designed the Salt Lake Temple.