The northwest corner of 100 South and Main Street
remained vacant with no permanent building on the site until 1917
when local businessman, Dave Shuler, constructed his new garage on
the site at 96 South Main, writes L. Dee Stevenson in this week's column, Pictures Tell The Payson Story. The building was constructed of face brick from the
Provo Brick Factory. The building had a cement foundation and a
concrete floor. This was the first commercial building in Payson
that utilized a cement foundation. There was a 12 foot by 24 foot
basement that housed the furnace and stock rooms. Find the complete story and photographs depicting the changes to the Shuler Garage building over the generations in this week's edition of The Payson Chronicle.
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The Payson Chronicle
Nora Eccles Harrison Museum Of Art At USU Highlights Jim Mangan: The Crick
PICTURED: Photograph by Jim Mangan, Horse Whisperer, 2020, Archival pigment print, 20x13 inches. (Courtesy of the artist) Logan, UT-- The ...
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MELODIE OLSEN WOOD On a warm, sunny day in February, our spunky, feisty, independent, loving ...
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A backyard view of the Peterson property in Payson, Utah. This story appeared in the print edition of The Payson Chronicle . Whe...


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