File:Bountiful Tabernacle.jpg

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English: Commissioned in 1857 by President Brigham Young — who appointed Augustus A. Farnham as architect for the Greek Revival edifice and, after the Johnston's Army episode of the Utah War, called Anson Call to raise funds for and to oversee its final construction — the Bountiful Tabernacle was completed and dedicated in 1862-63, at the height of the American Civil War and at a cost of $60,000. During its two-day dedication by President Heber C. Kimball, with President Young presiding (14-15 March 1863), Anson & Mariah Bowen Call housed and fed 150 out-of-town guests and cared for 100 of the visitors' horses. Apostle Lorenzo Snow had dedicated the structural site on 11 February 1857. The best artisans and craftsmen were employed in executing the plaster casting, hand carving, and the winding stairways for the 86 x 44 foot structure. The tabernacle was constructed on a rock foundation and featured a red-pine roof secured atop adobe walls by wooden pegs. The building's roof timbers and lumber were hauled from nearby Holbrook Canyon. Since its dedication, every Prophet-President of the Church (save Joseph Smith) has spoken from its pulpit. Today, the Bountiful Tabernacle, completed 5 years before the Salt Lake Tabernacle, remains the oldest surviving Mormon tabernacle and the oldest LDS Church meetinghouse in continuous use.[1][2]
Date circa 1870
date QS:P,+1870-00-00T00:00:00Z/9,P1480,Q5727902
Source CHBOWEN
Author Unknown photographer
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  1. Hartley, William G., Lorna Call Alder & H. Lane Johnson, Anson Bowen Call: Bishop of Colonia Dublán, 2007, pp. 37-38, 61
  2. 'Bountiful Tabernacle,' Utah Division of State History, Utah Department of Heritage & Arts

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current06:51, 13 October 2018Thumbnail for version as of 06:51, 13 October 2018540 × 497 (103 KB)Chauvelin2000 (talk | contribs){{Information |Description=Commissioned in 1857 by Brigham Young, who appointed Augustus A. Farnham as architect and called Anson Call to raise funds for the building, the Bountiful Tabernacle was completed in 1863 — at the height of the Civil War. During its two-day dedication by Heber C. Kimball, 14-15 March 1863, Anson & Mariah Bowen Call housed and fed 150 out-of-town guests and cared for 100 of the visitors' horses.<ref>[[William G. Hartley|Hart...

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