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Investing in a dream
08/11/10
By Mitzi Brabb
Connection Correspondent
As a young lady, Lisa Boyle would take
the same route along McLean to get to middle school and later
Payson High School. She would leave her family’s
apartment at the Oxbow Saloon, where her mother tended bar,
walk the street that was once considered “Main
Street”, and pass a beautifully crafted home that had
stood for decades. “I passed it nearly
everyday and I always wanted to live in that house,” said
Boyle.
That house was known as the old
Gibson House. In 1917 William Washington Gibson, better
known as “Wash”, built a craftsman style kit home,
which was ordered from a Sears and Roebucks catalogue.
About the turn of the last
century, these Bungalow assembly homes could be purchased from
$400-$1,350, depending on the model.
Between 1908 and 1940 more than
75,000 Sears’ kit homes were built in the United States.
Ol’ Wash participated in the Sears mail-order home
phenomenon, though some believe he may have taken creative
liberties while building his home.
As historical objects grew more
valuable over time, so did the Gibson House. The Gibson
House, well maintained, rich in local history, was listed for
$220,000 just two months ago.
Boyle had never considered moving
from her Payson home, but when she and husband Craig happened
to be driving down McLean during an open house at the Gibson
home, she had to stop.
“I always wanted to see the
inside of the house. It was really incredible,”
Boyle expressed.
The selling point for her husband
was the large lot at the back of the one-acre property.
It would prove to be the perfect place to build a hobby
shop where he could enjoy refurbishing vintage pick-ups.
Shortly after the open house,
Boyle again passed the house and noticed a realtor showing the
home to a couple. She impulsively pulled over and
approached the real estate agent.
“I’ll take it!”
she said.
Taken aback, the realtor
questioned her, but Boyle, afraid she would lose the house,
adamantly told him she wanted it.
“I always loved this house
and wanted to live here. I couldn’t pass up the
opportunity,” said Boyle.
As firm as is the foundation of
the Gibson house, so is the family ancestry. Just across
the road live Don and Ron Gibson, twin brothers, who have spent
much of their lives in Payson, and know the history of the
town.
Don Gibson recalled a time when
Payson had fewer than 500 residents, and homestead families
made longstanding names for themselves in the community.
“It wasn’t much more
than a sleepy little cow town with a lumber mill,” said
Gibson.
Gibson’s family, originally
from Salt Lake City, were pioneers that settled in Gisela and
homesteaded Gibson Ranch in Round Valley.
The other side of Gibson’s
family were the well known Randall’s. His
grandfather, George Randall, worked for the Santa Fe Railroad
crew in Denver before moving to the area in 1900 for a mining
opportunity.
Gibson was raised in the Randall
house, just across the road from Grandpa Wash’s home,
with his family, Aunt Julia, and Grandma Gibson, after Wash
passed on in 1930.
Although more rustic in
appearance, the wooden framed home of Julia Randall still
stands, a short walking distance away from the rock school
building where she taught local Payson children. It was
built in 1939 to educate a handful of students, but later
became known as the popular Julia Randall Elementary School and
the very school that Boyle attended when she was a schoolgirl.
Gibson said that it had recently
been bought and beautifully renovated on the inside by a family
who, like Boyle’s, always wanted to live in an historic
home.
According to Gibson, the
rusty-brown house has been vacant since 1997. He’s
certain that the new owners will put the same love and
attention into the home that his grandfather did.
Boyle plans on making only
moderate, tasteful renovations to her new home; to bring out
the best of the original structure, and not to take away from
the past.
We can only hope that those who
purchase similar historical homes in Payson will be as mindful
of the history that they protect.
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