Tempe Historic Property Survey

| Survey Number: |
HPS-156 |
| Name: |
Samuel Openshaw House |
| Location: |
Demolished/formerly at 104 W. 6th Street |
| Year Built: |
|
| Architectural Style: |
1883 |
This house was most significant as the residence of prominent Mormon pioneer, Bishop
Samuel Openshaw, and for its historic associations with the early development of Tempe.
Openshaw, and English convert to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, and
son-in-law of Benjamin Franklin Johnson, was a pioneer in the Mormon westward migration.
He had been a member of the Martin Handcart Company in 1845, and a pioneer settler of
several communities in Utah, including Salt Lake City, St. George, Springlake, and
Santaquin. Openshaw, along with two of his wives and several children, arrived in Tempe in
the spring of 1883 with the third group of Johnson family members to arrive there. He
built this adobe house that year on two acres at the northwest corner of 6th Street and
Maple. In 1882, the Maricopa Stake of the LDS Church was organized with wards created in
Mesa, Lehi, and Tempe. Samuel Openshaw became the first bishop of the Tempe ward in June
of 1884, a position he occupied for a year before increased persecution of polygamy forced
him to leave his family and seek refuge in Utah. He returned in 1885, and in the following
year, he moved to a rural area west of Mesa called Nephi. He became bishop of the Nephi
Ward and held that position for 15 years until his death in 1904, at the age of 70.
The Samuel Openshaw House was constructed of adobe, nearly square in plan, and measured
30 feet wide by 25 feet deep. The house was covered with a gable roof, ridge line parallel
to the street, and a gently-sloped pitched roof over the north half of the house. An
addition, built to the rear of the house about 1938, was of frame and plaster with a gable
roof intersecting the rear slope of the original roof. An early veranda, which had
extended across the front and east side of the house, had been infilled, and portions
across the front façade had been removed. In 1938, windows had been replaced with metal
casements, but original opening were not changed. The house had been located on two large
lots set back from the street, which distinguished it from other houses on the street.
Go to Tempe
Historic Property Survey
|