Just last week a friend of mine who lives across the street from me came over with an old leather book of his ancestors' photos, just because he knows I like Utah Pioneer history. I noticed that a few were taken in Manti, but with no apparent relation to Edward Lloyd Parry. One picture, however, caught my eye:
Edward Lloyd Parry's home in Manti!
The back of the photo reads: "Jezreel Shoemaker's House, Manti." What a blessed coincidence! My neighbor friend is a descendant of Jezreel Shoemaker, hence he had this picture. Shoemaker was one of two previous owners of the home in Manti before Edward Lloyd Parry moved in; therefore my friend and I are descendants of two different men who both lived in the same house over 100 years ago!
This is the first time I have seen this picture, and one of the oldest pictures we have come across showing the old Parry home in Manti (50 North 100 West).
Nowadays, the home has the following plaque affixed to its front:
(click on each photo for a detailed enlargement)
P.S. March 3, 2013: I just received further information regarding the house from their present-day owners, as follows:
This picture of the home was taken approximately 1930-1940.
There is really very little different from the present looks except for
the closed in sleeping porch on the upper story front. The kitchen
extension to the south is still clapboard (later stuccoed over) and has
the door and windows to the south as well (those were
closed off when the stucco job went on). The rear carriage shed is
unchanged and there is a different building (near the current stone
garage) in the far rear but its details are not discernible.
The ash tree in the front yard is the best dating device. Remember the 1907 picture you provided; there the ash was maybe six inches in diameter. Here it is maybe 18 inches.
There is no driveway close to the house at that
time. We intend to eliminate the current driveway and take it back to
that wrap-around lawn eventually. Just one more facet of restoration.
The old chimneys have been exposed in
the north rooms by our latest work. Our helper stripped the
plaster off the parlor and upper N room chimneys over that time. They
are back to the original field oolitic limestone and we are planning to re-point them
(gouge out the old adobe and re-mortar the joints nicely) and use them
as backdrops to modern gas-burning stoves in each room. Plumbing the gas
lines and venting the stoves through the old chimney flues will be the
major challenges.