Derek wrote: I have memories of each of the rooms in our old house (that weird under the stairs portion of Wendy's basement bedroom) The high bed in Shane's basement bedroom and the space underneath, the 1980's wood paneling in the basement, and the orange shag carpet upstairs (even carpet in the kitchen right?) :) There were lots of walls since that was before open floor plans became so popular. Small closets, and small bathrooms, and I remember we had a shed in the back and it seems like Dad had a root cellar cave under it (that couldn't have been safe!)
Wendy wrote: Was our home really only 1524 square feet? Or is that not including the basement? Yes, those pictures bring back a lot of memories! Like the ones in the kitchen with the scripture reading chart in the background and the big yellow phone with its looong cord. Sometimes I would try and go in the coat closet with it for privacy. I actually wish we had more pictures of the bedrooms and the unique features of the rooms and yard. I haven’t really seen pictures of the bedrooms – there might be a couple out there – but I wish we had those. If you see a picture of the kitchen carpet let me know! I remember it as patterned with squares and the colors were orange and yellow. We had to use a butter knife to scrape underneath all of the bottom kitchen cupboards in order to vacuum the floor since it didn’t reach well under there. I would be interested in seeing other pictures of the rooms in the house like the room Jen and I shared upstairs and my yellow bedroom in the basement.
- Dad would finish off one new bedroom every time we had a baby.
- I remember how we had to get out of the car to open the garage, carry in the groceries through the front door and then go back and close the garage door---not fun in bad weather and with our little kids. It was Scott when he was in his 20's, that he installed an automatic garage-door opener. For awhile, in later years, our garage door would mysteriously open and close. We finally figured out that Hadleys across the street had the same code so ours was opening every they pushed their buttons!
- Originally there was a cement patio. Shane fell once when it was icy and got a concussion and didn't know what was going on for awhile. As I remember the stairs from the deck originally went down on the West side. Then Dad did the shed. We hired a fellow in the 11th ward to build us a new redwood deck and patio and changed the stairs to the East side, so they landed on the patio.
- I think we had your big deep sandpile where the shed was later built. Then it was under the deck. It was about 3 feet deep. You kids would put on your swimming suits and take the hose into the sandpile and play "muddy mess."
- Yes, Dad excavated under the shed---supposedly for a food cellar. But it was too moist and full of spiders, so none of you wanted to go down the ladder through the trapdoor in the shed floor!
- I too wish we had photos of each room----so kids, take photos now in depth in each of your homes inside and out. I wish I had more of my growing-up home on Boxelder St. in Murray. I only have one bit of the kitchen photo and not even a photo of the outside.
- Originally the basement was unfinished. Just cement floors ... which was a perfect place for roller skating in the big family room. Wendy and I would put the Xanadu record on and skate away. The Wonderful Westra sisters!
- There were unique spaces ... the closet under the stairs (great for hide-and-seek) with shelves at the back where we stored the sleeping bags (when we weren't using the green slippery ones to slide down the stairs), the little space behind the closet in Wendy's room. The "high" bed, the space under it was actually part of the food storage room.
- The food storage room had so many "rolley" shelves, which was to help keep things in rotation. Put the new cans in one end, take out the oldest ones from the other end.
- Finishing the basement rooms, the older kids got to pick out their own colors for carpet and such. Scott's room was brown, Chris's was blue I think? Wendy's was yellow (I remember her dresser and cabinet were yellow). The basement bathroom was the first to have Dad's secret toilet paper storage (or am I thinking of the Havenmoor house?)
- Only the master bath had a bathtub. The master just had a shower, as did the basement bathroom.
- The main upstairs living area ... living room and "dining" room. The "sheer" curtains. The lava-rock fireplace. The yellow couch and loveseat, the stereo (record player and storage), the piano, the white couch. What was technically the dining area was the "tv room" with a little television, and then Mom's recliner.
- The kitchen had carpet. The appliances were mustard yellow (I can't recall the colors of the replacements). No built in microwave, originally there wasn't one, then we got one that would sit on the counter. There was a decent sized pantry in the corner ... we'd keep our boxes of cereal there that we'd get for Easter/Christmas. The "job chart" (there were a few different iterations) would hang on the wall, or on a big green pinboard.
- The main phone hung on the kitchen wall. It was a rotary phone for most of my memory. Yellow, with a loooooong cord like Wendy mentioned. There was a second phone in the master bedroom, and then eventually one downstairs. Cordless phones became common in the 80s, not sure when we got our first set. I don't remember ever having an answering machine.
- The family room downstairs was finished at some point ... paneling on the walls, built in desk and cabinets, a countertop (for the boxes and boxes of Mom's coupons and refunds). The rock fireplace that Dad gathered rocks from the canyon to piece together ... extended to include a built in planter.
- The furnace room, with the washer/dryer, extra freezer and storage, was never finished. Always had cement floors. A door to the back of the house, exited under the deck. Another freezer just outside.
- Lots of pine trees in the yard ... cut down for Christmas trees later on. Lots of flowers. Chickens and Hens succulents among the rocks. Lots of rockwork. The side yard on the East had a rock pathway and the back had a little pond, planter and steps. There was a little hill/slope in the backyard. Directly behind the deck was the vegetable garden.
- When the deck originally had the stairs on the West side, it was quite the trek to take things down to the patio. I think it was probably Scott who rigged a rope and bucket that we'd put things in and then lower over the side, rather than going down the steps and around each time.
- Under the deck was the sandbox ... muddy mess (as Mom mentioned).
- Mom and I would dry fruit leather on tables on the back deck ... Square frames with nails, to place mesh over to keep out the birds and bugs. We sketched out plans for custom frames, but never made them happen.
- Dad always talked about building a racquetball court under the house ;)
https://www.zillow.com/homes/1677-Hermitage-Circle,-Salt-Lake-City,-UT_rb/12864397_zpid/
That was January 2019 ... interesting to see how that continues to change over the years! As of this posting (Nov2022) ... $631,000














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