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Provo Tabernacle

The Provo Tabernacle was a tabernacle of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1898 to 2010 in downtown Provo, Utah, United States. It was a historic icon of Provo and had been home to many religious and cultural events.[1] All but the outer walls of the building were destroyed by fire in December 2010. The LDS Church preserved the remaining outer walls and built a new foundation and interior as part of the Provo City Center Temple, completed in 2016.

Provo Tabernacle
The Provo Tabernacle in 2009
Location50 S. University Ave., Provo, Utah
Coordinates40°13′57.5″N 111°39′33″W / 40.232639°N 111.65917°W / 40.232639; -111.65917
Area1 acre (0.40 ha)
Built1883
ArchitectWilliam H. Folsom
Architectural styleGothic Revival
NRHP reference No.75001830
Added to NRHPSeptember 9, 1975

First tabernacle in Provo edit

Predating the existing Provo tabernacle was a smaller tabernacle (sometimes called the Old Provo Tabernacle) that stood from 1861 to 1919 on the same block and was situated north of the later tabernacle building facing Center Street. Plans for the first tabernacle began as early as 1852, though ground wasn't broken until 1856.[2] The Walker and Utah wars slowed the progress of building the original structure. Thomas Allman and John Watkins did much of the interior woodwork. The first tabernacle seated 1100, though more could fit with chairs added in the aisles. The single tower, located on the north end above the foyer, stood 80 feet (24 m) tall and carried a 500-pound (230 kg) bell. For practical purposes, the tabernacle was completed in 1861, although the final plastering and dedication of the building occurred in 1867. There is confusion as to whether Brigham Young or John Taylor dedicated the first tabernacle. At the dedication, Young expressed that the tabernacle was "entirely too small" and should have been completed 12 years previously. The original Provo tabernacle was razed between 1918 and 1919. The foundation for the first tabernacle and nearby baptismal font were unearthed by the Office of Public Archaeology at Brigham Young University (BYU) in 2012. Many coins, trinkets, and other small items that had fallen through the floorboards and remained in the foundation were discovered.[3] The rock foundation was then disassembled and the stones were donated to Provo City.

Construction of the second tabernacle edit

 
The Provo Tabernacle in 1914, before the center tower was removed.

The construction for the second and larger Provo tabernacle (referred to also as the Utah Stake Tabernacle or the New Provo Tabernacle) started in 1883. It was built by the LDS Church as a meeting place that would hold more people than its predecessor.[4] Harvey H. Cluff oversaw its construction.[5] The new tabernacle, designed by William Folsom could seat 3,000 individuals in its auditorium and balconies. The tabernacle was in use by 1886, when it held the LDS Church's general conference on April 6. Members of the First Presidency were in hiding at the time on polygamy charges and were not present.[4] The tabernacle was dedicated on April 17, 1898, by George Q. Cannon, with church president Joseph F. Smith also in attendance. The building costs totaled USD$100,000. In 1907, a USD$10,000 organ from the Austin Organ Company was installed, featuring 36 ranks of pipes and 3 manuals.[6] In 1917, the cupola was removed due to the roof sagging.[7]

In 1964, the tabernacle was updated, with much of the interior painted white, while the electrical and heating systems were updated.[8]

Cultural impact edit

The Tabernacle was home to many concerts, LDS stake conferences, and other community events. One of the first big-name entertainers to perform in the tabernacle was Madame Abbie Carrington in 1891. On September 1, 1909, U.S. President William H. Taft visited and spoke in the tabernacle. In the 1930s, Herald R. Clark, the head of BYU's College of Commerce, arranged to use the tabernacle for university lyceum programs. One of the most famous lyceums occurred in 1938 when composer Sergei Rachmaninoff performed in concert.[9] Many funerals of prominent residents of Provo were held in the tabernacle, including Abraham O. Smoot, Hugh Nibley, and Truman Madsen. In 1975, the building was added to the U.S. National Register of Historic Places.

Fire edit

 
Provo Tabernacle gutted by fire on 17 December 2010

A four-alarm fire was reported at the tabernacle on December 17, 2010, at 2:43 AM MST. Firefighters arrived to find smoke coming from the building. Firefighters initially believed they could save the roof and thus the outward structural integrity of the building, but around 6:00 AM MST the roof collapsed.[10] The fire continued to burn throughout the day.

On March 31, 2011, after 12 weeks of investigation, the Provo City Fire Department released its findings and conclusion regarding the fire. The report states "The most probable proximate cause of the fire at the Tabernacle December 17, 2010 is a heat source, specifically an energized 300-watt lamp, which was placed too close to combustible materials, specifically a wooden speaker enclosure."[11] The lamp had been placed for rehearsals of Lex de Azevedo's Gloria: The Life of Christ.[12] The report also found deficiencies with the lack of a fire protection system (including automatic sprinklers and notification system) and human error (including multiple failures to alert authorities of suspicious circumstances such as odor, correcting an unsafe condition, and failure to recognize and respond to the fire alarm).[12]

According to press reports after the fire, a large reproduction painting of Jesus Christ was found to have partially survived.[13] The giclée print of Harry Anderson's The Second Coming, originally contained a number of angels as background figures, all of which were burned. In the center of the print, while Jesus' hands and one arm were fractionally burned, the remainder of the figure was mostly intact and partially surrounded by a largely unburned area.[14] Photographs taken during the fire response show the print was initially unharmed in its place near the east door of the tabernacle, but though the frame remained intact, the print itself somehow became partially charred during Friday night or Saturday as firefighting efforts continued.[14] The print was removed on the afternoon of 18 December and transported to Salt Lake City for conservation.

The fate of a notable original artwork, Minerva Teichert's 1934 painting Restoration of the Melchizedek Priesthood, remained unknown until 22 December.[15][16][12] Due to the significance of the painting, the Provo fire marshal permitted fire task force members to enter the east end of the ruined building despite dangerous conditions. In the late afternoon, searchers located the remnants of the painting,[12] which was almost completely destroyed by the fire, and were able to identify it primarily due to the melted Plexiglass of its protective cover.[17] The remnants of the painting were photographed and diagrammed before being turned over to BYU Risk Management officials for transportation to the property owners for preservation.[12] Fire crews stated that, had they been aware of the significance of the painting, they would have made efforts to recover it prior to the collapse of the building's roof.[17] The painting, valued at USD $1.5 million,[18] represented 10% of the building's total estimated loss in the fire.[19]

Other major losses included the tabernacle Austin pipe organ (the value of which de Azevedo estimated at over USD $1 million), a rented USD $100,000 Fazioli grand piano, a USD $20,000 Lyon & Healy concert grand harp, and USD $2 million in KBYU videography equipment in a single production truck.[20][13]

Restoration edit

Provo City Center LDS Temple time-lapse video
 
Provo Tabernacle under restoration to become the Provo City Center Temple (May 2015).

LDS Church president Thomas S. Monson announced in general conference on October 1, 2011, that the Provo Tabernacle would be rebuilt to serve as a second temple in Provo,[21] making Provo the second city in the LDS Church to have two temples, following South Jordan, Utah, which has the Jordan River and Oquirrh Mountain temples. It is the second tabernacle in Utah to be converted to a temple, following the Vernal Utah Temple. The restoration included "a complete restoration of the original exterior," and the artist's rendition in the press release included the central tower from the original building.[22][23] As part of construction, the outer wall was placed on scaffolding for the excavation of two basement levels beneath it.[24]

A public open house was held from Friday, January 15, 2016, through Saturday, March 5, 2016, excluding Sundays, and drew more than 800,000 visitors.[25] The temple was dedicated on Sunday, March 20, 2016.[26][27][28]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Toth, Heidi (December 18, 2010). "Community reflects on loss of tabernacle". Daily Herald. Retrieved October 3, 2011.
  2. ^ [1] March 16, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ Morgenegg, Ryan (February 28, 2012). "Provo Tabernacle excavation: Work completed!". Church News. Retrieved October 15, 2013.
  4. ^ a b "salt lake architecture: provo tabernacle". Saltlakearchitecture.blogspot.com. January 17, 2011. Retrieved October 15, 2013.
  5. ^ Jensen, Andrew (1941). "Cluff, Harvey Harris". LDS Biographical Encyclopedia. Vol. 1. Deseret News. pp. 371–373.
  6. ^ "Pipe Organ Database | Austin Organ Co. (Opus 191, 1907) Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints - Provo Tabernacle". Pipe Organ Database. Retrieved 2023-02-09.
  7. ^ "Historical Provo Tabernacle". Provo City Library. Retrieved April 7, 2017.
  8. ^ [2] October 15, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  9. ^ Carter, D. Robert (December 17, 2010). "Unwelcome bells at Provo Tabernacle". Daily Herald.
  10. ^ "Fire guts Provo Tabernacle". KSL-TV News. December 17, 2010.
  11. ^ (PDF), Tabernacle Fire Report (final), Provo Tabernacle Fire Investigative Task Force, March 31, 2011, archived from the original (PDF) on November 1, 2012, retrieved October 3, 2011
  12. ^ a b c d e (PDF). Provo Tabernacle Fire Investigative Task Force. March 31, 2011. Archived from the original (PDF) on May 16, 2011. Retrieved October 3, 2011. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  13. ^ a b Meyers, Donald W.; Moulton, Kristen; Mims, Bob (18 December 2010). "Provo's cultural heart broken by Tabernacle fire". Salt Lake Tribune. Retrieved 9 February 2023.
  14. ^ a b Warnock, Caleb (December 18, 2010). "Scorched portrait of Christ saved from Tabernacle". Daily Herald. Retrieved 10 February 2023.
  15. ^ Morgenegg, Ryan (21 December 2010). "Fire devastates historic Provo Tabernacle". LDS Church News.
  16. ^ "Partial list of items lost in Provo Tabernacle fire". Daily Herald. 17 December 2010. Retrieved 9 February 2023.
  17. ^ a b Utt, Emily (2013). This Debris Matters: Preserving Fire-Damaged Historic Buildings (MA thesis). Goucher College. p. 57. hdl:11603/2630.
  18. ^ Haskins, Scott M. (25 January 2016). "Art Conservation Forensic Analysis Of Wall Decorations In Burned Out Historic Building". Fine Art Conservation Laboratories.
  19. ^ "Report: Light fixture, human errors caused Provo Tabernacle fire". KSL.com. 31 March 2011. Retrieved 9 February 2023.
  20. ^ "Provo Tabernacle burns in four-alarm fire". Deseret News. 2010-12-18. Retrieved 2023-02-09.
  21. ^ Walker, Joseph (1 October 2011). "Provo Tabernacle to rise from ashes as a temple". Deseret News.
  22. ^ "New Temples Announced for France, Democratic Republic of Congo, South Africa, Colombia, Utah and Wyoming". Newsroom. LDS Church. October 1, 2011.
  23. ^ Meyers, Donald W. (October 2, 2011). "Mormon temple to rise from ashes of Provo Tabernacle". The Salt Lake Tribune.
  24. ^ Engineering Feat Puts Future Provo Temple on 'Stilts' from YouTube
  25. ^ Walch, Tad (March 9, 2016). "Provo City Center Temple open house drew more than 800,000 visitors". Deseret News. Retrieved April 7, 2017.
  26. ^ "'Beauty for Ashes': 4,500 youth participate in cultural celebration". LDS Church News. Deseret News. March 19, 2016.
  27. ^ "150th Temple Is Dedicated: Provo City Center Temple becomes the 16th Utah temple". Mormon Newsroom. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. March 20, 2016.
  28. ^ Walch, Tad (March 20, 2016). "Elder Oaks dedicates Provo City Center Temple as 150th temple of the LDS Church". Deseret News.

References edit

  • "A History of the Provo Tabernacle Organ", Pioneer, 58 (2), Sons of Utah Pioneers: 32–33, 2011
  • Backus, Anna Jean (2004), Provo Pioneers and Their Tabernacles, Hurricane, Utah: AJB Distributing, ISBN 0-9664471-4-X
  • Christensen, N. La Verl (1983), Provo's Two Tabernacles and the People Who Built Them, Provo, Utah: Provo Utah East Stake, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
  • "Provo Tabernacle Rededicated", Ensign, 16 (12): 70, December 1986, retrieved 2011-11-10
  • Roberts, Allen D. (September 9, 1975), National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination: Provo Tabernacle (PDF), National Park Service, retrieved December 18, 2010
    • "Accompanying 3 photos, from 1975." (PDF), National Register of Historic Places Inventory, retrieved December 18, 2010
  • "The Tabernacle Block: "A Very Eligible Place"", Pioneer, 58 (2), Sons of Utah Pioneers: 8–9, 2011
  • Westwood, Brad (2011), "Interior Craftsmanship of the Provo Tabernacle", Pioneer, 58 (2), Sons of Utah Pioneers: 28–31

External links edit

  • (provotabernacle.org), available from the Internet Archive
  • page by the City of Provo
  • Remembering the Provo Tabernacle, Photograph Archives in Special Collections, Harold B. Lee Library
  • NRHP Listings in Provo Utah

provo, tabernacle, renovated, structure, provo, city, center, temple, tabernacle, church, jesus, christ, latter, saints, church, from, 1898, 2010, downtown, provo, utah, united, states, historic, icon, provo, been, home, many, religious, cultural, events, oute. For the renovated structure see Provo City Center Temple The Provo Tabernacle was a tabernacle of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints LDS Church from 1898 to 2010 in downtown Provo Utah United States It was a historic icon of Provo and had been home to many religious and cultural events 1 All but the outer walls of the building were destroyed by fire in December 2010 The LDS Church preserved the remaining outer walls and built a new foundation and interior as part of the Provo City Center Temple completed in 2016 Provo TabernacleU S National Register of Historic PlacesThe Provo Tabernacle in 2009Show map of UtahShow map of the United StatesLocation50 S University Ave Provo UtahCoordinates40 13 57 5 N 111 39 33 W 40 232639 N 111 65917 W 40 232639 111 65917Area1 acre 0 40 ha Built1883ArchitectWilliam H FolsomArchitectural styleGothic RevivalNRHP reference No 75001830Added to NRHPSeptember 9 1975 Contents 1 First tabernacle in Provo 2 Construction of the second tabernacle 3 Cultural impact 4 Fire 5 Restoration 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksFirst tabernacle in Provo editPredating the existing Provo tabernacle was a smaller tabernacle sometimes called the Old Provo Tabernacle that stood from 1861 to 1919 on the same block and was situated north of the later tabernacle building facing Center Street Plans for the first tabernacle began as early as 1852 though ground wasn t broken until 1856 2 The Walker and Utah wars slowed the progress of building the original structure Thomas Allman and John Watkins did much of the interior woodwork The first tabernacle seated 1100 though more could fit with chairs added in the aisles The single tower located on the north end above the foyer stood 80 feet 24 m tall and carried a 500 pound 230 kg bell For practical purposes the tabernacle was completed in 1861 although the final plastering and dedication of the building occurred in 1867 There is confusion as to whether Brigham Young or John Taylor dedicated the first tabernacle At the dedication Young expressed that the tabernacle was entirely too small and should have been completed 12 years previously The original Provo tabernacle was razed between 1918 and 1919 The foundation for the first tabernacle and nearby baptismal font were unearthed by the Office of Public Archaeology at Brigham Young University BYU in 2012 Many coins trinkets and other small items that had fallen through the floorboards and remained in the foundation were discovered 3 The rock foundation was then disassembled and the stones were donated to Provo City Construction of the second tabernacle edit nbsp The Provo Tabernacle in 1914 before the center tower was removed The construction for the second and larger Provo tabernacle referred to also as the Utah Stake Tabernacle or the New Provo Tabernacle started in 1883 It was built by the LDS Church as a meeting place that would hold more people than its predecessor 4 Harvey H Cluff oversaw its construction 5 The new tabernacle designed by William Folsom could seat 3 000 individuals in its auditorium and balconies The tabernacle was in use by 1886 when it held the LDS Church s general conference on April 6 Members of the First Presidency were in hiding at the time on polygamy charges and were not present 4 The tabernacle was dedicated on April 17 1898 by George Q Cannon with church president Joseph F Smith also in attendance The building costs totaled USD 100 000 In 1907 a USD 10 000 organ from the Austin Organ Company was installed featuring 36 ranks of pipes and 3 manuals 6 In 1917 the cupola was removed due to the roof sagging 7 In 1964 the tabernacle was updated with much of the interior painted white while the electrical and heating systems were updated 8 Cultural impact editThe Tabernacle was home to many concerts LDS stake conferences and other community events One of the first big name entertainers to perform in the tabernacle was Madame Abbie Carrington in 1891 On September 1 1909 U S President William H Taft visited and spoke in the tabernacle In the 1930s Herald R Clark the head of BYU s College of Commerce arranged to use the tabernacle for university lyceum programs One of the most famous lyceums occurred in 1938 when composer Sergei Rachmaninoff performed in concert 9 Many funerals of prominent residents of Provo were held in the tabernacle including Abraham O Smoot Hugh Nibley and Truman Madsen In 1975 the building was added to the U S National Register of Historic Places Fire edit nbsp Provo Tabernacle gutted by fire on 17 December 2010 A four alarm fire was reported at the tabernacle on December 17 2010 at 2 43 AM MST Firefighters arrived to find smoke coming from the building Firefighters initially believed they could save the roof and thus the outward structural integrity of the building but around 6 00 AM MST the roof collapsed 10 The fire continued to burn throughout the day On March 31 2011 after 12 weeks of investigation the Provo City Fire Department released its findings and conclusion regarding the fire The report states The most probable proximate cause of the fire at the Tabernacle December 17 2010 is a heat source specifically an energized 300 watt lamp which was placed too close to combustible materials specifically a wooden speaker enclosure 11 The lamp had been placed for rehearsals of Lex de Azevedo s Gloria The Life of Christ 12 The report also found deficiencies with the lack of a fire protection system including automatic sprinklers and notification system and human error including multiple failures to alert authorities of suspicious circumstances such as odor correcting an unsafe condition and failure to recognize and respond to the fire alarm 12 According to press reports after the fire a large reproduction painting of Jesus Christ was found to have partially survived 13 The giclee print of Harry Anderson s The Second Coming originally contained a number of angels as background figures all of which were burned In the center of the print while Jesus hands and one arm were fractionally burned the remainder of the figure was mostly intact and partially surrounded by a largely unburned area 14 Photographs taken during the fire response show the print was initially unharmed in its place near the east door of the tabernacle but though the frame remained intact the print itself somehow became partially charred during Friday night or Saturday as firefighting efforts continued 14 The print was removed on the afternoon of 18 December and transported to Salt Lake City for conservation The fate of a notable original artwork Minerva Teichert s 1934 painting Restoration of the Melchizedek Priesthood remained unknown until 22 December 15 16 12 Due to the significance of the painting the Provo fire marshal permitted fire task force members to enter the east end of the ruined building despite dangerous conditions In the late afternoon searchers located the remnants of the painting 12 which was almost completely destroyed by the fire and were able to identify it primarily due to the melted Plexiglass of its protective cover 17 The remnants of the painting were photographed and diagrammed before being turned over to BYU Risk Management officials for transportation to the property owners for preservation 12 Fire crews stated that had they been aware of the significance of the painting they would have made efforts to recover it prior to the collapse of the building s roof 17 The painting valued at USD 1 5 million 18 represented 10 of the building s total estimated loss in the fire 19 Other major losses included the tabernacle Austin pipe organ the value of which de Azevedo estimated at over USD 1 million a rented USD 100 000 Fazioli grand piano a USD 20 000 Lyon amp Healy concert grand harp and USD 2 million in KBYU videography equipment in a single production truck 20 13 Restoration editFurther information Provo City Center Temple source source source source source Provo City Center LDS Temple time lapse video nbsp Provo Tabernacle under restoration to become the Provo City Center Temple May 2015 LDS Church president Thomas S Monson announced in general conference on October 1 2011 that the Provo Tabernacle would be rebuilt to serve as a second temple in Provo 21 making Provo the second city in the LDS Church to have two temples following South Jordan Utah which has the Jordan River and Oquirrh Mountain temples It is the second tabernacle in Utah to be converted to a temple following the Vernal Utah Temple The restoration included a complete restoration of the original exterior and the artist s rendition in the press release included the central tower from the original building 22 23 As part of construction the outer wall was placed on scaffolding for the excavation of two basement levels beneath it 24 A public open house was held from Friday January 15 2016 through Saturday March 5 2016 excluding Sundays and drew more than 800 000 visitors 25 The temple was dedicated on Sunday March 20 2016 26 27 28 Notes edit Toth Heidi December 18 2010 Community reflects on loss of tabernacle Daily Herald Retrieved October 3 2011 1 Archived March 16 2012 at the Wayback Machine Morgenegg Ryan February 28 2012 Provo Tabernacle excavation Work completed Church News Retrieved October 15 2013 a b salt lake architecture provo tabernacle Saltlakearchitecture blogspot com January 17 2011 Retrieved October 15 2013 Jensen Andrew 1941 Cluff Harvey Harris LDS Biographical Encyclopedia Vol 1 Deseret News pp 371 373 Pipe Organ Database Austin Organ Co Opus 191 1907 Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints Provo Tabernacle Pipe Organ Database Retrieved 2023 02 09 Historical Provo Tabernacle Provo City Library Retrieved April 7 2017 2 Archived October 15 2011 at the Wayback Machine Carter D Robert December 17 2010 Unwelcome bells at Provo Tabernacle Daily Herald Fire guts Provo Tabernacle KSL TV News December 17 2010 Tabernacle Fire Report Executive Summary PDF Tabernacle Fire Report final Provo Tabernacle Fire Investigative Task Force March 31 2011 archived from the original PDF on November 1 2012 retrieved October 3 2011 a b c d e The Origin Cause and Circumstance of the Provo Tabernacle Fire PDF Provo Tabernacle Fire Investigative Task Force March 31 2011 Archived from the original PDF on May 16 2011 Retrieved October 3 2011 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help a b Meyers Donald W Moulton Kristen Mims Bob 18 December 2010 Provo s cultural heart broken by Tabernacle fire Salt Lake Tribune Retrieved 9 February 2023 a b Warnock Caleb December 18 2010 Scorched portrait of Christ saved from Tabernacle Daily Herald Retrieved 10 February 2023 Morgenegg Ryan 21 December 2010 Fire devastates historic Provo Tabernacle LDS Church News Partial list of items lost in Provo Tabernacle fire Daily Herald 17 December 2010 Retrieved 9 February 2023 a b Utt Emily 2013 This Debris Matters Preserving Fire Damaged Historic Buildings MA thesis Goucher College p 57 hdl 11603 2630 Haskins Scott M 25 January 2016 Art Conservation Forensic Analysis Of Wall Decorations In Burned Out Historic Building Fine Art Conservation Laboratories Report Light fixture human errors caused Provo Tabernacle fire KSL com 31 March 2011 Retrieved 9 February 2023 Provo Tabernacle burns in four alarm fire Deseret News 2010 12 18 Retrieved 2023 02 09 Walker Joseph 1 October 2011 Provo Tabernacle to rise from ashes as a temple Deseret News New Temples Announced for France Democratic Republic of Congo South Africa Colombia Utah and Wyoming Newsroom LDS Church October 1 2011 Meyers Donald W October 2 2011 Mormon temple to rise from ashes of Provo Tabernacle The Salt Lake Tribune Engineering Feat Puts Future Provo Temple on Stilts from YouTube Walch Tad March 9 2016 Provo City Center Temple open house drew more than 800 000 visitors Deseret News Retrieved April 7 2017 Beauty for Ashes 4 500 youth participate in cultural celebration LDS Church News Deseret News March 19 2016 150th Temple Is Dedicated Provo City Center Temple becomes the 16th Utah temple Mormon Newsroom The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints March 20 2016 Walch Tad March 20 2016 Elder Oaks dedicates Provo City Center Temple as 150th temple of the LDS Church Deseret News References edit A History of the Provo Tabernacle Organ Pioneer 58 2 Sons of Utah Pioneers 32 33 2011 Backus Anna Jean 2004 Provo Pioneers and Their Tabernacles Hurricane Utah AJB Distributing ISBN 0 9664471 4 X Christensen N La Verl 1983 Provo s Two Tabernacles and the People Who Built Them Provo Utah Provo Utah East Stake The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints Provo Tabernacle Rededicated Ensign 16 12 70 December 1986 retrieved 2011 11 10 Roberts Allen D September 9 1975 National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Provo Tabernacle PDF National Park Service retrieved December 18 2010 Accompanying 3 photos from 1975 PDF National Register of Historic Places Inventory retrieved December 18 2010 The Tabernacle Block A Very Eligible Place Pioneer 58 2 Sons of Utah Pioneers 8 9 2011 Westwood Brad 2011 Interior Craftsmanship of the Provo Tabernacle Pioneer 58 2 Sons of Utah Pioneers 28 31External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Provo Tabernacle Former Unofficial website provotabernacle org available from the Internet Archive Provo Tabernacle Fire page by the City of Provo Remembering the Provo Tabernacle Photograph Archives in Special Collections Harold B Lee Library NRHP Listings in Provo Utah Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Provo Tabernacle amp oldid 1211507745, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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