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Elias L.T. Harrison : ウィキペディア英語版 | Elias L. T. Harrison
Elias Lacy Thomas Harrison (1830–1900) was an architect and writer in Salt Lake City, Utah who became important in the history of Utah and the Latter Day Saint Movement. Harrison converted to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints in England in the 1840s in part due to the preaching of Orson Pratt. In England, he became friends with Edward Tullidge, the editor of the Millennial Star. After immigration to Utah, Harrison and Tullidge were co-editors of the Peep O' Day, believed to be the first magazine in the Intermountain West. Harrison and Tullidge along with William Godbe started the Mormon Tribune, which later became The Salt Lake Tribune. Harrison eventually left the LDS Church and was influential in the formation of the Godbeites or "New Movement". ==Architect== His architectural works include the Daft Block, Salt Lake Theater interior, Walker's Store, Walker Brother's Bank, the Godbe-Pitts Company Store. He also designed his own home, sometimes referred to as "the castle" of Capitol Hill and located in the Capitol Hill Historic District at 10 West 300 North in Salt Lake City. The Daft Block is the only existing work on the National Register of Historic Places.
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