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Historic American Buildings Survey (HABS) No. WY-26, "T. A. Moulton Ranch, Mormon Row Road, Kelly vicinity, Teton County, WY", 20 photos, 13 measured drawings, 16 data pages; HABS No. WY-83, "Andy Chambers' Ranch House, Mormon Row Road, Kelly vicinity, Teton County, WY", 6 photos, 5 measured drawings, 7 data pages, 1 photo caption page
Historic American Buildings Survey (HABS) No. WY-26, "T. A. Moulton Ranch, Mormon Row Road, Kelly vicinity, Teton County, WY", 20 photos, 13 measured drawings, 16 data pages; T.A. Moulton Land Patent at BLM General Land Office Records; Mormon Row Historical District—history, photos, and maps of the original community
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Farmstead with nine contributing properties built 1917–1925; the most intact representative of Jackson Hole's majority Mormon settlers in the first two decades of the 20th century. [10] Also a contributing property to the Mormon Row Historic District. [11] 7: Chapel of the Transfiguration: Chapel of the Transfiguration
Other significant extant vacation homes, dude ranches and small working ranches include Dick and Ethel Reimer House, built in 1938 between Moose and Mormon Row at the end of Blacktail Butte, [33] and the McCollister residential complex farther to the east on Antelope Flats Road. Paul W. McCollister was the primary developer of Teton Village.
The ranch is the only remaining nearly complete farmstead in Mormon Row, itself a historic district the southeast corner of Grand Teton National Park, in the valley called Jackson Hole. The locale was settled by Mormon migrants between 1900 and 1920, creating an enclave near the Gros Ventre River. The farmstead dates to the 1920s and includes a ...
English: Mormon Row Historic District This is an image of a place or building that is listed on the National Register of Historic Places in the United States of America . Its reference number is 97000495 .
The Teton Range rises dramatically above Mormon Row. Grand Tetons in 1921 One reason the Teton Range is famous is because of the dramatic elevation profile visible from the eastern side, which rises sharply from 4,000 to 7,000 feet (1,200–2,100 m) above the valley floor.