4499 South 3200 West
This home is still standing and is registered as a "National Register of Historic Home"
William McLachlan Farmhouse:
Architect, builder, or engineer: William McLachlan
Architectural Style: No Style Listed
Area of Significance: Architecture, Religion, Exploration/Settlement
Current Function: Domestic
Current Sub-Function: Single Dwelling
Historic Function: Domestic
Historic Significance: Event, Architecture / Engineering
Historic Sub-function: Single Dwelling
Private Owners
William McLachlan Farmhouse
This house was constructed during the winter of 1884-1885 by William McLachlan for his second wife, Margaret Naismith. A carpenter and contractor by trade, William McLachlan was born in , Scotland in 1840. He joined the LDS Church in 1859 and sailed to America in1863. He was the first president of the Pioneer Stake from 1904 until his death in 1916. The house was built while William McLachlan was hiding from federal Marshalls who sought his arrest under anti-polygamy laws. The house is significant as one of the oldest remaining houses in the West part of Salt Lake Valley.