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Show Ce eats weve Oe, ene ete ELLIE PRR : The Porters and Waiters Club once stood at 127 25th Street. It was an important hotel and club in Ogden’'s Black community because it was one of the few places they could gather. Tf RAY’ RRS AVL Vii April ob, 49/U, UIC Cid Of LIC NCQCdADS ended as Johnny Hayes and Jimmy West, the last of the Redcaps at the Ogden depot, retired from service. NERY Many youngsters, including teenagers, are attending activities at the Wall Avenue USO center. Above is a typical group at the piano and a handicraft table. The director, Vera Hughes, is in the background, February 25, 1946. VV.VV. yonnson, veteran Union Depot barber, purchased tickets for Ogden Reds home games from Joe McQueen, railroad porter, November 20, 1954. t NW RT oa 8 AA OOP O NLA T KER # — Kids lined up for the Saturday matinee at the Egyptian Theater, 1949. a - Star Noodle Parlor at 225 25th Street taken by Bosch and Bell, May 1948. Sy AR NON OLAS OE PRED IN as In NAINA ee Ree CL ae a a NOLL AANA ee Seo RR empengensonnnten ud Shopping on Washington Blvd in front of J.C. Penney, 1944. SGN AGE eN Leen LOL“ LE PEILNLR _ acer ~ ; 2 eae ra > ; * ~ = al _—— Nea. eee om SA et * av wy i Ogden residents join representatives of the Union Pacific and Southern Pacific, along with Utah Governor J. Bracken Lee in dedicating a monument at Union Station commemorating the driving of the Golden Spike. At the May 10, 1951 event, Lee said it was a “fitting tribute” to the role Utah and Ogden played in the “building of the west.” |