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Boise's Original 1863 Plat Tour
Item 15 of 15
This is a contributing entry for Boise's Original 1863 Plat Tour and only appears as part of that tour.Learn More.

On the last stop of Boise's original plat tour, you will learn about the C.W. Moore house and The Grove.


C.W. MOORE HOUSE (SW Corner - Now The Grove)

Built in 1879 for C.W. Moore, the brick house had a mansard roof with iron cresting. It was one of the largest and most expensive houses in built in Idaho at the time. The Moores lived in the house until 1891 when they sold it to Captain Joseph Lamar, in order to build a mansion on the newly prestigious Warm Spring Avenue. In 1894, Mrs. Bradford purchased the home and turned it into a boarding house, where many residents were Basque sheepherders.

The house was demolished in 1971 as part of an urban renewal project.

THE GROVE

Boise’s downtown core suffered greatly during the 1960s and 1970s from urban renewal, a program intended to modernize downtowns. The Boise Redevelopment Agency (B.R.A.) and the City developed a plan for an enclosed shopping mall that would revitalize the downtown. The site, where the Grove Plaza is today, would have consisted of four city blocks.

In preparation for the project, blocks were razed. Many historic buildings were lost, including Boise’s Chinatown. The mall was never constructed.