Stop Two: 5th and Grove
Introduction
Text-to-speech Audio
On the second stop of Boise original 1863 plat tour, you will visit the intersection of 5th and Grove. Here you will learn about C. W. Moore Park and the Boise Stage Stables.
As you look around C.W. Moore park, take a moment to imagine the streets and buildings that these remnants once belonged to. How does it make you feel to be surrounded by these pieces?
Images
Boise Stage Stables
Backstory and Context
Text-to-speech Audio
C.W. MOORE PARK (NE Corner)
Moore was a Canadian who came to Idaho from Oregon in 1862. In 1867, he helped found Idaho First National Bank, the oldest bank in Idaho.
Moore deeded two lots to the city for a children’s park and playground. The playground was constructed in the 1930s. In 1956, World War II barracks were relocated to the site. The barracks were used by the Idaho Crippled Children and Adults and the Boise Jaycees. The park was later rededicated in 1983.
In the park today, you see remnants of many former Boise buildings. The turret is from the W.E. Pierce building, formerly across from the Idahna building. It was demolished in 1975. The arch was from the Bush building, at Capitol and Idaho Streets.
BOISE STAGE STABLES (NW Corner - Now The Lucy)
The Boise Stage Stable kept a corral, a carriage shed, a wagon shop and a granary at this site in the 1880s.
In a 1949 interview, William Northrop reminisced about Grove Street, saying that “most of the old coaches were manufactured on this site and they were super deluxe size, carrying 17 passengers and pulled by six horses.”
Sources
City of Boise. C.W. Moore Park History, Accessed July 31st, 2023. https://www.cityofboise.org/departments/parks-and-recreation/parks/cw-moore-park/cw-moore-park-history/.
Department of Planning & Development Services. Shaping Boise: A Selection of Boise's Landmark Buildings. City of Boise, 2010. https://www.cityofboise.org/media/7053/shaping-boise-landmarks.pdf. Accessed August 3, 2023.
Geraghty, Meg. "Boise Pioneer Vividly Recalls Grove Street as Residence Area." The Idaho Daily Statesman. June 29, 1949. Page 11.
“Idaho Pioneer Banker Is Dead.” Idaho Statesman, (Boise, ID), September 21, 1916: 2. NewsBank.
Sanborn Map Company. Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from Boise, Ada County, Idaho. Dec. 1884. Page 2.
1884 Sanborn Fire Insurance Map