To spot the Johnson-Hansen House, look for a classic, two-story brick home with a steep, shady roof and white trim, tucked behind leafy trees and greenery-it's the handsome house with an inviting covered entryway right in front of you.
Now, as you stand here in the cool shade, imagine the sound of wagon wheels crunching along a dirt road, and the scent of fresh brick and timber in the air-because you’re not just in front of an old house, you’re traveling back through 150 years of Provo history. This is no ordinary home; its walls have seen the grit, dreams, and daily life of Utah’s early settlers.
The Johnson-Hansen House stands like a time traveler at 485 East 400 South. Cast your eye over its friendly brickwork, its neat white windows, and, if you peek around the corner, you just might glimpse the rough-hewn logs of the old cabin joined to the back. Those logs might look humble, but they’ve seen more action than a squirrel at a nut festival! They’re some of the last remaining proof of what Provo looked like when people were first daring enough to build their lives far from the fort in the 1870s. You see, after settlers moved out from the safety of the stockade, they followed a very specific plan-one dreamed up by a prophet named Joseph Smith, and set into motion by Brigham Young, the big boss of early Utah. The city was platted into perfectly measured squares, each just the right size for a home with a patch of garden out front, so every family could grow something to eat and show off a few flowers (just in case someone important strolled by).
Picture those first homesteaders, heading out by foot or horse each morning to their fields beyond town, tending rows of wheat or corn. At night, they’d come home to tidy houses clustered together, safe among neighbors-a bit like those cozy villages you see in storybooks. This was for safety, but also to make sure nobody missed out on the latest gossip or a good laugh at church socials.
Now, let’s meet Neils Johnson, the man whose name will forever be tied to these bricks and logs. Born in Denmark in 1848, Neils sailed across the sea and ended up right here in Provo, where he set to work both as a farmer and as the cemetery sexton, caring for the resting places of the town’s dearly departed. He and his wife, Josephine, who hailed from Norway, raised five children here-though heartbreakingly, only two survived into adulthood, a sober reminder of how tough life was back then. The Johnsons' home became the anchor for their family and for generations who followed, even as neighbors came and went.
And then, one day, a fellow named Ray Hansen arrived on the scene. Born nearby in Benjamin, Utah, Ray was a pipeline man by day and, more interestingly, a gunsmith in his spare time. If you could look right through these walls, you’d spot the log cabin at the back, where Ray tinkered on his gun repairs for over fifty years! There’s a bit of a mystery here-nobody’s quite sure why Ray decided to haul that cabin to its spot by the brick house, connect it to the “modern” garage, and create this quirky trio of old and new. Maybe he wanted to show off the layers of Provo’s story, or maybe he just liked a good project. Either way, if walls could talk, these ones might be whispering, “You should’ve seen the things we’ve seen…”
Today, carefully cared for by Dr. and Mrs. M. Gary Hadfield, the home stands as a testament to all those years-a single-family residence filled with warmth and the echoes of laughter and life gone by. They even spent hours scrubbing away old layers of paint on those old bricks and logs, so you could see them just as Neils Johnson did. The house was officially named a Provo City Historic Landmark in 1995, but if you ask me, it became historic the day its walls first went up and a family called it home.
So go ahead, take a deep breath. Imagine farmers trotting past, the clang of tools in that old log shop. There’s real history in these walls. But remember-no peeking in the windows, or the ghosts of Provo’s past might mistake you for just another nosy neighbor!



