The business district was more than a mile long and boasted dozens of substantial stone buildings, including an Odd Fellows Hall.
Non-residential buildings include five stores, a frame school building, two churches, an Odd Fellows Hall, and a shoemaker's (now beauty) shop.
The Odd Fellows Hall was built in 1914.
By 1877, the Society had acquired rooms in the Odd Fellows Hall and was able to open its collection to the public on Friday evenings.
The first meeting place was in the Odd Fellows Hall, on Amboy Road.
In the 1870s, the building served as Odd Fellows Hall.
They eventually found a better place to meet in the Odd Fellows Hall.
The Odd Fellows Hall, although a large two-story structure, was an example of a more modest use of architectural detailing.
The Odd Fellows Hall in Beaver, Utah was built in 1903.
In 1890 the Odd Fellows Hall at the northwest corner, the newest contributing property, was built.