architectural inventory form - pueblo, co
TRANSCRIPT
Official eligibilty determiniation(OAHP use only)Date___________ Initials________ Determined Eligible- NR____ Determined Not Eligible- NR____ Determined Eligible- SR____ Determined Not Eligible- SR____ Need Data____ Contributes to eligible NR District____ Noncontributing to eligible NR District
COLORADO CULTURAL RESOURCE SURVEY
Architectural Inventory Form
I. IDENTIFICATION
1. Resource number:
2. Temporary resource number:
3. County:
4. City:
5. Historic building name:
6. Current building name:
7. Building address:
8. Owner name and address:
II. GEOGRAPHIC INFORMATION
9. P.M. Township Range
1/4 of 1/4 of 1/4 of 1/4 of section10.
Zone ; mE mN
11.
Year: Map scale: 7.5' 15' Attach photo copy of appropriate map section.
12. Lot(s): Block:
Addition: Year of Addition:
13. Boundary Description and Justification:
III. Architectural Description
14. Building plan (footprint, shape):
15. Dimensions in feet: Length
16. Number of stories:
17. Primary external wall material(s) (enter no more than two):
20S 64W
SW NW NW NW 30
5PE4485NPF 050
Pueblo
Pueblo
B. F. Daugherty House
Mike and Esther Jiminez, Irene Bucciarelli, John Lopez House
2026 N. Santa Fe Ave., 81003
Mike & Ester Jiminez, Irene Bucciarelli, John Lopez, 2026 N. Santa Fe Ave., Pueblo, CO 81003
534398 4237513
NE Pueblo, COUSGS quad name:
4-6 36
Barndollar & Co 1st 1871
The boundary of the potential historic district can be found in the Management Data Form for this district. The individual site boundary corresponds to the legal location of the parcel containing the building associated with the historic use of the property. Property boundary denoted by concrete block wall to the north, row of bushes to the south, wood fence to the east and North Santa Fe Avenue to the west.
Rectangular Plan
Length 44 x Width 35 = 1530 square feet
2
Stucco
UTM reference
1961 (1974)
6th
13
18. Roof configuration: (enter no more than one):19. Primary external roof material: (enter no more than one20. Special features (enter all that apply)21. General architectural description:
22. Architectural style/building type:23. Landscaping or special setting features:
24 Associated buildings, features, or objects:
25. Date of construction: Estimate: Actual:Source of information:
26. Architect:Source of information:
27. Builder/Contractor:Source of information
28. Original owner:Source of information:
29. Construction history (include description and dates of major additions, alterations, or demolitions):
30. Original location: Moved Date of move(s):
Resource number:Temporary resource number:
5PE4485
NPF 050
Gabled roof - front gable
Asphalt - composition roof Metal pipes on roof, wood fence.
Two story residential building with no identifiable style and a front gable roof. The building has a concrete foundation and stucco exterior walls. The main entry to the residence is located on the west elevation. A pyramidal bay window has been added onto the south corner of the west elevation. The exterior of the bay has been surfaced with stone. The east elevation has a second story addition that extends past the limits of the first floor and is supported by steel posts.
None
Mature, deciduous trees, juniper tree, manicured lawn and garden, painted stone rock pilings.
Two-vehicle garage is located in the rear (north east) of property. Garage consists of multiple aluminum doors, a stucco exterior and front gabled roof.
1921Pueblo County Assessor's Office
UnknownN/A
UnknownN/A
Original owner unavailable through typical county Record search.Pueblo County Assessor's Office
Multiple additions and modifications visible and confirmed by homeowner; no modifications or additions are listed in the Assessor's records. Alterations include a pyramidal bay window added to the south corner of the west elevation, exterior stone resurfacing, and an overlapping second story addition supported by steel posts.
Resource number:
Temporary resource number:
5PE4485
NPF 050
31. Original use(s)
32. Intermediate use(s):
33. Current use(s)
34 Site type(s):
35 Historical background:
36. Sources of information:
V. Historical Associations
VI. Significance
37. Local landmark designation: Yes No Date of designation:
Designating authority:
38. Applicable National Register Criteria:
A. Associated with events that have made a significant contribution to the broad pattern of our history;
B. Associated with the lives of persons significant in our past;
C. Embodies the distinctive characteristics of a type, period, or method of construction, or represents the work of a master, or that possess high artistic values, or represents a significant and distinguishable entity whose components may lack individual distinction; or
D. Has yielded, or may be likely to yield, information important in history or prehistory.
Qualifies under Criteria Considerations A through G (see Manual)
Does not meet any of the above National Reigster criteria
39. Area(s) of significance:
N/A
Domestic - single dwelling
Domestic - single dwelling
Domestic - single dwelling
House
This house is located in an area known as Mineral Palace Park which was settled by 1890. The neighborhood is different from any other in Pueblo because of its proximity to downtown Pueblo and the Pueblo County courthouse. Because of this, residents tended to look to the central business district for work instead of relying on the steel mills and rail yards for employment. The earliest known inhabitant/owner of this property was B. F. Daugherty, about whom research yielded no information. The building appears to have been built in 1921.
See attached Continuation Sheet.
Resource number:
Temporary resource number:
5PE4485
NPF 050
40. Period of significance:
41. Level of significance: National State Local42. Statement of significance:
43. Assessment of historic physical integrity related to significance:
44. National Register eligible field assessment:
VII. National Register Eligiblity Assessment
45. Is there National Register district potential?Eligible Not Eligible Need Data
Discuss:
If there is National Register district potential, is this building: Contributing Noncontributing
46. If the building is in existing National Register district, is it: Contributing Noncontributing
47.VIII. Recording Information
Photograph numbers:Negatives filed at:
48. Report title:49. Date(s):50. Recorder(s):51. Organization:
Although the resource was built during the district's period of significance, it does not retain enough integrity to be considered a contributing element of the proposed district. This structure does not have any known historic associations that would make it individually eligible for listing on the NRHP, and has lost substantial architectural integrity, rending it individually ineligible for under any criterion.
The house has been significantly modified thus removing all historic or architectural integrity. Alterations include a pyramidal bay window added to the south corner of the west elevation, exterior stone resurfacing, and an overlapping second story addition supported by steel posts.
Yes No
The area of Pueblo now known as Mineral Palace Park was sparsely settled by 1890. At that time, the area consisted of a scattering of adobe style houses and subdivided lots. The more affluent citizens of Pueblo chose to live in the area abutting the Mineral Palace Park itself. The affluence of the residents produced a degree of architectural diversity until the 1930s, as affluent home buyers asked for a wide variety of housing styles, types, and sizes. The character of the neighborhood began to change after the Second World War with the increased use of the automobile. While there is no one predominant style or type of building in the area, the neighborhood is characterized by single and multiple family buildings in popular styles spanning its period of development. These styles include Queen Anne, Tudor Revival, and Second Empire. Predominant types include Bungalows, Classic Cottages, Hipped-Roof boxes, Split Levels, and Foursquares. With the exception of the eastern portion of the neighborhood, the area retains reasonably good architectural integrity. The eastern section was destroyed with the construction of Interstate 25, and the integrity of the areas immediately adjacent to the interstate has been largely destroyed. However, the historic fabric of the majority of the neighborhood has not ultimately been significantly compromised. It therefore appears that this area is eligible for listing on the NRHP as an historic district.
52. Address:53. Phone number(s):NOTE: Please attach a sketch map, a photocopy of the USGS quad. map indicating resource location, and
photographs.Colorado Historical Society - Office of Archaeology Historic Preservation
1300 Broadway, Denver, CO 80203 (303) 866-3395
1921
Roll 1, exp. 27, 28
WCRM, Inc., Boulder office
A Cultural Resource Inventory of the New Pueblo Freeway Area of Potential Effect
12/06
Catherine Barrier, Steve F. Mehls, R. FiskeCH2M HILL and Western Cultural Resource Management
1515 Poydras Street, Ste 2110, New Orleans, LA 70112 and PO Box 2326, Boulder, Colorado 80306
504.593.9421 and 303.449.1151
5PE4485Continuation Sheet
Alexandroff, Marty. 1996. I-25/State Highway 50/State Highway 47 Survey, Project #NH-IR (CX) 25-2 (126). Manuscript. on file, Colorado Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver.
Ames, David L., and Linda F. McClelland. 2002. Historic Residential Suburbs: Guidelines for Evaluation and Documentation for the National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service, Washington, D.C.
Burrer, Weston C. 2004. The History of Mineral Palace Park. CH2M Hill and Colorado Department of Transportation, Denver, Colorado.
Cafky, Morris, and John A. Haney. 1999. Pueblo’s Steel Town Trolleys. Colorado Railroad Museum, Golden.
Clark, Clifford Edward, Jr. 1986. American Family Home, 1800-1960. University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill.
Gambrill, Kim. 1980. West City Limits Pueblo to Pueblo Dam: Colorado Department of Highways Project RS 0096(15). Manuscript on file, Colorado Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver.
Gearhart, Thaddeus, Chris Geddes, Lyle Hansen, Dale Heckendorn, and Holly Wilson. 2003. A Guide to Colorado’s Historic Architecture and Engineering. 2nd Ed. State Historical Society of Colorado, Denver.
Hand, O D, and Roxanne Eflin. 1995. Cultural Resource Survey of the Proposed Improvements to Interstate 25, U.S. Highway 50, and State Highway 47 in Pueblo, Pueblo County, Colorado. Colorado Department of Transportation Project NH-IR(CX) 25-1(126). Mainuscript on file, Colorado Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver, Colorado.
Kramer, Kerry. 1997. State Register of Historic Properties Nomination Form. Manuscript on file, Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver, Colorado.
Lee, Antoinette J., and Linda F. McClelland. 1999. How to Complete the National Register Multiple Property Documentation Form. Guidelines for Completing National Register of Historic Places Forms, Part B. National Register Bulletin. National Park Service, Washington, D.C.
Mehls, Steven F., and Carroll Joe Carter. 1984. Colorado Southern Frontier Historic Context. Colorado Historical Society, Denver.
Mehls, Steven F., Collette C. Chambellan, and Cara Muniz. 2001. Cultural Resources Class 1 and Reconnaissance Study of the Interstate 25 Improvements Project, Pueblo, Pueblo County, Colorado. Prepared for CH2M Hill and the Colorado Department of Transportation. Manuscript on file, Western Cultural Resource Management, Inc., Boulder, Colorado.
Pueblo Regional Planning Commission. 1981. Pueblo Historic and Architectural Survey: Master Resource File. Manuscript on file, Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver, Colorado.
R. L. Polk & Co. 1915. The R. L. Polk Directory Co.’s Pueblo City Directory. The R. L. Polk Directory Company, Colorado Springs, Colorado; 1925. The R. L. Polk Directory Co.’s Pueblo City Directory. The R. L. Polk Directory Company, Colorado Springs, Colorado; 1950. Polk’s Pueblo (Colorado) City Directory. The R. L. Polk Directory Company, Salt Lake City, Utah; 1997. Pueblo (Pueblo County, Colorado) City Directory. R. L. Polk & Company, Kansas City, Missouri.
Reps, John W. 1979. Cities of the American West: A History of Frontier Planning,. Princeton University Press, Princeton, New Jersey.
Sanborn Fire Insurance Map Co. v.d. Insurance Map of Pueblo, Colorado. Sanborn Map Co., New York.
Sprague, Marshall. 1964. The Great Gates. Little, Brown, Boston, Massachusetts.
State of Colorado Board of Immigration, 1918, 1922, 1934 & 1942. Colorado Yearbook. Denver.
Stephenson, Norma J. 1978. Pueblo, the People: An Oral History, University of Southern Colorado and the Pueblo Regional Library, Pueblo, Colorado.
U. S. Bureau of the Census. 1901. Twelfth Census of the United States Taken in the Year 1900. Department of Commerce and Labor, Washington, D.C.; 1913. Thirteenth Census of the United States: Abstract of the Census. Department of Commerce and Labor, Washington, D.C.; 1921. Fourteenth Census of Population. Department of Commerce and Labor, Washington, D.C.
5PE4485
5PE4485
5PE4485
Official eligibilty determiniation(OAHP use only)Date___________ Initials________ Determined Eligible- NR____ Determined Not Eligible- NR____ Determined Eligible- SR____ Determined Not Eligible- SR____ Need Data____ Contributes to eligible NR District____ Noncontributing to eligible NR District
COLORADO CULTURAL RESOURCE SURVEY
Architectural Inventory Form
I. IDENTIFICATION
1. Resource number:
2. Temporary resource number:
3. County:
4. City:
5. Historic building name:
6. Current building name:
7. Building address:
8. Owner name and address:
II. GEOGRAPHIC INFORMATION
9. P.M. Township Range
1/4 of 1/4 of 1/4 of 1/4 of section10.
Zone ; mE mN
11.
Year: Map scale: 7.5' 15' Attach photo copy of appropriate map section.
12. Lot(s): Block:
Addition: Year of Addition:
13. Boundary Description and Justification:
III. Architectural Description
14. Building plan (footprint, shape):
15. Dimensions in feet: Length
16. Number of stories:
17. Primary external wall material(s) (enter no more than two):
20S 64W
SW NW NW NW 30
5PE4486NPF 051
Pueblo
Pueblo
Frank Starginer, Sr., House
Star Nursery and Landscaping Co.
2006 N. Santa Fe Ave., 81003
Frank Starginer, Jr., 2006 N. Santa Fe Ave., Pueblo, CO 81003
534395 4237464
NE Pueblo, COUSGS quad name:
12, 13 36
Barndollar and Co. 1st 1871
The boundary of the potential historic district can be found in the Management Data Form for this district. The individual site boundary corresponds to the legal location of the parcel containing the building associated with the historic use of the property. Property boundary is denoted by fence on the south, east, and north sides. A sidewalk exists on the west side.
L-Shaped Plan
Length 28 x Width 50 = 1420 square feet
1
Stucco
UTM reference
1961 (1974)
6th
13
18. Roof configuration: (enter no more than one):19. Primary external roof material: (enter no more than one20. Special features (enter all that apply)21. General architectural description:
22. Architectural style/building type:23. Landscaping or special setting features:
24 Associated buildings, features, or objects:
25. Date of construction: Estimate: Actual:Source of information:
26. Architect:Source of information:
27. Builder/Contractor:Source of information
28. Original owner:Source of information:
29. Construction history (include description and dates of major additions, alterations, or demolitions):
30. Original location: Moved Date of move(s):
Resource number:Temporary resource number:
5PE4486
NPF 051
Gable - side gabled
Asphalt - composite roofSide-gable chimney, fence
This site is a single-family house and plant nursery. One story, approximately 1420 square foot, modified bungalow type residential building constructed in 1900. The side gable roof has exposed rafters, and overhanging eaves. In addition to being a residence, the building is also being used as a tree and plant nursery. The residence's main entry is on the west elevation, facing N. Santa Fe Avenue. The original front porch appears to have been enclosed, and the entrance is now through a sliding glass door. Several large, fixed (picture) windows are located north of the main entry. A North/South trending greenhouse structure lies immediately north of the residence, and potted trees, plants, tools and other nursery-related items are stored to the immediate north and east. There appear to be several additions to the original building. Among the additions and changes are the enclosed front porch, a shed addition and greenhouses.
NIS/Bungalow
As a nursery, the property is filled with trees and plants of all kinds, potted and growing. There are several gardens and greenhouses throughout.
Numerous structures including greenhouses, sheds, and a detached garage on the south side.
1903Pueblo County Assessor's Office
UnknownN/A
UnknownN/A
Original owner unavailable through typical county Record search.Pueblo County Assessor's Office
Numerous additions at unknown dates have occurred including the enclosure of the original front porch, a new main entrance through a side door, new large windows, and the exterior has been stuccoed over. A shed and green house have also been constructed adjacent to the house. The current owner states that the original building has been modified multiple times.
Resource number:
Temporary resource number:
5PE4486
NPF 051
31. Original use(s)
32. Intermediate use(s):
33. Current use(s)
34 Site type(s):
35 Historical background:
36. Sources of information:
V. Historical Associations
VI. Significance
37. Local landmark designation: Yes No Date of designation:
Designating authority:
38. Applicable National Register Criteria:
A. Associated with events that have made a significant contribution to the broad pattern of our history;
B. Associated with the lives of persons significant in our past;
C. Embodies the distinctive characteristics of a type, period, or method of construction, or represents the work of a master, or that possess high artistic values, or represents a significant and distinguishable entity whose components may lack individual distinction; or
D. Has yielded, or may be likely to yield, information important in history or prehistory.
Qualifies under Criteria Considerations A through G (see Manual)
Does not meet any of the above National Reigster criteria
39. Area(s) of significance:
N/A
Domestic - single dwelling
Domestic - unknown
Domestic - single dwelling, agriculture/subsistence - horticulture facility
House/Nursery
This house is located in an area known as Mineral Palace Park which was settled by 1890. The neighborhood is different from any other in Pueblo because of its proximity to downtown Pueblo and the Pueblo County courthouse. Because of this, residents tended to look to the central business district for work instead of relying on the steel mills and rail yards for employment. The earliest known inhabitant/owner of this property was Frank Starginer Sr. and this property is the oldest continually run nursery in Pueblo County. At one time the property was part of the Santa Fe Trail. The building appears to have been built in 1903.
Frank Starginer, Jr. - Owner. See attached Continuation Sheet
Resource number:
Temporary resource number:
5PE4486
NPF 051
40. Period of significance:
41. Level of significance: National State Local42. Statement of significance:
43. Assessment of historic physical integrity related to significance:
44. National Register eligible field assessment:
VII. National Register Eligiblity Assessment
45. Is there National Register district potential?Eligible Not Eligible Need Data
Discuss:
If there is National Register district potential, is this building: Contributing Noncontributing
46. If the building is in existing National Register district, is it: Contributing Noncontributing
47.VIII. Recording Information
Photograph numbers:Negatives filed at:
48. Report title:49. Date(s):50. Recorder(s):51. Organization:
This structure does not retain enough integrity to be considered a contributing element of the proposed district. This structure does not have any known historic associations that would make it individually eligible for listing on the NRHP, and has lost substantial architectural integrity, rending it individually ineligible for under any criterion.
The house has been significantly modified thus removing all historic or architectural integrity. Numerous additions at unknown dates have occurred including the enclosure of the original front porch, a new main entrance through a side door, new large windows, and the exterior has been stuccoed over.
Yes No
The area of Pueblo now known as Mineral Palace Park was sparsely settled by 1890. At that time, the area consisted of a scattering of adobe style houses and subdivided lots. The more affluent citizens of Pueblo chose to live in the area abutting the Mineral Palace Park itself. The affluence of the residents produced a degree of architectural diversity until the 1930s, as affluent home buyers asked for a wide variety of housing styles, types, and sizes. The character of the neighborhood began to change after the Second World War with the increased use of the automobile. While there is no one predominant style or type of building in the area, the neighborhood is characterized by single and multiple family buildings in popular styles spanning its period of development. These styles include Queen Anne, Tudor Revival, and Second Empire. Predominant types include Bungalows, Classic Cottages, Hipped-Roof boxes, Split Levels, and Foursquares. With the exception of the eastern portion of the neighborhood, the area retains reasonably good architectural integrity. The eastern section was destroyed with the construction of Interstate 25, and the integrity of the areas immediately adjacent to the interstate has been largely destroyed. However, the historic fabric of the majority of the neighborhood has not ultimately been significantly compromised. It therefore appears that this area is eligible for listing on the NRHP as an historic district.
52. Address:53. Phone number(s):NOTE: Please attach a sketch map, a photocopy of the USGS quad. map indicating resource location, and
photographs.Colorado Historical Society - Office of Archaeology Historic Preservation
1300 Broadway, Denver, CO 80203 (303) 866-3395
1903
Roll 2, exp. 42
WCRM, Inc., Boulder office
A Cultural Resource Inventory of the New Pueblo Freeway Area of Potential Effect
12/06
Catherine Barrier, Steve F. Mehls, C. BergCH2M HILL and Western Cultural Resource Management
1515 Poydras Street, Ste 2110, New Orleans, LA 70112 and PO Box 2326, Boulder, Colorado 80306
504.593.9421 and 303.449.1151
5PE4486Continuation Sheet
Alexandroff, Marty. 1996. I-25/State Highway 50/State Highway 47 Survey, Project #NH-IR (CX) 25-2 (126). Manuscript. on file, Colorado Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver.
Ames, David L., and Linda F. McClelland. 2002. Historic Residential Suburbs: Guidelines for Evaluation and Documentation for the National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service, Washington, D.C.
Burrer, Weston C. 2004. The History of Mineral Palace Park. CH2M Hill and Colorado Department of Transportation, Denver, Colorado.
Cafky, Morris, and John A. Haney. 1999. Pueblo’s Steel Town Trolleys. Colorado Railroad Museum, Golden.
Clark, Clifford Edward, Jr. 1986. American Family Home, 1800-1960. University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill.
Gambrill, Kim. 1980. West City Limits Pueblo to Pueblo Dam: Colorado Department of Highways Project RS 0096(15). Manuscript on file, Colorado Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver.
Gearhart, Thaddeus, Chris Geddes, Lyle Hansen, Dale Heckendorn, and Holly Wilson. 2003. A Guide to Colorado’s Historic Architecture and Engineering. 2nd Ed. State Historical Society of Colorado, Denver.
Hand, O D, and Roxanne Eflin. 1995. Cultural Resource Survey of the Proposed Improvements to Interstate 25, U.S. Highway 50, and State Highway 47 in Pueblo, Pueblo County, Colorado. Colorado Department of Transportation Project NH-IR(CX) 25-1(126). Mainuscript on file, Colorado Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver, Colorado.
Kramer, Kerry. 1997. State Register of Historic Properties Nomination Form. Manuscript on file, Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver, Colorado.
Lee, Antoinette J., and Linda F. McClelland. 1999. How to Complete the National Register Multiple Property Documentation Form. Guidelines for Completing National Register of Historic Places Forms, Part B. National Register Bulletin. National Park Service, Washington, D.C.
Mehls, Steven F., and Carroll Joe Carter. 1984. Colorado Southern Frontier Historic Context. Colorado Historical Society, Denver.
Mehls, Steven F., Collette C. Chambellan, and Cara Muniz. 2001. Cultural Resources Class 1 and Reconnaissance Study of the Interstate 25 Improvements Project, Pueblo, Pueblo County, Colorado. Prepared for CH2M Hill and the Colorado Department of Transportation. Manuscript on file, Western Cultural Resource Management, Inc., Boulder, Colorado.
Pueblo Regional Planning Commission. 1981. Pueblo Historic and Architectural Survey: Master Resource File. Manuscript on file, Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver, Colorado.
R. L. Polk & Co. 1915. The R. L. Polk Directory Co.’s Pueblo City Directory. The R. L. Polk Directory Company, Colorado Springs, Colorado; 1925. The R. L. Polk Directory Co.’s Pueblo City Directory. The R. L. Polk Directory Company, Colorado Springs, Colorado; 1950. Polk’s Pueblo (Colorado) City Directory. The R. L. Polk Directory Company, Salt Lake City, Utah; 1997. Pueblo (Pueblo County, Colorado) City Directory. R. L. Polk & Company, Kansas City, Missouri.
Reps, John W. 1979. Cities of the American West: A History of Frontier Planning,. Princeton University Press, Princeton, New Jersey.
Sanborn Fire Insurance Map Co. v.d. Insurance Map of Pueblo, Colorado. Sanborn Map Co., New York.
Sprague, Marshall. 1964. The Great Gates. Little, Brown, Boston, Massachusetts.
State of Colorado Board of Immigration, 1918, 1922, 1934 & 1942. Colorado Yearbook. Denver.
Stephenson, Norma J. 1978. Pueblo, the People: An Oral History, University of Southern Colorado and the Pueblo Regional Library, Pueblo, Colorado.
U. S. Bureau of the Census. 1901. Twelfth Census of the United States Taken in the Year 1900. Department of Commerce and Labor, Washington, D.C.; 1913. Thirteenth Census of the United States: Abstract of the Census. Department of Commerce and Labor, Washington, D.C.; 1921. Fourteenth Census of Population. Department of Commerce and Labor, Washington, D.C.
5PE4486
5PE4486
5PE4486
Official eligibilty determiniation(OAHP use only)Date___________ Initials________ Determined Eligible- NR____ Determined Not Eligible- NR____ Determined Eligible- SR____ Determined Not Eligible- SR____ Need Data____ Contributes to eligible NR District____ Noncontributing to eligible NR District
COLORADO CULTURAL RESOURCE SURVEY
Architectural Inventory Form
I. IDENTIFICATION
1. Resource number:
2. Temporary resource number:
3. County:
4. City:
5. Historic building name:
6. Current building name:
7. Building address:
8. Owner name and address:
II. GEOGRAPHIC INFORMATION
9. P.M. Township Range
1/4 of 1/4 of 1/4 of 1/4 of section10.
Zone ; mE mN
11.
Year: Map scale: 7.5' 15' Attach photo copy of appropriate map section.
12. Lot(s): Block:
Addition: Year of Addition:
13. Boundary Description and Justification:
III. Architectural Description
14. Building plan (footprint, shape):
15. Dimensions in feet: Length
16. Number of stories:
17. Primary external wall material(s) (enter no more than two):
20S 64W
NW NW NW NW 30
5PE4487NPF 052
Pueblo
Pueblo
A. J. Hayes House
Mike and Esther Jiminez, Irene Bucciarelli, John Lopez House #2
2020 N. Santa Fe Ave., 81003
Mike and Ester Jiminez, Irene Bucciarelli, John Lopez, 2026 N. Santa Fe Ave., Pueblo, CO 81003
534395 4237492
NE Pueblo, COUSGS quad name:
7, 8 36
Barndollar and Co 1st 1871
The boundary of the potential historic district can be found in the Management Data Form for this district. The individual site boundary corresponds to the legal location of the parcel containing the building associated with the historic use of the property. Property boundary is denoted by the edge of driveway to the north, North Santa Fe Avenue to the west, a wooden/chain link fence to the south, and an alley to the east.
Rectangular Plan
Length 40 x Width 29 = 1145 square feet
1
Wood siding, concrete
UTM reference
1961 (1974)
6th
13
18. Roof configuration: (enter no more than one):19. Primary external roof material: (enter no more than one20. Special features (enter all that apply)21. General architectural description:
22. Architectural style/building type:23. Landscaping or special setting features:
24 Associated buildings, features, or objects:
25. Date of construction: Estimate: Actual:Source of information:
26. Architect:Source of information:
27. Builder/Contractor:Source of information
28. Original owner:Source of information:
29. Construction history (include description and dates of major additions, alterations, or demolitions):
30. Original location: Moved Date of move(s):
Resource number:Temporary resource number:
5PE4487
NPF 052
Gable
Asphalt RoofPorch, wood and chain link fences.
One story residential building, possibly vernacular bungalow type, with a gable roof. The concrete foundation of the building extends approximately six inches above the ground, where the horizontal siding begins. The main entry is located on the west elevation. The front porch is centered and covered by a gabled overhang. The overhang is supported by three wrought iron supports. The front door is offset to the southern side of the west elevation. There is a double-hung window offset to the northern side of the west elevation. A substantial addition constructed of materials matching those used in the original structure is attached to the east (rear) elevation.
None
Two large deciduous trees on west side of lot, and two large deciduous trees on east side of lot.
Detached shed in southeast corner of lot.
1900Pueblo County Assessor's Office
UnknownN/A
UnknownN/A
Original owner unavailable through typical county Record search.Pueblo County Assessor's Office
A substantial addition constructed of materials matching those used in the original structure is attached to the east (rear) elevation. This addition cannot be viewed from the street.
Resource number:
Temporary resource number:
5PE4487
NPF 052
31. Original use(s)
32. Intermediate use(s):
33. Current use(s)
34 Site type(s):
35 Historical background:
36. Sources of information:
V. Historical Associations
VI. Significance
37. Local landmark designation: Yes No Date of designation:
Designating authority:
38. Applicable National Register Criteria:
A. Associated with events that have made a significant contribution to the broad pattern of our history;
B. Associated with the lives of persons significant in our past;
C. Embodies the distinctive characteristics of a type, period, or method of construction, or represents the work of a master, or that possess high artistic values, or represents a significant and distinguishable entity whose components may lack individual distinction; or
D. Has yielded, or may be likely to yield, information important in history or prehistory.
Qualifies under Criteria Considerations A through G (see Manual)
Does not meet any of the above National Reigster criteria
39. Area(s) of significance:
N/A
Domestic - single dwelling
Domestic - single dwelling
Domestic - single dwelling
House
This house is located in an area known as Mineral Palace Park which was settled by 1890. The neighborhood is different from any other in Pueblo because of its proximity to downtown Pueblo and the Pueblo County courthouse. Because of this, residents tended to look to the central business district for work instead of relying on the steel mills and rail yards for employment. The earliest known inhabitant/owner of this property was A. J. Hayes, about whom research yielded no information. The building appears to have been built in 1900.
See attached Continuation Sheet.
Resource number:
Temporary resource number:
5PE4487
NPF 052
40. Period of significance:
41. Level of significance: National State Local42. Statement of significance:
43. Assessment of historic physical integrity related to significance:
44. National Register eligible field assessment:
VII. National Register Eligiblity Assessment
45. Is there National Register district potential?Eligible Not Eligible Need Data
Discuss:
If there is National Register district potential, is this building: Contributing Noncontributing
46. If the building is in existing National Register district, is it: Contributing Noncontributing
47.VIII. Recording Information
Photograph numbers:Negatives filed at:
48. Report title:49. Date(s):50. Recorder(s):51. Organization:
This resource was built within the district's primary period of significance and retains enough integrity to be a contributing element to the Mineral Palace Park Historic District. This structure does not have any known historic associations that would make it individually eligible for listing on the NRHP, and has lost substantial architectural integrity, rending it individually ineligible for under any criterion.
A substantial addition constructed of materials matching those used in the original structure is attached to the east (rear) elevation. This addition cannot be viewed from the street. This new addition does not compromise the architectural or historical integrity associated with this structure.
Yes No
The area of Pueblo now known as Mineral Palace Park was sparsely settled by 1890. At that time, the area consisted of a scattering of adobe style houses and subdivided lots. The more affluent citizens of Pueblo chose to live in the area abutting the Mineral Palace Park itself. The affluence of the residents produced a degree of architectural diversity until the 1930s, as affluent home buyers asked for a wide variety of housing styles, types, and sizes. The character of the neighborhood began to change after the Second World War with the increased use of the automobile. While there is no one predominant style or type of building in the area, the neighborhood is characterized by single and multiple family buildings in popular styles spanning its period of development. These styles include Queen Anne, Tudor Revival, and Second Empire. Predominant types include Bungalows, Classic Cottages, Hipped-Roof boxes, Split Levels, and Foursquares. With the exception of the eastern portion of the neighborhood, the area retains reasonably good architectural integrity. The eastern section was destroyed with the construction of Interstate 25, and the integrity of the areas immediately adjacent to the interstate has been largely destroyed. However, the historic fabric of the majority of the neighborhood has not ultimately been significantly compromised. It therefore appears that this area is eligible for listing on the NRHP as an historic district.
52. Address:53. Phone number(s):NOTE: Please attach a sketch map, a photocopy of the USGS quad. map indicating resource location, and
photographs.Colorado Historical Society - Office of Archaeology Historic Preservation
1300 Broadway, Denver, CO 80203 (303) 866-3395
1900
Roll 1, exp. 29
WCRM, Inc., Boulder office
A Cultural Resource Inventory of the New Pueblo Freeway Area of Potential Effect
12/06
Catherine Barrier, Steve F. Mehls, G. HauschildCH2M HILL and Western Cultural Resource Management
1515 Poydras Street, Ste 2110, New Orleans, LA 70112 and PO Box 2326, Boulder, Colorado 80306
504.593.9421 and 303.449.1151
5PE4487Continuation Sheet
Alexandroff, Marty. 1996. I-25/State Highway 50/State Highway 47 Survey, Project #NH-IR (CX) 25-2 (126). Manuscript. on file, Colorado Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver.
Ames, David L., and Linda F. McClelland. 2002. Historic Residential Suburbs: Guidelines for Evaluation and Documentation for the National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service, Washington, D.C.
Burrer, Weston C. 2004. The History of Mineral Palace Park. CH2M Hill and Colorado Department of Transportation, Denver, Colorado.
Cafky, Morris, and John A. Haney. 1999. Pueblo’s Steel Town Trolleys. Colorado Railroad Museum, Golden.
Clark, Clifford Edward, Jr. 1986. American Family Home, 1800-1960. University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill.
Gambrill, Kim. 1980. West City Limits Pueblo to Pueblo Dam: Colorado Department of Highways Project RS 0096(15). Manuscript on file, Colorado Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver.
Gearhart, Thaddeus, Chris Geddes, Lyle Hansen, Dale Heckendorn, and Holly Wilson. 2003. A Guide to Colorado’s Historic Architecture and Engineering. 2nd Ed. State Historical Society of Colorado, Denver.
Hand, O D, and Roxanne Eflin. 1995. Cultural Resource Survey of the Proposed Improvements to Interstate 25, U.S. Highway 50, and State Highway 47 in Pueblo, Pueblo County, Colorado. Colorado Department of Transportation Project NH-IR(CX) 25-1(126). Mainuscript on file, Colorado Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver, Colorado.
Kramer, Kerry. 1997. State Register of Historic Properties Nomination Form. Manuscript on file, Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver, Colorado.
Lee, Antoinette J., and Linda F. McClelland. 1999. How to Complete the National Register Multiple Property Documentation Form. Guidelines for Completing National Register of Historic Places Forms, Part B. National Register Bulletin. National Park Service, Washington, D.C.
Mehls, Steven F., and Carroll Joe Carter. 1984. Colorado Southern Frontier Historic Context. Colorado Historical Society, Denver.
Mehls, Steven F., Collette C. Chambellan, and Cara Muniz. 2001. Cultural Resources Class 1 and Reconnaissance Study of the Interstate 25 Improvements Project, Pueblo, Pueblo County, Colorado. Prepared for CH2M Hill and the Colorado Department of Transportation. Manuscript on file, Western Cultural Resource Management, Inc., Boulder, Colorado.
Pueblo Regional Planning Commission. 1981. Pueblo Historic and Architectural Survey: Master Resource File. Manuscript on file, Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver, Colorado.
R. L. Polk & Co. 1915. The R. L. Polk Directory Co.’s Pueblo City Directory. The R. L. Polk Directory Company, Colorado Springs, Colorado; 1925. The R. L. Polk Directory Co.’s Pueblo City Directory. The R. L. Polk Directory Company, Colorado Springs, Colorado; 1950. Polk’s Pueblo (Colorado) City Directory. The R. L. Polk Directory Company, Salt Lake City, Utah; 1997. Pueblo (Pueblo County, Colorado) City Directory. R. L. Polk & Company, Kansas City, Missouri.
Reps, John W. 1979. Cities of the American West: A History of Frontier Planning,. Princeton University Press, Princeton, New Jersey.
Sanborn Fire Insurance Map Co. v.d. Insurance Map of Pueblo, Colorado. Sanborn Map Co., New York.
Sprague, Marshall. 1964. The Great Gates. Little, Brown, Boston, Massachusetts.
State of Colorado Board of Immigration, 1918, 1922, 1934 & 1942. Colorado Yearbook. Denver.
Stephenson, Norma J. 1978. Pueblo, the People: An Oral History, University of Southern Colorado and the Pueblo Regional Library, Pueblo, Colorado.
U. S. Bureau of the Census. 1901. Twelfth Census of the United States Taken in the Year 1900. Department of Commerce and Labor, Washington, D.C.; 1913. Thirteenth Census of the United States: Abstract of the Census. Department of Commerce and Labor, Washington, D.C.; 1921. Fourteenth Census of Population. Department of Commerce and Labor, Washington, D.C.
5PE4487
5PE4487
5PE4487
Official eligibilty determiniation(OAHP use only)Date___________ Initials________ Determined Eligible- NR____ Determined Not Eligible- NR____ Determined Eligible- SR____ Determined Not Eligible- SR____ Need Data____ Contributes to eligible NR District____ Noncontributing to eligible NR District
COLORADO CULTURAL RESOURCE SURVEY
Architectural Inventory Form
I. IDENTIFICATION
1. Resource number:
2. Temporary resource number:
3. County:
4. City:
5. Historic building name:
6. Current building name:
7. Building address:
8. Owner name and address:
II. GEOGRAPHIC INFORMATION
9. P.M. Township Range
1/4 of 1/4 of 1/4 of 1/4 of section10.
Zone ; mE mN
11.
Year: Map scale: 7.5' 15' Attach photo copy of appropriate map section.
12. Lot(s): Block:
Addition: Year of Addition:
13. Boundary Description and Justification:
III. Architectural Description
14. Building plan (footprint, shape):
15. Dimensions in feet: Length
16. Number of stories:
17. Primary external wall material(s) (enter no more than two):
20S 64W
NW NW NW NW 30
5PE4488NPF 053
Pueblo
Pueblo
Star Nursery & Floral Shop, Bldg #1
Ken and Mary Anne Hoover House #1
2002 N. Santa Fe Ave., 81005
Ken and Mary Anne Hoover Trust, 2110 Oakwood Ln, Pueblo, CO 81005
534400 4237441
NE Pueblo, COUSGS quad name:
lots 14 to 16 inc + por lots 17 to 21 desc as beg nw cor lot 2 36
Barndollar and Co. 1st 1871
The boundary of the potential historic district can be found in the Management Data Form for this district. The individual site boundary corresponds to the legal location of the parcel containing the building associated with the historic use of the property. Property boundary is defined by North Santa Fe Avenue to the west, 20th Street to the south, driveway and wooden privacy fence to the north, and an alley to the east.
L-Shaped Plan
Length 28 x Width 47 = 1316 square feet
1
Stucco, synthetic
UTM reference
1961 (1974)
6th
13
18. Roof configuration: (enter no more than one):19. Primary external roof material: (enter no more than one20. Special features (enter all that apply)21. General architectural description:
22. Architectural style/building type:23. Landscaping or special setting features:
24 Associated buildings, features, or objects:
25. Date of construction: Estimate: Actual:Source of information:
26. Architect:Source of information:
27. Builder/Contractor:Source of information
28. Original owner:Source of information:
29. Construction history (include description and dates of major additions, alterations, or demolitions):
30. Original location: Moved Date of move(s):
Resource number:Temporary resource number:
5PE4488
NPF 053
Gable
Asphalt/compositionWooden Fence
One story commercial building that appears to be a heavily modified bungalow. It has both a gable and barrel sectioned roof. The building is now a flower shop with the main entry on the west elevation. There is a portion of exposed concrete block foundation, and the walls above are stucco. There are six single-light windows in the west elevation. The main entry is a double door configuration with sidelights. Above the entry is a gabled hood supported by thin metal supports. There is a large greenhouse extending off of the north elevation of the building. The greenhouse is constructed of plastic/synthetic material, and has a gable roof. There are two additional hut-shaped greenhouses appended to the first. It is unclear if the original use of this building was domestic or commercial.
NIS/Bungalow
Well manicured coniferous shrubs and lawn along west elevation of structure.
Two small sheds in northeast corner of property, one of which is appended to east-west oriented greenhouse.
1924Pueblo County Assessor's Office
UnknownN/A
UnknownN/A
Original owner unavailable through typical county Record search.Pueblo County Assessor's Office
Two greenhouses have been added onto the original structure although the date of construction is not listed. The horticultural center also contains modifications such as modern doors and windows.
Resource number:
Temporary resource number:
5PE4488
NPF 053
31. Original use(s)
32. Intermediate use(s):
33. Current use(s)
34 Site type(s):
35 Historical background:
36. Sources of information:
V. Historical Associations
VI. Significance
37. Local landmark designation: Yes No Date of designation:
Designating authority:
38. Applicable National Register Criteria:
A. Associated with events that have made a significant contribution to the broad pattern of our history;
B. Associated with the lives of persons significant in our past;
C. Embodies the distinctive characteristics of a type, period, or method of construction, or represents the work of a master, or that possess high artistic values, or represents a significant and distinguishable entity whose components may lack individual distinction; or
D. Has yielded, or may be likely to yield, information important in history or prehistory.
Qualifies under Criteria Considerations A through G (see Manual)
Does not meet any of the above National Reigster criteria
39. Area(s) of significance:
N/A
Unknown Use
Unknown Use
Commerce/trade - agriculture/subsistence - horticultural facility
Horticultural Facility
This house is located in an area known as Mineral Palace Park which was settled by 1890. The neighborhood is different from any other in Pueblo because of its proximity to downtown Pueblo and the Pueblo County courthouse. Because of this, residents tended to look to the central business district for work instead of relying on the steel mills and rail yards for employment. The earliest known inhabitant/owner of this property was Star Nursery & Floral Shop, about whom research yielded no information. The building appears to have been built in 1924.
See attached Continuation Sheet.
Resource number:
Temporary resource number:
5PE4488
NPF 053
40. Period of significance:
41. Level of significance: National State Local42. Statement of significance:
43. Assessment of historic physical integrity related to significance:
44. National Register eligible field assessment:
VII. National Register Eligiblity Assessment
45. Is there National Register district potential?Eligible Not Eligible Need Data
Discuss:
If there is National Register district potential, is this building: Contributing Noncontributing
46. If the building is in existing National Register district, is it: Contributing Noncontributing
47.VIII. Recording Information
Photograph numbers:Negatives filed at:
48. Report title:49. Date(s):50. Recorder(s):51. Organization:
This building lacks the integrity to be associated with any of the themes pertinent to the Mineral Palace Park Historic District. Although built within the period of significance of the Mineral Palace Park Historic District, it does not retain enough integrity to be considered a contributing element of the proposed district. This structure does not have any known historic associations that would make it individually eligible for listing on the NRHP, and has lost substantial architectural integrity, rending it individually ineligible for under any criterion.
The house has been significantly modified thus removing all historic or architectural integrity. Alterations include two greenhouses that have been added onto the original structure. The horticultural center also contains modifications such as modern doors and windows.
Yes No
The area of Pueblo now known as Mineral Palace Park was sparsely settled by 1890. At that time, the area consisted of a scattering of adobe style houses and subdivided lots. The more affluent citizens of Pueblo chose to live in the area abutting the Mineral Palace Park itself. The affluence of the residents produced a degree of architectural diversity until the 1930s, as affluent home buyers asked for a wide variety of housing styles, types, and sizes. The character of the neighborhood began to change after the Second World War with the increased use of the automobile. While there is no one predominant style or type of building in the area, the neighborhood is characterized by single and multiple family buildings in popular styles spanning its period of development. These styles include Queen Anne, Tudor Revival, and Second Empire. Predominant types include Bungalows, Classic Cottages, Hipped-Roof boxes, Split Levels, and Foursquares. With the exception of the eastern portion of the neighborhood, the area retains reasonably good architectural integrity. The eastern section was destroyed with the construction of Interstate 25, and the integrity of the areas immediately adjacent to the interstate has been largely destroyed. However, the historic fabric of the majority of the neighborhood has not ultimately been significantly compromised. It therefore appears that this area is eligible for listing on the NRHP as an historic district.
52. Address:53. Phone number(s):NOTE: Please attach a sketch map, a photocopy of the USGS quad. map indicating resource location, and
photographs.Colorado Historical Society - Office of Archaeology Historic Preservation
1300 Broadway, Denver, CO 80203 (303) 866-3395
1924
Roll 2, exp. 33, 34
WCRM, Inc., Boulder office
A Cultural Resource Inventory of the New Pueblo Freeway Area of Potential Effect
12/06
Catherine Barrier, Steve F. Mehls, R.Z. WoodCH2M HILL and Western Cultural Resource Management
1515 Poydras Street, Ste 2110, New Orleans, LA 70112 and PO Box 2326, Boulder, Colorado 80306
504.593.9421 and 303.449.1151
5PE4488Continuation Sheet
Alexandroff, Marty. 1996. I-25/State Highway 50/State Highway 47 Survey, Project #NH-IR (CX) 25-2 (126). Manuscript. on file, Colorado Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver.
Ames, David L., and Linda F. McClelland. 2002. Historic Residential Suburbs: Guidelines for Evaluation and Documentation for the National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service, Washington, D.C.
Burrer, Weston C. 2004. The History of Mineral Palace Park. CH2M Hill and Colorado Department of Transportation, Denver, Colorado.
Cafky, Morris, and John A. Haney. 1999. Pueblo’s Steel Town Trolleys. Colorado Railroad Museum, Golden.
Clark, Clifford Edward, Jr. 1986. American Family Home, 1800-1960. University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill.
Gambrill, Kim. 1980. West City Limits Pueblo to Pueblo Dam: Colorado Department of Highways Project RS 0096(15). Manuscript on file, Colorado Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver.
Gearhart, Thaddeus, Chris Geddes, Lyle Hansen, Dale Heckendorn, and Holly Wilson. 2003. A Guide to Colorado’s Historic Architecture and Engineering. 2nd Ed. State Historical Society of Colorado, Denver.
Hand, O D, and Roxanne Eflin. 1995. Cultural Resource Survey of the Proposed Improvements to Interstate 25, U.S. Highway 50, and State Highway 47 in Pueblo, Pueblo County, Colorado. Colorado Department of Transportation Project NH-IR(CX) 25-1(126). Mainuscript on file, Colorado Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver, Colorado.
Kramer, Kerry. 1997. State Register of Historic Properties Nomination Form. Manuscript on file, Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver, Colorado.
Lee, Antoinette J., and Linda F. McClelland. 1999. How to Complete the National Register Multiple Property Documentation Form. Guidelines for Completing National Register of Historic Places Forms, Part B. National Register Bulletin. National Park Service, Washington, D.C.
Mehls, Steven F., and Carroll Joe Carter. 1984. Colorado Southern Frontier Historic Context. Colorado Historical Society, Denver.
Mehls, Steven F., Collette C. Chambellan, and Cara Muniz. 2001. Cultural Resources Class 1 and Reconnaissance Study of the Interstate 25 Improvements Project, Pueblo, Pueblo County, Colorado. Prepared for CH2M Hill and the Colorado Department of Transportation. Manuscript on file, Western Cultural Resource Management, Inc., Boulder, Colorado.
Pueblo Regional Planning Commission. 1981. Pueblo Historic and Architectural Survey: Master Resource File. Manuscript on file, Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver, Colorado.
R. L. Polk & Co. 1915. The R. L. Polk Directory Co.’s Pueblo City Directory. The R. L. Polk Directory Company, Colorado Springs, Colorado; 1925. The R. L. Polk Directory Co.’s Pueblo City Directory. The R. L. Polk Directory Company, Colorado Springs, Colorado; 1950. Polk’s Pueblo (Colorado) City Directory. The R. L. Polk Directory Company, Salt Lake City, Utah; 1997. Pueblo (Pueblo County, Colorado) City Directory. R. L. Polk & Company, Kansas City, Missouri.
Reps, John W. 1979. Cities of the American West: A History of Frontier Planning,. Princeton University Press, Princeton, New Jersey.
Sanborn Fire Insurance Map Co. v.d. Insurance Map of Pueblo, Colorado. Sanborn Map Co., New York.
Sprague, Marshall. 1964. The Great Gates. Little, Brown, Boston, Massachusetts.
State of Colorado Board of Immigration, 1918, 1922, 1934 & 1942. Colorado Yearbook. Denver.
Stephenson, Norma J. 1978. Pueblo, the People: An Oral History, University of Southern Colorado and the Pueblo Regional Library, Pueblo, Colorado.
U. S. Bureau of the Census. 1901. Twelfth Census of the United States Taken in the Year 1900. Department of Commerce and Labor, Washington, D.C.; 1913. Thirteenth Census of the United States: Abstract of the Census. Department of Commerce and Labor, Washington, D.C.; 1921. Fourteenth Census of Population. Department of Commerce and Labor, Washington, D.C.
5PE4488
5PE4488
5PE4488
Official eligibilty determiniation(OAHP use only)Date___________ Initials________ Determined Eligible- NR____ Determined Not Eligible- NR____ Determined Eligible- SR____ Determined Not Eligible- SR____ Need Data____ Contributes to eligible NR District____ Noncontributing to eligible NR District
COLORADO CULTURAL RESOURCE SURVEY
Architectural Inventory Form
I. IDENTIFICATION
1. Resource number:
2. Temporary resource number:
3. County:
4. City:
5. Historic building name:
6. Current building name:
7. Building address:
8. Owner name and address:
II. GEOGRAPHIC INFORMATION
9. P.M. Township Range
1/4 of 1/4 of 1/4 of 1/4 of section10.
Zone ; mE mN
11.
Year: Map scale: 7.5' 15' Attach photo copy of appropriate map section.
12. Lot(s): Block:
Addition: Year of Addition:
13. Boundary Description and Justification:
III. Architectural Description
14. Building plan (footprint, shape):
15. Dimensions in feet: Length
16. Number of stories:
17. Primary external wall material(s) (enter no more than two):
20S 64W
SW NW NW NW 30
5PE4489NPF 054
Pueblo
Pueblo
Silverio Apodaca House
Frank J. Starginer, Jr., 1887 Adobe House #1
2015 N. Albany Ave., 81003
Frank J. Starginer, Jr., 2006 N. Santa Fe Ave., Pubelo, CO 81003
534456 4237484
NE Pueblo, COUSGS quad name:
22, 32 36
Barndollar and Co. 1st 1871
The boundary of the potential historic district can be found in the Management Data Form for this district. The individual site boundary corresponds to the legal location of the parcel containing the building associated with the historic use of the property. Property boundary denoted by North Albany Street (gravel) to the west, the extent of building's north wall to the north, a chain link fence to the east, and gravel parking area to the south.
Irregular Plan
Length 38 x Width 10 = 377 square feet
1
Adobe - adobe brick
UTM reference
1961 (1974)
6th
13
18. Roof configuration: (enter no more than one):19. Primary external roof material: (enter no more than one20. Special features (enter all that apply)21. General architectural description:
22. Architectural style/building type:23. Landscaping or special setting features:
24 Associated buildings, features, or objects:
25. Date of construction: Estimate: Actual:Source of information:
26. Architect:Source of information:
27. Builder/Contractor:Source of information
28. Original owner:Source of information:
29. Construction history (include description and dates of major additions, alterations, or demolitions):
30. Original location: Moved Date of move(s):
Resource number:Temporary resource number:
5PE4489
NPF 054
Front gable, flat roof
Asphalt roll roofChain link fence.
One story Territorial Adobe residential structure that is now vacant. There is a sign on the building stating that it is "the second oldest adobe house in Pueblo County, year built 1887." The original construction date according to the Pueblo County Assessor's office is 1920. The walls were constructed from adobe brick and faced with plaster. The west elevation contains one double-hung window. The south elevation contains one fixed window with six lights. The roof has been modified from a flat roof to a gabled asphalt roll roof. The first modification, an addition coming off of the east elevation, has a gently sloping flat roof extending off of the main structure. The addition has a plaster exterior and has one door. It is not known when the addition took place. The second addition has a plaster exterior and one door. It is not known when the addition was constructed. The second addition is also coming off of the east elevation. This addition is constructed of plywood, has a flat roof and a small sheet metal canopy. This addition contains several modern elements, i.e. sliding glass doors. The original portion of the building faces west, although there is evidence that the main entrance to the residence was in the east signified by a doorway that has since been sealed.
Territorial Adobe/NIT
Located adjacent (east) to historic nursery, various items pertaining to vegetation care present.
Building is one of three adobe houses bordering highway 5PE4489, 5PE4491, 5PE4493); original or partially original structures in the area.
1887Sign on structure, owner communication; Pueblo County Assessor's Office
UnknownN/A
UnknownN/A
Original owner unavailable through typical county Record search.Pueblo County Assessor's Office
The house was built in 1887 and has been modified several times. Alterations include two additions onto the east elevation with modern improvements such as sliding glass doors. The roof was changed from flat to gabled with an asphalt roll covered arrangement.
Resource number:
Temporary resource number:
5PE4489
NPF 054
31. Original use(s)
32. Intermediate use(s):
33. Current use(s)
34 Site type(s):
35 Historical background:
36. Sources of information:
V. Historical Associations
VI. Significance
37. Local landmark designation: Yes No Date of designation:
Designating authority:
38. Applicable National Register Criteria:
A. Associated with events that have made a significant contribution to the broad pattern of our history;
B. Associated with the lives of persons significant in our past;
C. Embodies the distinctive characteristics of a type, period, or method of construction, or represents the work of a master, or that possess high artistic values, or represents a significant and distinguishable entity whose components may lack individual distinction; or
D. Has yielded, or may be likely to yield, information important in history or prehistory.
Qualifies under Criteria Considerations A through G (see Manual)
Does not meet any of the above National Reigster criteria
39. Area(s) of significance:
N/A
Architecture
Domestic - single dwelling
Domestic - single dwelling
Recreation/culture - monument/marker
House
This house is located in an area known as Mineral Palace Park which was settled by 1890. The neighborhood is different from any other in Pueblo because of its proximity to downtown Pueblo and the Pueblo County courthouse. Because of this, residents tended to look to the central business district for work instead of relying on the steel mills and rail yards for employment. The earliest known inhabitant/owner of this property was Silverio Apodaca, about whom research yielded no information. The oldest well in Pueblo County is located on the lot. During the drought in early 1900s, the well supplied water to residents and currently supplies water to the owner of the property, Frank Starginer. The house is also listed as the second oldest house in Pueblo County. The building appears to have been built in 1887.
Signs describing history and communication with owner Frank Starginer. See attached Continuation Sheet.
Resource number:
Temporary resource number:
5PE4489
NPF 054
40. Period of significance:
41. Level of significance: National State Local42. Statement of significance:
43. Assessment of historic physical integrity related to significance:
44. National Register eligible field assessment:
VII. National Register Eligiblity Assessment
45. Is there National Register district potential?Eligible Not Eligible Need Data
Discuss:
If there is National Register district potential, is this building: Contributing Noncontributing
46. If the building is in existing National Register district, is it: Contributing Noncontributing
47.VIII. Recording Information
Photograph numbers:Negatives filed at:
48. Report title:49. Date(s):50. Recorder(s):51. Organization:
(Individually Eligible) This is one of the last examples of early Pueblo methods and materials of construction. During Pueblo's early history, adobe construction was more prevalent than in later years, and this house is one of the few remaining from that period. Alterations made to the buiding demonstrate the evolution of a dwelling as its owners sought to keep it viable as a residence. It possesses sufficient integrity to demonstrate a clear association with the identified period of significance and is considered eligible on a individual basis under Criterion C for the NRHP.
The house was built in 1887 and has been modified several times. Alterations include two additions onto the east elevation with modern improvements such as sliding glass doors. The roof was changed from flat to gabled of asphalt rolled composition. Though the building has undergone modifications, it has integrity of materials and retains the general characteristics of an historic Adobe structure.
Yes No
The area of Pueblo now known as Mineral Palace Park was sparsely settled by 1890. At that time, the area consisted of a scattering of adobe style houses and subdivided lots. The more affluent citizens of Pueblo chose to live in the area abutting the Mineral Palace Park itself. The affluence of the residents produced a degree of architectural diversity until the 1930s, as affluent home buyers asked for a wide variety of housing styles, types, and sizes. The character of the neighborhood began to change after the Second World War with the increased use of the automobile. While there is no one predominant style or type of building in the area, the neighborhood is characterized by single and multiple family buildings in popular styles spanning its period of development. These styles include Queen Anne, Tudor Revival, and Second Empire. Predominant types include Bungalows, Classic Cottages, Hipped-Roof boxes, Split Levels, and Foursquares. With the exception of the eastern portion of the neighborhood, the area retains reasonably good architectural integrity. The eastern section was destroyed with the construction of Interstate 25, and the integrity of the areas immediately adjacent to the interstate has been largely destroyed. However, the historic fabric of the majority of the neighborhood has not ultimately been significantly compromised. It therefore appears that this area is eligible for listing on the NRHP as an historic district.
52. Address:53. Phone number(s):NOTE: Please attach a sketch map, a photocopy of the USGS quad. map indicating resource location, and
photographs.Colorado Historical Society - Office of Archaeology Historic Preservation
1300 Broadway, Denver, CO 80203 (303) 866-3395
1887
Roll 1, exp. 30, 31
WCRM, Inc., Boulder office
A Cultural Resource Inventory of the New Pueblo Freeway Area of Potential Effect
12/06
Catherine Barrier, Steve F. Mehls, R. FiskeCH2M HILL and Western Cultural Resource Management
1515 Poydras Street, Ste 2110, New Orleans, LA 70112 and PO Box 2326, Boulder, Colorado 80306
504.593.9421 and 303.449.1151
5PE4489Continuation Sheet
Alexandroff, Marty. 1996. I-25/State Highway 50/State Highway 47 Survey, Project #NH-IR (CX) 25-2 (126). Manuscript. on file, Colorado Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver.
Ames, David L., and Linda F. McClelland. 2002. Historic Residential Suburbs: Guidelines for Evaluation and Documentation for the National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service, Washington, D.C.
Burrer, Weston C. 2004. The History of Mineral Palace Park. CH2M Hill and Colorado Department of Transportation, Denver, Colorado.
Cafky, Morris, and John A. Haney. 1999. Pueblo’s Steel Town Trolleys. Colorado Railroad Museum, Golden.
Clark, Clifford Edward, Jr. 1986. American Family Home, 1800-1960. University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill.
Gambrill, Kim. 1980. West City Limits Pueblo to Pueblo Dam: Colorado Department of Highways Project RS 0096(15). Manuscript on file, Colorado Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver.
Gearhart, Thaddeus, Chris Geddes, Lyle Hansen, Dale Heckendorn, and Holly Wilson. 2003. A Guide to Colorado’s Historic Architecture and Engineering. 2nd Ed. State Historical Society of Colorado, Denver.
Hand, O D, and Roxanne Eflin. 1995. Cultural Resource Survey of the Proposed Improvements to Interstate 25, U.S. Highway 50, and State Highway 47 in Pueblo, Pueblo County, Colorado. Colorado Department of Transportation Project NH-IR(CX) 25-1(126). Mainuscript on file, Colorado Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver, Colorado.
Kramer, Kerry. 1997. State Register of Historic Properties Nomination Form. Manuscript on file, Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver, Colorado.
Lee, Antoinette J., and Linda F. McClelland. 1999. How to Complete the National Register Multiple Property Documentation Form. Guidelines for Completing National Register of Historic Places Forms, Part B. National Register Bulletin. National Park Service, Washington, D.C.
Mehls, Steven F., and Carroll Joe Carter. 1984. Colorado Southern Frontier Historic Context. Colorado Historical Society, Denver.
Mehls, Steven F., Collette C. Chambellan, and Cara Muniz. 2001. Cultural Resources Class 1 and Reconnaissance Study of the Interstate 25 Improvements Project, Pueblo, Pueblo County, Colorado. Prepared for CH2M Hill and the Colorado Department of Transportation. Manuscript on file, Western Cultural Resource Management, Inc., Boulder, Colorado.
Pueblo Regional Planning Commission. 1981. Pueblo Historic and Architectural Survey: Master Resource File. Manuscript on file, Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver, Colorado.
R. L. Polk & Co. 1915. The R. L. Polk Directory Co.’s Pueblo City Directory. The R. L. Polk Directory Company, Colorado Springs, Colorado; 1925. The R. L. Polk Directory Co.’s Pueblo City Directory. The R. L. Polk Directory Company, Colorado Springs, Colorado; 1950. Polk’s Pueblo (Colorado) City Directory. The R. L. Polk Directory Company, Salt Lake City, Utah; 1997. Pueblo (Pueblo County, Colorado) City Directory. R. L. Polk & Company, Kansas City, Missouri.
Reps, John W. 1979. Cities of the American West: A History of Frontier Planning,. Princeton University Press, Princeton, New Jersey.
Sanborn Fire Insurance Map Co. v.d. Insurance Map of Pueblo, Colorado. Sanborn Map Co., New York.
Sprague, Marshall. 1964. The Great Gates. Little, Brown, Boston, Massachusetts.
State of Colorado Board of Immigration, 1918, 1922, 1934 & 1942. Colorado Yearbook. Denver.
Stephenson, Norma J. 1978. Pueblo, the People: An Oral History, University of Southern Colorado and the Pueblo Regional Library, Pueblo, Colorado.
U. S. Bureau of the Census. 1901. Twelfth Census of the United States Taken in the Year 1900. Department of Commerce and Labor, Washington, D.C.; 1913. Thirteenth Census of the United States: Abstract of the Census. Department of Commerce and Labor, Washington, D.C.; 1921. Fourteenth Census of Population. Department of Commerce and Labor, Washington, D.C.
5PE4489
5PE4489
5PE4489
Official eligibilty determiniation(OAHP use only)Date___________ Initials________ Determined Eligible- NR____ Determined Not Eligible- NR____ Determined Eligible- SR____ Determined Not Eligible- SR____ Need Data____ Contributes to eligible NR District____ Noncontributing to eligible NR District
COLORADO CULTURAL RESOURCE SURVEY
Architectural Inventory Form
I. IDENTIFICATION
1. Resource number:
2. Temporary resource number:
3. County:
4. City:
5. Historic building name:
6. Current building name:
7. Building address:
8. Owner name and address:
II. GEOGRAPHIC INFORMATION
9. P.M. Township Range
1/4 of 1/4 of 1/4 of 1/4 of section10.
Zone ; mE mN
11.
Year: Map scale: 7.5' 15' Attach photo copy of appropriate map section.
12. Lot(s): Block:
Addition: Year of Addition:
13. Boundary Description and Justification:
III. Architectural Description
14. Building plan (footprint, shape):
15. Dimensions in feet: Length
16. Number of stories:
17. Primary external wall material(s) (enter no more than two):
20S 64W
NW SW NW NW 30
5PE4490NPF 055
Pueblo
Pueblo
R. H. Johnston House
Betty J. Galusha House
1924 N. Santa Fe. Ave., 81003
Betty J. Galusha, 8278 Cuerna Verde Road, Rye, CO 81069
534403 4237390
NE Pueblo, COUSGS quad name:
W. 112 ft of Lots 2 and 3 37
Barndollar and Co. 1st 1871
The boundary of the potential historic district can be found in the Management Data Form for this district. The individual site boundary corresponds to the legal location of the parcel containing the building associated with the historic use of the property. Property is defined by North Santa Fe Avenue to the west, the neighbor's driveway to the south, 20th Street to the north, and an alley to the east.
Irregular Plan
Length 43 x Width 20 = 851 square feet
1.5
Brick
UTM reference
1961 (1974)
6th
13
18. Roof configuration: (enter no more than one):19. Primary external roof material: (enter no more than one20. Special features (enter all that apply)21. General architectural description:
22. Architectural style/building type:23. Landscaping or special setting features:
24 Associated buildings, features, or objects:
25. Date of construction: Estimate: Actual:Source of information:
26. Architect:Source of information:
27. Builder/Contractor:Source of information
28. Original owner:Source of information:
29. Construction history (include description and dates of major additions, alterations, or demolitions):
30. Original location: Moved Date of move(s):
Resource number:Temporary resource number:
5PE4490
NPF 055
Gabled
Asphalt, composite roof Two straddle-ridged brick chimneys approx. two feet in height by one foot in width.
One and a half story, transitional Queen Anne style, residential building with a gable roof. The residence is constructed of random courses of brick headers and stretchers, and has a concrete foundation. The main entry is located on the west elevation. There is a three-bay covered front porch that is supported by simplified Doric columns and an off-center, gable façade door with one double-hung sash and transom window. Also present on the west elevation is a double-hung sash with a segmental brick arch above. There are also two double-hung windows, each with a mullion and a lugsill in the upper floor. In the open gable end there is an imbricated pattern of wooden shingles. There is a small "wing" coming off of the east elevation that is ten feet lower than the central block of the building. It most likely was part of the original construction, as it matches the style/character of the rest of the building. There are no obvious additions or modifications to this building.
Queen Anne (Transitional)/Classic Cottage
Low deciduous bushes around structure and two large mature deciduous trees.
None
1900Pueblo County Assessor's Office
UnknownN/A
UnknownN/A
Original owner unavailable through typical county Record search.Pueblo County Assessor's Office
No additions or modifications listed in the Assessor's records and there does not appear to be any major additions or modifications to the house.
Resource number:
Temporary resource number:
5PE4490
NPF 055
31. Original use(s)
32. Intermediate use(s):
33. Current use(s)
34 Site type(s):
35 Historical background:
36. Sources of information:
V. Historical Associations
VI. Significance
37. Local landmark designation: Yes No Date of designation:
Designating authority:
38. Applicable National Register Criteria:
A. Associated with events that have made a significant contribution to the broad pattern of our history;
B. Associated with the lives of persons significant in our past;
C. Embodies the distinctive characteristics of a type, period, or method of construction, or represents the work of a master, or that possess high artistic values, or represents a significant and distinguishable entity whose components may lack individual distinction; or
D. Has yielded, or may be likely to yield, information important in history or prehistory.
Qualifies under Criteria Considerations A through G (see Manual)
Does not meet any of the above National Reigster criteria
39. Area(s) of significance:
N/A
Architecture
Domestic - single dwelling
Domestic - single dwelling
Domestic - single dwelling
House
This house is located in an area known as Mineral Palace Park which was settled by 1890. The neighborhood is different from any other in Pueblo because of its proximity to downtown Pueblo and the Pueblo County courthouse. Because of this, residents tended to look to the central business district for work instead of relying on the steel mills and rail yards for employment. The earliest known inhabitant/owner of this property was R. H. Johnston, about whom research yielded no information. The building appears to have been built in 1900.
See attached Continuation Sheet.
Resource number:
Temporary resource number:
5PE4490
NPF 055
40. Period of significance:
41. Level of significance: National State Local42. Statement of significance:
43. Assessment of historic physical integrity related to significance:
44. National Register eligible field assessment:
VII. National Register Eligiblity Assessment
45. Is there National Register district potential?Eligible Not Eligible Need Data
Discuss:
If there is National Register district potential, is this building: Contributing Noncontributing
46. If the building is in existing National Register district, is it: Contributing Noncontributing
47.VIII. Recording Information
Photograph numbers:Negatives filed at:
48. Report title:49. Date(s):50. Recorder(s):51. Organization:
This structure was developed within the period of significance of the district and appears to retain sufficient integrity to contribute to the district. This structure also appears eligible individually for listing on the NRHP under Criterion C as an excellent intact example of the transition between the Queen Anne and Colonial Revival styles in Pueblo.
The architectural and historic integrity of the house is high as there have do not appear to have been any major alterations or additions to the house.
Yes No
The area of Pueblo now known as Mineral Palace Park was sparsely settled by 1890. At that time, the area consisted of a scattering of adobe style houses and subdivided lots. The more affluent citizens of Pueblo chose to live in the area abutting the Mineral Palace Park itself. The affluence of the residents produced a degree of architectural diversity until the 1930s, as affluent home buyers asked for a wide variety of housing styles, types, and sizes. The character of the neighborhood began to change after the Second World War with the increased use of the automobile. While there is no one predominant style or type of building in the area, the neighborhood is characterized by single and multiple family buildings in popular styles spanning its period of development. These styles include Queen Anne, Tudor Revival, and Second Empire. Predominant types include Bungalows, Classic Cottages, Hipped-Roof boxes, Split Levels, and Foursquares. With the exception of the eastern portion of the neighborhood, the area retains reasonably good architectural integrity. The eastern section was destroyed with the construction of Interstate 25, and the integrity of the areas immediately adjacent to the interstate has been largely destroyed. However, the historic fabric of the majority of the neighborhood has not ultimately been significantly compromised. It therefore appears that this area is eligible for listing on the NRHP as an historic district.
52. Address:53. Phone number(s):NOTE: Please attach a sketch map, a photocopy of the USGS quad. map indicating resource location, and
photographs.Colorado Historical Society - Office of Archaeology Historic Preservation
1300 Broadway, Denver, CO 80203 (303) 866-3395
1900
Roll 2, exp. 36, Rool 2, exp. 2
WCRM, Inc., Boulder office
A Cultural Resource Inventory of the New Pueblo Freeway Area of Potential Effect
12/06
Catherine Barrier, Steve F. Mehls, R.Z. WoodCH2M HILL and Western Cultural Resource Management
1515 Poydras Street, Ste 2110, New Orleans, LA 70112 and PO Box 2326, Boulder, Colorado 80306
504.593.9421 and 303.449.1151
5PE4490Continuation Sheet
Alexandroff, Marty. 1996. I-25/State Highway 50/State Highway 47 Survey, Project #NH-IR (CX) 25-2 (126). Manuscript. on file, Colorado Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver.
Ames, David L., and Linda F. McClelland. 2002. Historic Residential Suburbs: Guidelines for Evaluation and Documentation for the National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service, Washington, D.C.
Burrer, Weston C. 2004. The History of Mineral Palace Park. CH2M Hill and Colorado Department of Transportation, Denver, Colorado.
Cafky, Morris, and John A. Haney. 1999. Pueblo’s Steel Town Trolleys. Colorado Railroad Museum, Golden.
Clark, Clifford Edward, Jr. 1986. American Family Home, 1800-1960. University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill.
Gambrill, Kim. 1980. West City Limits Pueblo to Pueblo Dam: Colorado Department of Highways Project RS 0096(15). Manuscript on file, Colorado Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver.
Gearhart, Thaddeus, Chris Geddes, Lyle Hansen, Dale Heckendorn, and Holly Wilson. 2003. A Guide to Colorado’s Historic Architecture and Engineering. 2nd Ed. State Historical Society of Colorado, Denver.
Hand, O D, and Roxanne Eflin. 1995. Cultural Resource Survey of the Proposed Improvements to Interstate 25, U.S. Highway 50, and State Highway 47 in Pueblo, Pueblo County, Colorado. Colorado Department of Transportation Project NH-IR(CX) 25-1(126). Mainuscript on file, Colorado Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver, Colorado.
Kramer, Kerry. 1997. State Register of Historic Properties Nomination Form. Manuscript on file, Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver, Colorado.
Lee, Antoinette J., and Linda F. McClelland. 1999. How to Complete the National Register Multiple Property Documentation Form. Guidelines for Completing National Register of Historic Places Forms, Part B. National Register Bulletin. National Park Service, Washington, D.C.
Mehls, Steven F., and Carroll Joe Carter. 1984. Colorado Southern Frontier Historic Context. Colorado Historical Society, Denver.
Mehls, Steven F., Collette C. Chambellan, and Cara Muniz. 2001. Cultural Resources Class 1 and Reconnaissance Study of the Interstate 25 Improvements Project, Pueblo, Pueblo County, Colorado. Prepared for CH2M Hill and the Colorado Department of Transportation. Manuscript on file, Western Cultural Resource Management, Inc., Boulder, Colorado.
Pueblo Regional Planning Commission. 1981. Pueblo Historic and Architectural Survey: Master Resource File. Manuscript on file, Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver, Colorado.
R. L. Polk & Co. 1915. The R. L. Polk Directory Co.’s Pueblo City Directory. The R. L. Polk Directory Company, Colorado Springs, Colorado; 1925. The R. L. Polk Directory Co.’s Pueblo City Directory. The R. L. Polk Directory Company, Colorado Springs, Colorado; 1950. Polk’s Pueblo (Colorado) City Directory. The R. L. Polk Directory Company, Salt Lake City, Utah; 1997. Pueblo (Pueblo County, Colorado) City Directory. R. L. Polk & Company, Kansas City, Missouri.
Reps, John W. 1979. Cities of the American West: A History of Frontier Planning,. Princeton University Press, Princeton, New Jersey.
Sanborn Fire Insurance Map Co. v.d. Insurance Map of Pueblo, Colorado. Sanborn Map Co., New York.
Sprague, Marshall. 1964. The Great Gates. Little, Brown, Boston, Massachusetts.
State of Colorado Board of Immigration, 1918, 1922, 1934 & 1942. Colorado Yearbook. Denver.
Stephenson, Norma J. 1978. Pueblo, the People: An Oral History, University of Southern Colorado and the Pueblo Regional Library, Pueblo, Colorado.
U. S. Bureau of the Census. 1901. Twelfth Census of the United States Taken in the Year 1900. Department of Commerce and Labor, Washington, D.C.; 1913. Thirteenth Census of the United States: Abstract of the Census. Department of Commerce and Labor, Washington, D.C.; 1921. Fourteenth Census of Population. Department of Commerce and Labor, Washington, D.C.
5PE4490
5PE4490
5PE4490
Official eligibilty determiniation(OAHP use only)Date___________ Initials________ Determined Eligible- NR____ Determined Not Eligible- NR____ Determined Eligible- SR____ Determined Not Eligible- SR____ Need Data____ Contributes to eligible NR District____ Noncontributing to eligible NR District
COLORADO CULTURAL RESOURCE SURVEY
Architectural Inventory Form
I. IDENTIFICATION
1. Resource number:
2. Temporary resource number:
3. County:
4. City:
5. Historic building name:
6. Current building name:
7. Building address:
8. Owner name and address:
II. GEOGRAPHIC INFORMATION
9. P.M. Township Range
1/4 of 1/4 of 1/4 of 1/4 of section10.
Zone ; mE mN
11.
Year: Map scale: 7.5' 15' Attach photo copy of appropriate map section.
12. Lot(s): Block:
Addition: Year of Addition:
13. Boundary Description and Justification:
III. Architectural Description
14. Building plan (footprint, shape):
15. Dimensions in feet: Length
16. Number of stories:
17. Primary external wall material(s) (enter no more than two):
20S 64W
SE NW NW NW 30
5PE4491NPF 056
Pueblo
Pueblo
Frank Hermandez House
Frank Starginer, Jr., House #2
2017 N. Albany Ave., 81003
Frank Starginer, Jr., 2006 N. Santa Fe Ave., Pueblo, CO 81003
534555 4237506
NE Pueblo, COUSGS quad name:
22, 32 36
Barndollar and Co. 1st 1871
The boundary of the potential historic district can be found in the Management Data Form for this district. The individual site boundary corresponds to the legal location of the parcel containing the building associated with the historic use of the property. Property boundary denoted by a dirt driveway to the north, North Albany Street to the west, a passageway between 2017 and 2015 North Albany Street to the south, and Interstate-25 to the east.
Rectangular Plan
664 sq. feet
1
Adobe, wood siding
UTM reference
196 1(1974)
6th
13
18. Roof configuration: (enter no more than one):19. Primary external roof material: (enter no more than one20. Special features (enter all that apply)21. General architectural description:
22. Architectural style/building type:23. Landscaping or special setting features:
24 Associated buildings, features, or objects:
25. Date of construction: Estimate: Actual:Source of information:
26. Architect:Source of information:
27. Builder/Contractor:Source of information
28. Original owner:Source of information:
29. Construction history (include description and dates of major additions, alterations, or demolitions):
30. Original location: Moved Date of move(s):
Resource number:Temporary resource number:
5PE4491
NPF 056
Gable
Asphalt - compositeBrick chimney, metal pipes on roof.
One story modified Territorial Adobe residential structure with a gable roof. Portions of the structure have adobe exterior walls, and other portions have some type of wood siding. The west elevation (street facing) has four small fixed single sash windows that are on the upper part of the wall toward the southern end of elevation. The building has several additions and modifications, most notably a "pop-up" roof.
Territorial Adobe/NIT
Not available for inspection.
Not available for inspection.
1916Pueblo County Assessor's Office
UnknownN/A
UnknownN/A
Original owner unavailable through typical county Record search.Pueblo County Assessor's Office
Building has several additions that do not match style/character of original building, including a "Pop-up" roof. Portions of the structure have been reclad in wood siding.
Resource number:
Temporary resource number:
5PE4491
NPF 056
31. Original use(s)
32. Intermediate use(s):
33. Current use(s)
34 Site type(s):
35 Historical background:
36. Sources of information:
V. Historical Associations
VI. Significance
37. Local landmark designation: Yes No Date of designation:
Designating authority:
38. Applicable National Register Criteria:
A. Associated with events that have made a significant contribution to the broad pattern of our history;
B. Associated with the lives of persons significant in our past;
C. Embodies the distinctive characteristics of a type, period, or method of construction, or represents the work of a master, or that possess high artistic values, or represents a significant and distinguishable entity whose components may lack individual distinction; or
D. Has yielded, or may be likely to yield, information important in history or prehistory.
Qualifies under Criteria Considerations A through G (see Manual)
Does not meet any of the above National Reigster criteria
39. Area(s) of significance:
N/A
Domestic - single dwelling
Domestic - single dwelling
Domestic - single dwelling
House
This house is located in an area known as Mineral Palace Park which was settled by 1890. The neighborhood is different from any other in Pueblo because of its proximity to downtown Pueblo and the Pueblo County courthouse. Because of this, residents tended to look to the central business district for work instead of relying on the steel mills and rail yards for employment. The earliest known inhabitant/owner of this property was Frank Hernandez, about whom research yielded no information. The building appears to have been built in 1916.
See attached Continuation Sheet.
Resource number:
Temporary resource number:
5PE4491
NPF 056
40. Period of significance:
41. Level of significance: National State Local42. Statement of significance:
43. Assessment of historic physical integrity related to significance:
44. National Register eligible field assessment:
VII. National Register Eligiblity Assessment
45. Is there National Register district potential?Eligible Not Eligible Need Data
Discuss:
If there is National Register district potential, is this building: Contributing Noncontributing
46. If the building is in existing National Register district, is it: Contributing Noncontributing
47.VIII. Recording Information
Photograph numbers:Negatives filed at:
48. Report title:49. Date(s):50. Recorder(s):51. Organization:
This building lacks the requisite integrity to be considered a contributing element of the proposed district. This structure does not have any known historic associations that would make it individually eligible for listing on the NRHP, and because of integrity issues it does not appear to be a good example of a style or type, rendering it ineligible for individual listing. However, the building was built within the period of significance of the district and appears to retain enough integrity of form and materials to contribute to the potential district.
The building has several additions that do not match the style/character of original building including a "Pop-up" roof. The house has been significantly modified thus removing all historic or architectural integrity.
Yes No
The area of Pueblo now known as Mineral Palace Park was sparsely settled by 1890. At that time, the area consisted of a scattering of adobe style houses and subdivided lots. The more affluent citizens of Pueblo chose to live in the area abutting the Mineral Palace Park itself. The affluence of the residents produced a degree of architectural diversity until the 1930s, as affluent home buyers asked for a wide variety of housing styles, types, and sizes. The character of the neighborhood began to change after the Second World War with the increased use of the automobile. While there is no one predominant style or type of building in the area, the neighborhood is characterized by single and multiple family buildings in popular styles spanning its period of development. These styles include Queen Anne, Tudor Revival, and Second Empire. Predominant types include Bungalows, Classic Cottages, Hipped-Roof boxes, Split Levels, and Foursquares. With the exception of the eastern portion of the neighborhood, the area retains reasonably good architectural integrity. The eastern section was destroyed with the construction of Interstate 25, and the integrity of the areas immediately adjacent to the interstate has been largely destroyed. However, the historic fabric of the majority of the neighborhood has not ultimately been significantly compromised. It therefore appears that this area is eligible for listing on the NRHP as an historic district.
52. Address:53. Phone number(s):NOTE: Please attach a sketch map, a photocopy of the USGS quad. map indicating resource location, and
photographs.Colorado Historical Society - Office of Archaeology Historic Preservation
1300 Broadway, Denver, CO 80203 (303) 866-3395
1916
Roll 11, exp. 32
WCRM, Inc., Boulder office
A Cultural Resource Inventory of the New Pueblo Freeway Area of Potential Effect
12/06
Catherine Barrier, Steve F. Mehls, G. HauschildCH2M HILL and Western Cultural Resource Management
1515 Poydras Street, Ste 2110, New Orleans, LA 70112 and PO Box 2326, Boulder, Colorado 80306
504.593.9421 and 303.449.1151
5PE4491Continuation Sheet
Alexandroff, Marty. 1996. I-25/State Highway 50/State Highway 47 Survey, Project #NH-IR (CX) 25-2 (126). Manuscript. on file, Colorado Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver.
Ames, David L., and Linda F. McClelland. 2002. Historic Residential Suburbs: Guidelines for Evaluation and Documentation for the National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service, Washington, D.C.
Burrer, Weston C. 2004. The History of Mineral Palace Park. CH2M Hill and Colorado Department of Transportation, Denver, Colorado.
Cafky, Morris, and John A. Haney. 1999. Pueblo’s Steel Town Trolleys. Colorado Railroad Museum, Golden.
Clark, Clifford Edward, Jr. 1986. American Family Home, 1800-1960. University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill.
Gambrill, Kim. 1980. West City Limits Pueblo to Pueblo Dam: Colorado Department of Highways Project RS 0096(15). Manuscript on file, Colorado Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver.
Gearhart, Thaddeus, Chris Geddes, Lyle Hansen, Dale Heckendorn, and Holly Wilson. 2003. A Guide to Colorado’s Historic Architecture and Engineering. 2nd Ed. State Historical Society of Colorado, Denver.
Hand, O D, and Roxanne Eflin. 1995. Cultural Resource Survey of the Proposed Improvements to Interstate 25, U.S. Highway 50, and State Highway 47 in Pueblo, Pueblo County, Colorado. Colorado Department of Transportation Project NH-IR(CX) 25-1(126). Mainuscript on file, Colorado Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver, Colorado.
Kramer, Kerry. 1997. State Register of Historic Properties Nomination Form. Manuscript on file, Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver, Colorado.
Lee, Antoinette J., and Linda F. McClelland. 1999. How to Complete the National Register Multiple Property Documentation Form. Guidelines for Completing National Register of Historic Places Forms, Part B. National Register Bulletin. National Park Service, Washington, D.C.
Mehls, Steven F., and Carroll Joe Carter. 1984. Colorado Southern Frontier Historic Context. Colorado Historical Society, Denver.
Mehls, Steven F., Collette C. Chambellan, and Cara Muniz. 2001. Cultural Resources Class 1 and Reconnaissance Study of the Interstate 25 Improvements Project, Pueblo, Pueblo County, Colorado. Prepared for CH2M Hill and the Colorado Department of Transportation. Manuscript on file, Western Cultural Resource Management, Inc., Boulder, Colorado.
Pueblo Regional Planning Commission. 1981. Pueblo Historic and Architectural Survey: Master Resource File. Manuscript on file, Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver, Colorado.
R. L. Polk & Co. 1915. The R. L. Polk Directory Co.’s Pueblo City Directory. The R. L. Polk Directory Company, Colorado Springs, Colorado; 1925. The R. L. Polk Directory Co.’s Pueblo City Directory. The R. L. Polk Directory Company, Colorado Springs, Colorado; 1950. Polk’s Pueblo (Colorado) City Directory. The R. L. Polk Directory Company, Salt Lake City, Utah; 1997. Pueblo (Pueblo County, Colorado) City Directory. R. L. Polk & Company, Kansas City, Missouri.
Reps, John W. 1979. Cities of the American West: A History of Frontier Planning,. Princeton University Press, Princeton, New Jersey.
Sanborn Fire Insurance Map Co. v.d. Insurance Map of Pueblo, Colorado. Sanborn Map Co., New York.
Sprague, Marshall. 1964. The Great Gates. Little, Brown, Boston, Massachusetts.
State of Colorado Board of Immigration, 1918, 1922, 1934 & 1942. Colorado Yearbook. Denver.
Stephenson, Norma J. 1978. Pueblo, the People: An Oral History, University of Southern Colorado and the Pueblo Regional Library, Pueblo, Colorado.
U. S. Bureau of the Census. 1901. Twelfth Census of the United States Taken in the Year 1900. Department of Commerce and Labor, Washington, D.C.; 1913. Thirteenth Census of the United States: Abstract of the Census. Department of Commerce and Labor, Washington, D.C.; 1921. Fourteenth Census of Population. Department of Commerce and Labor, Washington, D.C.
5PE4491
5PE4491
5PE4491
Official eligibilty determiniation(OAHP use only)Date___________ Initials________ Determined Eligible- NR____ Determined Not Eligible- NR____ Determined Eligible- SR____ Determined Not Eligible- SR____ Need Data____ Contributes to eligible NR District____ Noncontributing to eligible NR District
COLORADO CULTURAL RESOURCE SURVEY
Architectural Inventory Form
I. IDENTIFICATION
1. Resource number:
2. Temporary resource number:
3. County:
4. City:
5. Historic building name:
6. Current building name:
7. Building address:
8. Owner name and address:
II. GEOGRAPHIC INFORMATION
9. P.M. Township Range
1/4 of 1/4 of 1/4 of 1/4 of section10.
Zone ; mE mN
11.
Year: Map scale: 7.5' 15' Attach photo copy of appropriate map section.
12. Lot(s): Block:
Addition: Year of Addition:
13. Boundary Description and Justification:
III. Architectural Description
14. Building plan (footprint, shape):
15. Dimensions in feet: Length
16. Number of stories:
17. Primary external wall material(s) (enter no more than two):
20S 64W
NW NE SW NW 30
5PE4492NPF 057
Pueblo
Pueblo
Lee Wilson House
Gregory Gauna House
1920 N. Santa Fe. Ave., 81003
Gregory Gauna, 1920 N. Santa Fe Ave., Pueblo, CO 81003
534402 4237378
NE Pueblo, COUSGS quad name:
4, 5 37
Barndollar and CO 1st 1871
The boundary of the potential historic district can be found in the Management Data Form for this district. The individual site boundary corresponds to the legal location of the parcel containing the building associated with the historic use of the property. Property has a fence to the north, south and east, and a sidewalk to the west.
Rectangular Plan
Length 47 x Width 20 = 940 square feet
1
Stucco
UTM reference
1961 (1974)
6th
13
18. Roof configuration: (enter no more than one):19. Primary external roof material: (enter no more than one20. Special features (enter all that apply)21. General architectural description:
22. Architectural style/building type:23. Landscaping or special setting features:
24 Associated buildings, features, or objects:
25. Date of construction: Estimate: Actual:Source of information:
26. Architect:Source of information:
27. Builder/Contractor:Source of information
28. Original owner:Source of information:
29. Construction history (include description and dates of major additions, alterations, or demolitions):
30. Original location: Moved Date of move(s):
Resource number:Temporary resource number:
5PE4492
NPF 057
Hipped roof
Asphalt - composite Fence
One story residential building with no identifiable style and a hipped roof. The main entry is located on the west elevation and has a small front porch that may be an addition to the original structure. There is a large double-hung window symmetrically placed on either side of the front door, which has a fanlight in it. Each window has a raised stucco casing around it. The eaves of the roof overhang slightly, and judging by the slope of the roof over the east elevation, this may denote that this is an addition. According to a neighbor, the original house on this lot was torn down and the current house was constructed at a later date than the other houses in the neighborhood. An addition constructed of materials matching those used in the original structure appears to be attached to the west elevation. The addition is not visible in the aerial. Alterations include new windows, exterior stucco resurfacing, a new roo, and new doors.
None
None
A large shed or garage in the back yard, not readily visible from the street.
1900Pueblo County Assessor's Office
UnknownN/A
UnknownN/A
Original owner unavailable through typical county Record search.Pueblo County Assessor's Office
The house was remodeled in 1997 according to the Assessor's records and according to a neighbor, the original house torn down and this one built later than other homes in the area.
Resource number:
Temporary resource number:
5PE4492
NPF 057
31. Original use(s)
32. Intermediate use(s):
33. Current use(s)
34 Site type(s):
35 Historical background:
36. Sources of information:
V. Historical Associations
VI. Significance
37. Local landmark designation: Yes No Date of designation:
Designating authority:
38. Applicable National Register Criteria:
A. Associated with events that have made a significant contribution to the broad pattern of our history;
B. Associated with the lives of persons significant in our past;
C. Embodies the distinctive characteristics of a type, period, or method of construction, or represents the work of a master, or that possess high artistic values, or represents a significant and distinguishable entity whose components may lack individual distinction; or
D. Has yielded, or may be likely to yield, information important in history or prehistory.
Qualifies under Criteria Considerations A through G (see Manual)
Does not meet any of the above National Reigster criteria
39. Area(s) of significance:
N/A
Domestic - single dwelling
Domestic - single dwelling
Domestic - single dwelling
House
This house is located in an area known as Mineral Palace Park which was settled by 1890. The neighborhood is different from any other in Pueblo because of its proximity to downtown Pueblo and the Pueblo County courthouse. Because of this, residents tended to look to the central business district for work instead of relying on the steel mills and rail yards for employment. The earliest known inhabitant/owner of this property was Lee Wilson, about whom research yielded no information. The building appears to have been built in 1900.
See attached Continuation Sheet.
Resource number:
Temporary resource number:
5PE4492
NPF 057
40. Period of significance:
41. Level of significance: National State Local42. Statement of significance:
43. Assessment of historic physical integrity related to significance:
44. National Register eligible field assessment:
VII. National Register Eligiblity Assessment
45. Is there National Register district potential?Eligible Not Eligible Need Data
Discuss:
If there is National Register district potential, is this building: Contributing Noncontributing
46. If the building is in existing National Register district, is it: Contributing Noncontributing
47.VIII. Recording Information
Photograph numbers:Negatives filed at:
48. Report title:49. Date(s):50. Recorder(s):51. Organization:
This building lacks the integrity to be associated with any of the themes pertinent to the Mineral Palace Park Historic District. Although the resource was built during the period of significance of the Mineral Palace Park Historic District, it does not retain enough integrity to be considered a contributing element of the proposed district. Because of integrity issues, it also appears ineligible for individual listing on the NRHP.
The house has been significantly modified or replaced, thus removing significant historic or architectural integrity. Alterations include new windows, exterior stucco resurfacing, and new doors.
Yes No
The area of Pueblo now known as Mineral Palace Park was sparsely settled by 1890. At that time, the area consisted of a scattering of adobe style houses and subdivided lots. The more affluent citizens of Pueblo chose to live in the area abutting the Mineral Palace Park itself. The affluence of the residents produced a degree of architectural diversity until the 1930s, as affluent home buyers asked for a wide variety of housing styles, types, and sizes. The character of the neighborhood began to change after the Second World War with the increased use of the automobile. While there is no one predominant style or type of building in the area, the neighborhood is characterized by single and multiple family buildings in popular styles spanning its period of development. These styles include Queen Anne, Tudor Revival, and Second Empire. Predominant types include Bungalows, Classic Cottages, Hipped-Roof boxes, Split Levels, and Foursquares. With the exception of the eastern portion of the neighborhood, the area retains reasonably good architectural integrity. The eastern section was destroyed with the construction of Interstate 25, and the integrity of the areas immediately adjacent to the interstate has been largely destroyed. However, the historic fabric of the majority of the neighborhood has not ultimately been significantly compromised. It therefore appears that this area is eligible for listing on the NRHP as an historic district.
52. Address:53. Phone number(s):NOTE: Please attach a sketch map, a photocopy of the USGS quad. map indicating resource location, and
photographs.Colorado Historical Society - Office of Archaeology Historic Preservation
1300 Broadway, Denver, CO 80203 (303) 866-3395
1920
Roll 2, exp. 35
WCRM, Inc., Boulder office
A Cultural Resource Inventory of the New Pueblo Freeway Area of Potential Effect
12/06
Catherine Barrier, Steve F. Mehls, C. BergCH2M HILL and Western Cultural Resource Management
1515 Poydras Street, Ste 2110, New Orleans, LA 70112 and PO Box 2326, Boulder, Colorado 80306
504.593.9421 and 303.449.1151
5PE4492Continuation Sheet
Alexandroff, Marty. 1996. I-25/State Highway 50/State Highway 47 Survey, Project #NH-IR (CX) 25-2 (126). Manuscript. on file, Colorado Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver.
Ames, David L., and Linda F. McClelland. 2002. Historic Residential Suburbs: Guidelines for Evaluation and Documentation for the National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service, Washington, D.C.
Burrer, Weston C. 2004. The History of Mineral Palace Park. CH2M Hill and Colorado Department of Transportation, Denver, Colorado.
Cafky, Morris, and John A. Haney. 1999. Pueblo’s Steel Town Trolleys. Colorado Railroad Museum, Golden.
Clark, Clifford Edward, Jr. 1986. American Family Home, 1800-1960. University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill.
Gambrill, Kim. 1980. West City Limits Pueblo to Pueblo Dam: Colorado Department of Highways Project RS 0096(15). Manuscript on file, Colorado Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver.
Gearhart, Thaddeus, Chris Geddes, Lyle Hansen, Dale Heckendorn, and Holly Wilson. 2003. A Guide to Colorado’s Historic Architecture and Engineering. 2nd Ed. State Historical Society of Colorado, Denver.
Hand, O D, and Roxanne Eflin. 1995. Cultural Resource Survey of the Proposed Improvements to Interstate 25, U.S. Highway 50, and State Highway 47 in Pueblo, Pueblo County, Colorado. Colorado Department of Transportation Project NH-IR(CX) 25-1(126). Mainuscript on file, Colorado Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver, Colorado.
Kramer, Kerry. 1997. State Register of Historic Properties Nomination Form. Manuscript on file, Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver, Colorado.
Lee, Antoinette J., and Linda F. McClelland. 1999. How to Complete the National Register Multiple Property Documentation Form. Guidelines for Completing National Register of Historic Places Forms, Part B. National Register Bulletin. National Park Service, Washington, D.C.
Mehls, Steven F., and Carroll Joe Carter. 1984. Colorado Southern Frontier Historic Context. Colorado Historical Society, Denver.
Mehls, Steven F., Collette C. Chambellan, and Cara Muniz. 2001. Cultural Resources Class 1 and Reconnaissance Study of the Interstate 25 Improvements Project, Pueblo, Pueblo County, Colorado. Prepared for CH2M Hill and the Colorado Department of Transportation. Manuscript on file, Western Cultural Resource Management, Inc., Boulder, Colorado.
Pueblo Regional Planning Commission. 1981. Pueblo Historic and Architectural Survey: Master Resource File. Manuscript on file, Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver, Colorado.
R. L. Polk & Co. 1915. The R. L. Polk Directory Co.’s Pueblo City Directory. The R. L. Polk Directory Company, Colorado Springs, Colorado; 1925. The R. L. Polk Directory Co.’s Pueblo City Directory. The R. L. Polk Directory Company, Colorado Springs, Colorado; 1950. Polk’s Pueblo (Colorado) City Directory. The R. L. Polk Directory Company, Salt Lake City, Utah; 1997. Pueblo (Pueblo County, Colorado) City Directory. R. L. Polk & Company, Kansas City, Missouri.
Reps, John W. 1979. Cities of the American West: A History of Frontier Planning,. Princeton University Press, Princeton, New Jersey.
Sanborn Fire Insurance Map Co. v.d. Insurance Map of Pueblo, Colorado. Sanborn Map Co., New York.
Sprague, Marshall. 1964. The Great Gates. Little, Brown, Boston, Massachusetts.
State of Colorado Board of Immigration, 1918, 1922, 1934 & 1942. Colorado Yearbook. Denver.
Stephenson, Norma J. 1978. Pueblo, the People: An Oral History, University of Southern Colorado and the Pueblo Regional Library, Pueblo, Colorado.
U. S. Bureau of the Census. 1901. Twelfth Census of the United States Taken in the Year 1900. Department of Commerce and Labor, Washington, D.C.; 1913. Thirteenth Census of the United States: Abstract of the Census. Department of Commerce and Labor, Washington, D.C.; 1921. Fourteenth Census of Population. Department of Commerce and Labor, Washington, D.C.
5PE4492
5PE4492
5PE4492
Official eligibilty determiniation(OAHP use only)Date___________ Initials________ Determined Eligible- NR____ Determined Not Eligible- NR____ Determined Eligible- SR____ Determined Not Eligible- SR____ Need Data____ Contributes to eligible NR District____ Noncontributing to eligible NR District
COLORADO CULTURAL RESOURCE SURVEY
Architectural Inventory Form
I. IDENTIFICATION
1. Resource number:
2. Temporary resource number:
3. County:
4. City:
5. Historic building name:
6. Current building name:
7. Building address:
8. Owner name and address:
II. GEOGRAPHIC INFORMATION
9. P.M. Township Range
1/4 of 1/4 of 1/4 of 1/4 of section10.
Zone ; mE mN
11.
Year: Map scale: 7.5' 15' Attach photo copy of appropriate map section.
12. Lot(s): Block:
Addition: Year of Addition:
13. Boundary Description and Justification:
III. Architectural Description
14. Building plan (footprint, shape):
15. Dimensions in feet: Length
16. Number of stories:
17. Primary external wall material(s) (enter no more than two):
20S 64W
NE SW NW NW 30
5PE4493NPF 058
Pueblo
Pueblo
Unknown
Frank J. Starginer, Jr., 1882 Adobe House #3
2011 N. Albany Ave., 81003
Frank J. Starginer, Jr., 2006 N. Santa Fe Ave., Pueblo, CO 81003
534456 4237478
NE Pueblo, COUSGS quad name:
22, 32 36
Barndollar and Co. 1st 1871
The boundary of the potential historic district can be found in the Management Data Form for this district. The individual site boundary corresponds to the legal location of the parcel containing the building associated with the historic use of the property. Gravel parking area to the north, Interstate-25 to the east, gravel parking area to the south, and North Albany Avenue to the west.
L-Shaped Plan
Length 18 x Width 20 = 368 square feet
1
Adobe
UTM reference
1961 (1974)
6th
13
18. Roof configuration: (enter no more than one):19. Primary external roof material: (enter no more than one20. Special features (enter all that apply)21. General architectural description:
22. Architectural style/building type:23. Landscaping or special setting features:
24 Associated buildings, features, or objects:
25. Date of construction: Estimate: Actual:Source of information:
26. Architect:Source of information:
27. Builder/Contractor:Source of information
28. Original owner:Source of information:
29. Construction history (include description and dates of major additions, alterations, or demolitions):
30. Original location: Moved Date of move(s):
Resource number:Temporary resource number:
5PE4493
NPF 058
Flat roof
Asphalt - compositionSeveral metal pipes coming from roof
One story Territorial Adobe residential building with a flat roof. Rough stucco surfaced. The west elevation runs parallel to Albany Street, and has one fixed single-light window centered in the elevation. The east half of the north elevation is recessed several feet, giving the structure its L-shaped configuration. The south elevation has two windows; one vertically aligned and the other horizontally aligned. The western is an inset multi-light window, and the other is framed in wood. There are two signs on the southwest corner identifying the building as having been originally built in 1882.
Territorial Adobe/NIT
Several mature deciduous trees interspersed throughout lot.
None
1882 1920 (Assessor's office)Pueblo County Assessor's Office
UnknownN/A
UnknownN/A
Original owner unavailable through typical county Record search.Pueblo County Assessor's Office
The current owner, Frank Starginer, states the construction date is 1882, however the assessor's office has a date of 1920. An addition is listed in 1955 as "new add eleven by twenty frame." There appears to be a stucco-covered frame addition on the southwest side, a "new" roof treatment and electrical and gas connections punched through the walls. The wood-framed window appears to be in the new addition.
Resource number:
Temporary resource number:
5PE4493
NPF 058
31. Original use(s)
32. Intermediate use(s):
33. Current use(s)
34 Site type(s):
35 Historical background:
36. Sources of information:
V. Historical Associations
VI. Significance
37. Local landmark designation: Yes No Date of designation:
Designating authority:
38. Applicable National Register Criteria:
A. Associated with events that have made a significant contribution to the broad pattern of our history;
B. Associated with the lives of persons significant in our past;
C. Embodies the distinctive characteristics of a type, period, or method of construction, or represents the work of a master, or that possess high artistic values, or represents a significant and distinguishable entity whose components may lack individual distinction; or
D. Has yielded, or may be likely to yield, information important in history or prehistory.
Qualifies under Criteria Considerations A through G (see Manual)
Does not meet any of the above National Reigster criteria
39. Area(s) of significance:
N/A
Architecture
Domestic - single dwelling
Domestic - single dwelling
Domestic - single dwelling
House
This house is located in an area known as Mineral Palace Park which was settled by 1890. The neighborhood is different from any other in Pueblo because of its proximity to downtown Pueblo and the Pueblo County courthouse. Because of this, residents tended to look to the central business district for work instead of relying on the steel mills and rail yards for employment. The earliest known inhabitant/owner of this property could not be determined. The building appears to have been built in 1920 (Assessor's office).
See attached Continuation Sheet.
Resource number:
Temporary resource number:
5PE4493
NPF 058
40. Period of significance:
41. Level of significance: National State Local42. Statement of significance:
43. Assessment of historic physical integrity related to significance:
44. National Register eligible field assessment:
VII. National Register Eligiblity Assessment
45. Is there National Register district potential?Eligible Not Eligible Need Data
Discuss:
If there is National Register district potential, is this building: Contributing Noncontributing
46. If the building is in existing National Register district, is it: Contributing Noncontributing
47.VIII. Recording Information
Photograph numbers:Negatives filed at:
48. Report title:49. Date(s):50. Recorder(s):51. Organization:
This is one of the last examples of early Pueblo methods and materials of construction. During Pueblo's early history, adobe construction was more prevalent than in later years, and this house is one of the few remaining from that period. Alterations made to the building demonstrate the evolution of the dwelling as its owners sought to keep it viable as a residence. It possesses sufficient integrity to demonstrate a clear association with the identified period of significance and is considered eligible on a individual basis under Criterion C for the NRHP. Although the physical integrity of the house has been impacted by a roof modification and two major additions on the east elevation, it retains enough historic integrity to be considered a good example of the linear plan Hispano Adobe style, with plaster-faced adobe brick walls and a gabled roof (renovated from a flat roof).
The building has had some modifications, including replacement windows, a possible addition, and possible roof alterations, but it retains integrity of material and the general characteristics of an historic Adobe structure.
Yes No
The area of Pueblo now known as Mineral Palace Park was sparsely settled by 1890. At that time, the area consisted of a scattering of adobe style houses and subdivided lots. The more affluent citizens of Pueblo chose to live in the area abutting the Mineral Palace Park itself. The affluence of the residents produced a degree of architectural diversity until the 1930s, as affluent home buyers asked for a wide variety of housing styles, types, and sizes. The character of the neighborhood began to change after the Second World War with the increased use of the automobile. While there is no one predominant style or type of building in the area, the neighborhood is characterized by single and multiple family buildings in popular styles spanning its period of development. These styles include Queen Anne, Tudor Revival, and Second Empire. Predominant types include Bungalows, Classic Cottages, Hipped-Roof boxes, Split Levels, and Foursquares. With the exception of the eastern portion of the neighborhood, the area retains reasonably good architectural integrity. The eastern section was destroyed with the construction of Interstate 25, and the integrity of the areas immediately adjacent to the interstate has been largely destroyed. However, the historic fabric of the majority of the neighborhood has not ultimately been significantly compromised. It therefore appears that this area is eligible for listing on the NRHP as an historic district.
52. Address:53. Phone number(s):NOTE: Please attach a sketch map, a photocopy of the USGS quad. map indicating resource location, and
photographs.Colorado Historical Society - Office of Archaeology Historic Preservation
1300 Broadway, Denver, CO 80203 (303) 866-3395
1882
Roll 1, exp. 33
WCRM, Inc., Boulder office
A Cultural Resource Inventory of the New Pueblo Freeway Area of Potential Effect
12/06
Catherine Barrier, Steve F. Mehls, G. HauschildCH2M HILL and Western Cultural Resource Management
1515 Poydras Street, Ste 2110, New Orleans, LA 70112 and PO Box 2326, Boulder, Colorado 80306
504.593.9421 and 303.449.1151
5PE4493Continuation Sheet
Alexandroff, Marty. 1996. I-25/State Highway 50/State Highway 47 Survey, Project #NH-IR (CX) 25-2 (126). Manuscript. on file, Colorado Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver.
Ames, David L., and Linda F. McClelland. 2002. Historic Residential Suburbs: Guidelines for Evaluation and Documentation for the National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service, Washington, D.C.
Burrer, Weston C. 2004. The History of Mineral Palace Park. CH2M Hill and Colorado Department of Transportation, Denver, Colorado.
Cafky, Morris, and John A. Haney. 1999. Pueblo’s Steel Town Trolleys. Colorado Railroad Museum, Golden.
Clark, Clifford Edward, Jr. 1986. American Family Home, 1800-1960. University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill.
Gambrill, Kim. 1980. West City Limits Pueblo to Pueblo Dam: Colorado Department of Highways Project RS 0096(15). Manuscript on file, Colorado Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver.
Gearhart, Thaddeus, Chris Geddes, Lyle Hansen, Dale Heckendorn, and Holly Wilson. 2003. A Guide to Colorado’s Historic Architecture and Engineering. 2nd Ed. State Historical Society of Colorado, Denver.
Hand, O D, and Roxanne Eflin. 1995. Cultural Resource Survey of the Proposed Improvements to Interstate 25, U.S. Highway 50, and State Highway 47 in Pueblo, Pueblo County, Colorado. Colorado Department of Transportation Project NH-IR(CX) 25-1(126). Mainuscript on file, Colorado Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver, Colorado.
Kramer, Kerry. 1997. State Register of Historic Properties Nomination Form. Manuscript on file, Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver, Colorado.
Lee, Antoinette J., and Linda F. McClelland. 1999. How to Complete the National Register Multiple Property Documentation Form. Guidelines for Completing National Register of Historic Places Forms, Part B. National Register Bulletin. National Park Service, Washington, D.C.
Mehls, Steven F., and Carroll Joe Carter. 1984. Colorado Southern Frontier Historic Context. Colorado Historical Society, Denver.
Mehls, Steven F., Collette C. Chambellan, and Cara Muniz. 2001. Cultural Resources Class 1 and Reconnaissance Study of the Interstate 25 Improvements Project, Pueblo, Pueblo County, Colorado. Prepared for CH2M Hill and the Colorado Department of Transportation. Manuscript on file, Western Cultural Resource Management, Inc., Boulder, Colorado.
Pueblo Regional Planning Commission. 1981. Pueblo Historic and Architectural Survey: Master Resource File. Manuscript on file, Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver, Colorado.
R. L. Polk & Co. 1915. The R. L. Polk Directory Co.’s Pueblo City Directory. The R. L. Polk Directory Company, Colorado Springs, Colorado; 1925. The R. L. Polk Directory Co.’s Pueblo City Directory. The R. L. Polk Directory Company, Colorado Springs, Colorado; 1950. Polk’s Pueblo (Colorado) City Directory. The R. L. Polk Directory Company, Salt Lake City, Utah; 1997. Pueblo (Pueblo County, Colorado) City Directory. R. L. Polk & Company, Kansas City, Missouri.
Reps, John W. 1979. Cities of the American West: A History of Frontier Planning,. Princeton University Press, Princeton, New Jersey.
Sanborn Fire Insurance Map Co. v.d. Insurance Map of Pueblo, Colorado. Sanborn Map Co., New York.
Sprague, Marshall. 1964. The Great Gates. Little, Brown, Boston, Massachusetts.
State of Colorado Board of Immigration, 1918, 1922, 1934 & 1942. Colorado Yearbook. Denver.
Stephenson, Norma J. 1978. Pueblo, the People: An Oral History, University of Southern Colorado and the Pueblo Regional Library, Pueblo, Colorado.
U. S. Bureau of the Census. 1901. Twelfth Census of the United States Taken in the Year 1900. Department of Commerce and Labor, Washington, D.C.; 1913. Thirteenth Census of the United States: Abstract of the Census. Department of Commerce and Labor, Washington, D.C.; 1921. Fourteenth Census of Population. Department of Commerce and Labor, Washington, D.C.
5PE4493
5PE4493
5PE4493
Official eligibilty determiniation(OAHP use only)Date___________ Initials________ Determined Eligible- NR____ Determined Not Eligible- NR____ Determined Eligible- SR____ Determined Not Eligible- SR____ Need Data____ Contributes to eligible NR District____ Noncontributing to eligible NR District
COLORADO CULTURAL RESOURCE SURVEY
Architectural Inventory Form
I. IDENTIFICATION
1. Resource number:
2. Temporary resource number:
3. County:
4. City:
5. Historic building name:
6. Current building name:
7. Building address:
8. Owner name and address:
II. GEOGRAPHIC INFORMATION
9. P.M. Township Range
1/4 of 1/4 of 1/4 of 1/4 of section10.
Zone ; mE mN
11.
Year: Map scale: 7.5' 15' Attach photo copy of appropriate map section.
12. Lot(s): Block:
Addition: Year of Addition:
13. Boundary Description and Justification:
III. Architectural Description
14. Building plan (footprint, shape):
15. Dimensions in feet: Length
16. Number of stories:
17. Primary external wall material(s) (enter no more than two):
20S 64W
SW SW NW NW 30
5PE4494NPF 059
Pueblo
Pueblo
G. W. Lane House
Alfonso and Josephine Marmolejo House
1904 N. Santa Fe Ave., 81003
Alfonso and Josephine Marmolejo, 1912 N. Santa Fe Ave., Pueblo, CO 81003
534404 4237305
NE Pueblo, COUSGS quad name:
13, 14 37
Barndollar and Co. 1st 1871
The boundary of the potential historic district can be found in the Management Data Form for this district. The individual site boundary corresponds to the legal location of the parcel containing the building associated with the historic use of the property. Property boundary denoted by a wooden fence on south side, by the neighbor's driveway to the north, North Santa Fe Avenue to the west, and the east boundary is unavailable for inspection.
L-Shaped Plan
Length 22 x Width 42 = 914 square feet
1.5
Stucco
UTM reference
1961 (1974)
6th
13
18. Roof configuration: (enter no more than one):19. Primary external roof material: (enter no more than one20. Special features (enter all that apply)21. General architectural description:
22. Architectural style/building type:23. Landscaping or special setting features:
24 Associated buildings, features, or objects:
25. Date of construction: Estimate: Actual:Source of information:
26. Architect:Source of information:
27. Builder/Contractor:Source of information
28. Original owner:Source of information:
29. Construction history (include description and dates of major additions, alterations, or demolitions):
30. Original location: Moved Date of move(s):
Resource number:Temporary resource number:
5PE4494
NPF 059
Hipped roof with front and side gables.
Asphalt - composition shinglesDecorative shingles, wood fence, and porch.
One and a half story Queen Anne style residence. The residence has a hipped roof with front and side gables and slightly overhanging eaves. The cornice has a boxed, decorated pediment with sunburst-type detailing in the open end of the gable on the west elevation. The double-hung window in the west elevation has hood molding in a semi-circular pattern. The west gable also features a polygon shaped multi-light window, and an imbracated pattern of decorative shingles. The front porch has Ionic columns and the porch roof has scroll brackets supporting a tier of finials across the top of the porch. There appears to be a substanital addition on the east elevation of the original structure. The exterior walls appear to be brick covered with stucco.
Queen Anne/NIT
There are two large deciduous trees to the south and some new landscaping in the front yard.
None
1900Pueblo County Assessor's Office
UnknownN/A
UnknownN/A
Original owner unavailable through typical county Record search.Pueblo County Assessor's Office
Alterations include an addition to the rear elevation, which has some original decorations and architectural qualities. The original facade of the building has been covered up by stucco. No additions or modifications are listed in the Assessor's records.
Resource number:
Temporary resource number:
5PE4494
NPF 059
31. Original use(s)
32. Intermediate use(s):
33. Current use(s)
34 Site type(s):
35 Historical background:
36. Sources of information:
V. Historical Associations
VI. Significance
37. Local landmark designation: Yes No Date of designation:
Designating authority:
38. Applicable National Register Criteria:
A. Associated with events that have made a significant contribution to the broad pattern of our history;
B. Associated with the lives of persons significant in our past;
C. Embodies the distinctive characteristics of a type, period, or method of construction, or represents the work of a master, or that possess high artistic values, or represents a significant and distinguishable entity whose components may lack individual distinction; or
D. Has yielded, or may be likely to yield, information important in history or prehistory.
Qualifies under Criteria Considerations A through G (see Manual)
Does not meet any of the above National Reigster criteria
39. Area(s) of significance:
N/A
Domestic - single dwelling
Domestic - single dwelling
Domestic - single dwelling
House
This house is located in an area known as Mineral Palace Park which was settled by 1890. The neighborhood is different from any other in Pueblo because of its proximity to downtown Pueblo and the Pueblo County courthouse. Because of this, residents tended to look to the central business district for work instead of relying on the steel mills and rail yards for employment. The earliest known inhabitant/owner of this property was G. W. Lane, about whom research yielded no information. The building appears to have been built in 1900.
See attached Continuation Sheet.
Resource number:
Temporary resource number:
5PE4494
NPF 059
40. Period of significance:
41. Level of significance: National State Local42. Statement of significance:
43. Assessment of historic physical integrity related to significance:
44. National Register eligible field assessment:
VII. National Register Eligiblity Assessment
45. Is there National Register district potential?Eligible Not Eligible Need Data
Discuss:
If there is National Register district potential, is this building: Contributing Noncontributing
46. If the building is in existing National Register district, is it: Contributing Noncontributing
47.VIII. Recording Information
Photograph numbers:Negatives filed at:
48. Report title:49. Date(s):50. Recorder(s):51. Organization:
This building was built within the proposed period of significance of the district and appears to retain sufficient integrity to be considered a contributing element to the district. This structure does not have any known significant historical associations and has lost the requisite integrity to qualify it as a good example of a style or type, rendering it ineligible for individual listing on the NRHP.
The house has been modified, thus removing the majority of the architectural integrity. Alterations include an addition to the rear of the structure, and refacing of the façade with stucco.
Yes No
The area of Pueblo now known as Mineral Palace Park was sparsely settled by 1890. At that time, the area consisted of a scattering of adobe style houses and subdivided lots. The more affluent citizens of Pueblo chose to live in the area abutting the Mineral Palace Park itself. The affluence of the residents produced a degree of architectural diversity until the 1930s, as affluent home buyers asked for a wide variety of housing styles, types, and sizes. The character of the neighborhood began to change after the Second World War with the increased use of the automobile. While there is no one predominant style or type of building in the area, the neighborhood is characterized by single and multiple family buildings in popular styles spanning its period of development. These styles include Queen Anne, Tudor Revival, and Second Empire. Predominant types include Bungalows, Classic Cottages, Hipped-Roof boxes, Split Levels, and Foursquares. With the exception of the eastern portion of the neighborhood, the area retains reasonably good architectural integrity. The eastern section was destroyed with the construction of Interstate 25, and the integrity of the areas immediately adjacent to the interstate has been largely destroyed. However, the historic fabric of the majority of the neighborhood has not ultimately been significantly compromised. It therefore appears that this area is eligible for listing on the NRHP as an historic district.
52. Address:53. Phone number(s):NOTE: Please attach a sketch map, a photocopy of the USGS quad. map indicating resource location, and
photographs.Colorado Historical Society - Office of Archaeology Historic Preservation
1300 Broadway, Denver, CO 80203 (303) 866-3395
1900
Roll 4, exp. 4
WCRM, Inc., Boulder office
A Cultural Resource Inventory of the New Pueblo Freeway Area of Potential Effect
12/06
Catherine Barrier, Steve F. Mehls, C. BergCH2M HILL and Western Cultural Resource Management
1515 Poydras Street, Ste 2110, New Orleans, LA 70112 and PO Box 2326, Boulder, Colorado 80306
504.593.9421 and 303.449.1151
5PE4494Continuation Sheet
Alexandroff, Marty. 1996. I-25/State Highway 50/State Highway 47 Survey, Project #NH-IR (CX) 25-2 (126). Manuscript. on file, Colorado Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver.
Ames, David L., and Linda F. McClelland. 2002. Historic Residential Suburbs: Guidelines for Evaluation and Documentation for the National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service, Washington, D.C.
Burrer, Weston C. 2004. The History of Mineral Palace Park. CH2M Hill and Colorado Department of Transportation, Denver, Colorado.
Cafky, Morris, and John A. Haney. 1999. Pueblo’s Steel Town Trolleys. Colorado Railroad Museum, Golden.
Clark, Clifford Edward, Jr. 1986. American Family Home, 1800-1960. University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill.
Gambrill, Kim. 1980. West City Limits Pueblo to Pueblo Dam: Colorado Department of Highways Project RS 0096(15). Manuscript on file, Colorado Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver.
Gearhart, Thaddeus, Chris Geddes, Lyle Hansen, Dale Heckendorn, and Holly Wilson. 2003. A Guide to Colorado’s Historic Architecture and Engineering. 2nd Ed. State Historical Society of Colorado, Denver.
Hand, O D, and Roxanne Eflin. 1995. Cultural Resource Survey of the Proposed Improvements to Interstate 25, U.S. Highway 50, and State Highway 47 in Pueblo, Pueblo County, Colorado. Colorado Department of Transportation Project NH-IR(CX) 25-1(126). Mainuscript on file, Colorado Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver, Colorado.
Kramer, Kerry. 1997. State Register of Historic Properties Nomination Form. Manuscript on file, Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver, Colorado.
Lee, Antoinette J., and Linda F. McClelland. 1999. How to Complete the National Register Multiple Property Documentation Form. Guidelines for Completing National Register of Historic Places Forms, Part B. National Register Bulletin. National Park Service, Washington, D.C.
Mehls, Steven F., and Carroll Joe Carter. 1984. Colorado Southern Frontier Historic Context. Colorado Historical Society, Denver.
Mehls, Steven F., Collette C. Chambellan, and Cara Muniz. 2001. Cultural Resources Class 1 and Reconnaissance Study of the Interstate 25 Improvements Project, Pueblo, Pueblo County, Colorado. Prepared for CH2M Hill and the Colorado Department of Transportation. Manuscript on file, Western Cultural Resource Management, Inc., Boulder, Colorado.
Pueblo Regional Planning Commission. 1981. Pueblo Historic and Architectural Survey: Master Resource File. Manuscript on file, Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver, Colorado.
R. L. Polk & Co. 1915. The R. L. Polk Directory Co.’s Pueblo City Directory. The R. L. Polk Directory Company, Colorado Springs, Colorado; 1925. The R. L. Polk Directory Co.’s Pueblo City Directory. The R. L. Polk Directory Company, Colorado Springs, Colorado; 1950. Polk’s Pueblo (Colorado) City Directory. The R. L. Polk Directory Company, Salt Lake City, Utah; 1997. Pueblo (Pueblo County, Colorado) City Directory. R. L. Polk & Company, Kansas City, Missouri.
Reps, John W. 1979. Cities of the American West: A History of Frontier Planning,. Princeton University Press, Princeton, New Jersey.
Sanborn Fire Insurance Map Co. v.d. Insurance Map of Pueblo, Colorado. Sanborn Map Co., New York.
Sprague, Marshall. 1964. The Great Gates. Little, Brown, Boston, Massachusetts.
State of Colorado Board of Immigration, 1918, 1922, 1934 & 1942. Colorado Yearbook. Denver.
Stephenson, Norma J. 1978. Pueblo, the People: An Oral History, University of Southern Colorado and the Pueblo Regional Library, Pueblo, Colorado.
U. S. Bureau of the Census. 1901. Twelfth Census of the United States Taken in the Year 1900. Department of Commerce and Labor, Washington, D.C.; 1913. Thirteenth Census of the United States: Abstract of the Census. Department of Commerce and Labor, Washington, D.C.; 1921. Fourteenth Census of Population. Department of Commerce and Labor, Washington, D.C.
5PE4494
5PE4494
5PE4494
Official eligibilty determiniation(OAHP use only)Date___________ Initials________ Determined Eligible- NR____ Determined Not Eligible- NR____ Determined Eligible- SR____ Determined Not Eligible- SR____ Need Data____ Contributes to eligible NR District____ Noncontributing to eligible NR District
COLORADO CULTURAL RESOURCE SURVEY
Architectural Inventory Form
I. IDENTIFICATION
1. Resource number:
2. Temporary resource number:
3. County:
4. City:
5. Historic building name:
6. Current building name:
7. Building address:
8. Owner name and address:
II. GEOGRAPHIC INFORMATION
9. P.M. Township Range
1/4 of 1/4 of 1/4 of 1/4 of section10.
Zone ; mE mN
11.
Year: Map scale: 7.5' 15' Attach photo copy of appropriate map section.
12. Lot(s): Block:
Addition: Year of Addition:
13. Boundary Description and Justification:
III. Architectural Description
14. Building plan (footprint, shape):
15. Dimensions in feet: Length
16. Number of stories:
17. Primary external wall material(s) (enter no more than two):
20S 64W
NW SW NW NW 30
5PE4495NPF 060
Pueblo
Pueblo
Star Nursery & Floral Shop, Bldg #2
Ken and Mary Anne Hoover House #2
115 West 20th St., 81003 (Listed as 2002 N. Santa Fe)
Ken and Mary Anne Hoover Trust, 2110 Oakwood Ln., Pueblo, CO 81005
534465 4237421
NE Pueblo, COUSGS quad name:
Lots 14 to 16 inc + por lots 17 to 21 desc as beg nw cor lot 2 36
Barndollar and Co. 1st 1871
The boundary of the potential historic district can be found in the Management Data Form for this district. The individual site boundary corresponds to the legal location of the parcel containing the building associated with the historic use of the property. Property boundary denoted by West 20th Street to the south, a chain link fence to the east, North Albany Street to the west, and extent of building's north wall to the north.
Rectangular Plan
Length 44 x Width 30 = 1316 square feet
1
Wood - wood shingles
UTM reference
1961 (1974)
6th
13
18. Roof configuration: (enter no more than one):19. Primary external roof material: (enter no more than one20. Special features (enter all that apply)21. General architectural description:
22. Architectural style/building type:23. Landscaping or special setting features:
24 Associated buildings, features, or objects:
25. Date of construction: Estimate: Actual:Source of information:
26. Architect:Source of information:
27. Builder/Contractor:Source of information
28. Original owner:Source of information:
29. Construction history (include description and dates of major additions, alterations, or demolitions):
30. Original location: Moved Date of move(s):
Resource number:Temporary resource number:
5PE4495
NPF 060
Gabled roof - side gables
GableInside end chimney, chain link fence.
One story residential building with no identifiable style and a side gable roof. The exterior walls are wood shingles. The main entry is located on the south elevation. is where the main entry is located. The south elevation also contains one double-hung window, one fixed-sash,and another pair of double-hung windows, and there is a gable hood over the entryway. There is a large shed roof extension on the west end of the building and the fixed-sash window appears to be a replacement. It is not at the same grade as the rest of the house.
None
Manicured lawn, several small bushes.
Several run-down shacks and a greenhouse are located behind (north) building and it is not clear whether they are associated with 5PE4495 or part of Star Nursery (5PE4491, 5PE4493).
1924Pueblo County Assessor's Office
UnknownN/A
UnknownN/A
Original owner unavailable through typical county Record search.Pueblo County Assessor's Office
No additions or modifications listed in the Assessor's records; however, the building has an addition with a shed roof on one end and modifications to the windows.
Resource number:
Temporary resource number:
5PE4495
NPF 060
31. Original use(s)
32. Intermediate use(s):
33. Current use(s)
34 Site type(s):
35 Historical background:
36. Sources of information:
V. Historical Associations
VI. Significance
37. Local landmark designation: Yes No Date of designation:
Designating authority:
38. Applicable National Register Criteria:
A. Associated with events that have made a significant contribution to the broad pattern of our history;
B. Associated with the lives of persons significant in our past;
C. Embodies the distinctive characteristics of a type, period, or method of construction, or represents the work of a master, or that possess high artistic values, or represents a significant and distinguishable entity whose components may lack individual distinction; or
D. Has yielded, or may be likely to yield, information important in history or prehistory.
Qualifies under Criteria Considerations A through G (see Manual)
Does not meet any of the above National Reigster criteria
39. Area(s) of significance:
N/A
Domestic - single dwelling
Domestic - single dwelling
Domestic - single dwelling
House
This house is located in an area known as Mineral Palace Park which was settled by 1890. The neighborhood is different from any other in Pueblo because of its proximity to downtown Pueblo and the Pueblo County courthouse. Because of this, residents tended to look to the central business district for work instead of relying on the steel mills and rail yards for employment. The earliest known inhabitant/owner of this property was Star Nursery & Floral Shop, about whom research yielded no information. The building appears to have been built in 1924.
See attached Continuation Sheet.
Resource number:
Temporary resource number:
5PE4495
NPF 060
40. Period of significance:
41. Level of significance: National State Local42. Statement of significance:
43. Assessment of historic physical integrity related to significance:
44. National Register eligible field assessment:
VII. National Register Eligiblity Assessment
45. Is there National Register district potential?Eligible Not Eligible Need Data
Discuss:
If there is National Register district potential, is this building: Contributing Noncontributing
46. If the building is in existing National Register district, is it: Contributing Noncontributing
47.VIII. Recording Information
Photograph numbers:Negatives filed at:
48. Report title:49. Date(s):50. Recorder(s):51. Organization:
This building lacks the integrity to be associated with any of the themes pertinent to the Mineral Palace Park Historic District. Although the resource was built within the period of signficance of the Mineral Palace Park Historic District, it does not retain enough integrity to be considered a contributing element of the proposed district. These integrity issues also render it individually ineligible for listing on the NRHP under any criterion.
The house has been modified thus removing significant architectural integrity. The building has an addition with a shed roof on one end and modifications to the windows.
Yes No
The area of Pueblo now known as Mineral Palace Park was sparsely settled by 1890. At that time, the area consisted of a scattering of adobe style houses and subdivided lots. The more affluent citizens of Pueblo chose to live in the area abutting the Mineral Palace Park itself. The affluence of the residents produced a degree of architectural diversity until the 1930s, as affluent home buyers asked for a wide variety of housing styles, types, and sizes. The character of the neighborhood began to change after the Second World War with the increased use of the automobile. While there is no one predominant style or type of building in the area, the neighborhood is characterized by single and multiple family buildings in popular styles spanning its period of development. These styles include Queen Anne, Tudor Revival, and Second Empire. Predominant types include Bungalows, Classic Cottages, Hipped-Roof boxes, Split Levels, and Foursquares. With the exception of the eastern portion of the neighborhood, the area retains reasonably good architectural integrity. The eastern section was destroyed with the construction of Interstate 25, and the integrity of the areas immediately adjacent to the interstate has been largely destroyed. However, the historic fabric of the majority of the neighborhood has not ultimately been significantly compromised. It therefore appears that this area is eligible for listing on the NRHP as an historic district.
52. Address:53. Phone number(s):NOTE: Please attach a sketch map, a photocopy of the USGS quad. map indicating resource location, and
photographs.Colorado Historical Society - Office of Archaeology Historic Preservation
1300 Broadway, Denver, CO 80203 (303) 866-3395
1924
Roll 1, exp. 34
WCRM, Inc., Boulder office
A Cultural Resource Inventory of the New Pueblo Freeway Area of Potential Effect
12/06
Catherine Barrier, Steve F. Mehls, R. FiskeCH2M HILL and Western Cultural Resource Management
1515 Poydras Street, Ste 2110, New Orleans, LA 70112 and PO Box 2326, Boulder, Colorado 80306
504.593.9421 and 303.449.1151
5PE4495Continuation Sheet
Alexandroff, Marty. 1996. I-25/State Highway 50/State Highway 47 Survey, Project #NH-IR (CX) 25-2 (126). Manuscript. on file, Colorado Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver.
Ames, David L., and Linda F. McClelland. 2002. Historic Residential Suburbs: Guidelines for Evaluation and Documentation for the National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service, Washington, D.C.
Burrer, Weston C. 2004. The History of Mineral Palace Park. CH2M Hill and Colorado Department of Transportation, Denver, Colorado.
Cafky, Morris, and John A. Haney. 1999. Pueblo’s Steel Town Trolleys. Colorado Railroad Museum, Golden.
Clark, Clifford Edward, Jr. 1986. American Family Home, 1800-1960. University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill.
Gambrill, Kim. 1980. West City Limits Pueblo to Pueblo Dam: Colorado Department of Highways Project RS 0096(15). Manuscript on file, Colorado Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver.
Gearhart, Thaddeus, Chris Geddes, Lyle Hansen, Dale Heckendorn, and Holly Wilson. 2003. A Guide to Colorado’s Historic Architecture and Engineering. 2nd Ed. State Historical Society of Colorado, Denver.
Hand, O D, and Roxanne Eflin. 1995. Cultural Resource Survey of the Proposed Improvements to Interstate 25, U.S. Highway 50, and State Highway 47 in Pueblo, Pueblo County, Colorado. Colorado Department of Transportation Project NH-IR(CX) 25-1(126). Mainuscript on file, Colorado Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver, Colorado.
Kramer, Kerry. 1997. State Register of Historic Properties Nomination Form. Manuscript on file, Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver, Colorado.
Lee, Antoinette J., and Linda F. McClelland. 1999. How to Complete the National Register Multiple Property Documentation Form. Guidelines for Completing National Register of Historic Places Forms, Part B. National Register Bulletin. National Park Service, Washington, D.C.
Mehls, Steven F., and Carroll Joe Carter. 1984. Colorado Southern Frontier Historic Context. Colorado Historical Society, Denver.
Mehls, Steven F., Collette C. Chambellan, and Cara Muniz. 2001. Cultural Resources Class 1 and Reconnaissance Study of the Interstate 25 Improvements Project, Pueblo, Pueblo County, Colorado. Prepared for CH2M Hill and the Colorado Department of Transportation. Manuscript on file, Western Cultural Resource Management, Inc., Boulder, Colorado.
Pueblo Regional Planning Commission. 1981. Pueblo Historic and Architectural Survey: Master Resource File. Manuscript on file, Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver, Colorado.
R. L. Polk & Co. 1915. The R. L. Polk Directory Co.’s Pueblo City Directory. The R. L. Polk Directory Company, Colorado Springs, Colorado; 1925. The R. L. Polk Directory Co.’s Pueblo City Directory. The R. L. Polk Directory Company, Colorado Springs, Colorado; 1950. Polk’s Pueblo (Colorado) City Directory. The R. L. Polk Directory Company, Salt Lake City, Utah; 1997. Pueblo (Pueblo County, Colorado) City Directory. R. L. Polk & Company, Kansas City, Missouri.
Reps, John W. 1979. Cities of the American West: A History of Frontier Planning,. Princeton University Press, Princeton, New Jersey.
Sanborn Fire Insurance Map Co. v.d. Insurance Map of Pueblo, Colorado. Sanborn Map Co., New York.
Sprague, Marshall. 1964. The Great Gates. Little, Brown, Boston, Massachusetts.
State of Colorado Board of Immigration, 1918, 1922, 1934 & 1942. Colorado Yearbook. Denver.
Stephenson, Norma J. 1978. Pueblo, the People: An Oral History, University of Southern Colorado and the Pueblo Regional Library, Pueblo, Colorado.
U. S. Bureau of the Census. 1901. Twelfth Census of the United States Taken in the Year 1900. Department of Commerce and Labor, Washington, D.C.; 1913. Thirteenth Census of the United States: Abstract of the Census. Department of Commerce and Labor, Washington, D.C.; 1921. Fourteenth Census of Population. Department of Commerce and Labor, Washington, D.C.
5PE4495
5PE4495
5PE4495
Official eligibilty determiniation(OAHP use only)Date___________ Initials________ Determined Eligible- NR____ Determined Not Eligible- NR____ Determined Eligible- SR____ Determined Not Eligible- SR____ Need Data____ Contributes to eligible NR District____ Noncontributing to eligible NR District
COLORADO CULTURAL RESOURCE SURVEY
Architectural Inventory Form
I. IDENTIFICATION
1. Resource number:
2. Temporary resource number:
3. County:
4. City:
5. Historic building name:
6. Current building name:
7. Building address:
8. Owner name and address:
II. GEOGRAPHIC INFORMATION
9. P.M. Township Range
1/4 of 1/4 of 1/4 of 1/4 of section10.
Zone ; mE mN
11.
Year: Map scale: 7.5' 15' Attach photo copy of appropriate map section.
12. Lot(s): Block:
Addition: Year of Addition:
13. Boundary Description and Justification:
III. Architectural Description
14. Building plan (footprint, shape):
15. Dimensions in feet: Length
16. Number of stories:
17. Primary external wall material(s) (enter no more than two):
20S 64W
SW SW NW NW 30
5PE4496NPF 061
Pueblo
Pueblo
Delmer D. Treat House
William Duran House
101 E. 19th St., 81003
William Duran, 101 E. 19th St., Pueblo, CO 81003
534419 42337273
NE Pueblo, COUSGS quad name:
15, 16 37
Barndollar & Co. 1st 1871
The boundary of the potential historic district can be found in the Management Data Form for this district. The individual site boundary corresponds to the legal location of the parcel containing the building associated with the historic use of the property. Property boundary is denoted by East 19th Street to the south, Santa Fe Avenue to the west, an alley to the east, and a chain link fence to the north.
Rectangular Plan
Length 50 x Width 31 = 1509 square feet
1
Stucco
UTM reference
1961 (1974)
6th
13
18. Roof configuration: (enter no more than one):19. Primary external roof material: (enter no more than one20. Special features (enter all that apply)21. General architectural description:
22. Architectural style/building type:23. Landscaping or special setting features:
24 Associated buildings, features, or objects:
25. Date of construction: Estimate: Actual:Source of information:
26. Architect:Source of information:
27. Builder/Contractor:Source of information
28. Original owner:Source of information:
29. Construction history (include description and dates of major additions, alterations, or demolitions):
30. Original location: Moved Date of move(s):
Resource number:Temporary resource number:
5PE4496
NPF 061
Gable
Asphalt - composite Four pipes on front slope of roof, chain link fence
One story residential building with no identifiable style and a gable roof. The main entry is located on the south elevation, towards the western end of the front facade. In addition to the main entry, there is also one fixed-sash window with sidelights and one double-hung window. There is a secondary entry located on the south elevation. A different roof configuration and exterior wall material on the east wing suggest the house has undergone a more recent construction eposide.
None
Multiple trees and shrubs interspersed throughout lot.
One single-car garage and carport on the east end of property.
1925Pueblo County Assessor's Office
UnknownN/A
UnknownN/A
Original owner unavailable through typical county Record search.Pueblo County Assessor's Office
The house has a large addition on east side and the building appears to have been refaced in modern stucco, however nothing listed in Assessor's records.
Resource number:
Temporary resource number:
5PE4496
NPF 061
31. Original use(s)
32. Intermediate use(s):
33. Current use(s)
34 Site type(s):
35 Historical background:
36. Sources of information:
V. Historical Associations
VI. Significance
37. Local landmark designation: Yes No Date of designation:
Designating authority:
38. Applicable National Register Criteria:
A. Associated with events that have made a significant contribution to the broad pattern of our history;
B. Associated with the lives of persons significant in our past;
C. Embodies the distinctive characteristics of a type, period, or method of construction, or represents the work of a master, or that possess high artistic values, or represents a significant and distinguishable entity whose components may lack individual distinction; or
D. Has yielded, or may be likely to yield, information important in history or prehistory.
Qualifies under Criteria Considerations A through G (see Manual)
Does not meet any of the above National Reigster criteria
39. Area(s) of significance:
N/A
Domestic - single dwelling
Domestic - single dwelling
Domestic - single dwelling
House
This house is located in an area known as Mineral Palace Park which was settled by 1890. The neighborhood is different from any other in Pueblo because of its proximity to downtown Pueblo and the Pueblo County courthouse. Because of this, residents tended to look to the central business district for work instead of relying on the steel mills and rail yards for employment. The earliest known inhabitant/owner of this property was Delmer D. Treat, about whom research yielded no information. The building appears to have been built in 1925.
See attached Continuation Sheet.
Resource number:
Temporary resource number:
5PE4496
NPF 061
40. Period of significance:
41. Level of significance: National State Local42. Statement of significance:
43. Assessment of historic physical integrity related to significance:
44. National Register eligible field assessment:
VII. National Register Eligiblity Assessment
45. Is there National Register district potential?Eligible Not Eligible Need Data
Discuss:
If there is National Register district potential, is this building: Contributing Noncontributing
46. If the building is in existing National Register district, is it: Contributing Noncontributing
47.VIII. Recording Information
Photograph numbers:Negatives filed at:
48. Report title:49. Date(s):50. Recorder(s):51. Organization:
This building lacks the integrity to be associated with any of the themes pertinent to the Mineral Palace Park Historic District. Although built within the period of signficance of the district, it does not retain enough integrity to be considered a contributing element of the proposed district. These integrity issues also render it individually ineligible for listing on the NRHP under any criterion.
The house has been significantly modified thus removing signigicant historic or architectural integrity. This includes a large addition on the east side of the house, and refacing in modern stucco.
Yes No
The area of Pueblo now known as Mineral Palace Park was sparsely settled by 1890. At that time, the area consisted of a scattering of adobe style houses and subdivided lots. The more affluent citizens of Pueblo chose to live in the area abutting the Mineral Palace Park itself. The affluence of the residents produced a degree of architectural diversity until the 1930s, as affluent home buyers asked for a wide variety of housing styles, types, and sizes. The character of the neighborhood began to change after the Second World War with the increased use of the automobile. While there is no one predominant style or type of building in the area, the neighborhood is characterized by single and multiple family buildings in popular styles spanning its period of development. These styles include Queen Anne, Tudor Revival, and Second Empire. Predominant types include Bungalows, Classic Cottages, Hipped-Roof boxes, Split Levels, and Foursquares. With the exception of the eastern portion of the neighborhood, the area retains reasonably good architectural integrity. The eastern section was destroyed with the construction of Interstate 25, and the integrity of the areas immediately adjacent to the interstate has been largely destroyed. However, the historic fabric of the majority of the neighborhood has not ultimately been significantly compromised. It therefore appears that this area is eligible for listing on the NRHP as an historic district.
52. Address:53. Phone number(s):NOTE: Please attach a sketch map, a photocopy of the USGS quad. map indicating resource location, and
photographs.Colorado Historical Society - Office of Archaeology Historic Preservation
1300 Broadway, Denver, CO 80203 (303) 866-3395
1925
Roll 4, exp. 5
WCRM, Inc., Boulder office
A Cultural Resource Inventory of the New Pueblo Freeway Area of Potential Effect
12/06
Catherine Barrier, Steve F. Mehls, R.Z. WoodCH2M HILL and Western Cultural Resource Management
1515 Poydras Street, Ste 2110, New Orleans, LA 70112 and PO Box 2326, Boulder, Colorado 80306
504.593.9421 and 303.449.1151
5PE4496Continuation Sheet
Alexandroff, Marty. 1996. I-25/State Highway 50/State Highway 47 Survey, Project #NH-IR (CX) 25-2 (126). Manuscript. on file, Colorado Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver.
Ames, David L., and Linda F. McClelland. 2002. Historic Residential Suburbs: Guidelines for Evaluation and Documentation for the National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service, Washington, D.C.
Burrer, Weston C. 2004. The History of Mineral Palace Park. CH2M Hill and Colorado Department of Transportation, Denver, Colorado.
Cafky, Morris, and John A. Haney. 1999. Pueblo’s Steel Town Trolleys. Colorado Railroad Museum, Golden.
Clark, Clifford Edward, Jr. 1986. American Family Home, 1800-1960. University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill.
Gambrill, Kim. 1980. West City Limits Pueblo to Pueblo Dam: Colorado Department of Highways Project RS 0096(15). Manuscript on file, Colorado Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver.
Gearhart, Thaddeus, Chris Geddes, Lyle Hansen, Dale Heckendorn, and Holly Wilson. 2003. A Guide to Colorado’s Historic Architecture and Engineering. 2nd Ed. State Historical Society of Colorado, Denver.
Hand, O D, and Roxanne Eflin. 1995. Cultural Resource Survey of the Proposed Improvements to Interstate 25, U.S. Highway 50, and State Highway 47 in Pueblo, Pueblo County, Colorado. Colorado Department of Transportation Project NH-IR(CX) 25-1(126). Mainuscript on file, Colorado Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver, Colorado.
Kramer, Kerry. 1997. State Register of Historic Properties Nomination Form. Manuscript on file, Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver, Colorado.
Lee, Antoinette J., and Linda F. McClelland. 1999. How to Complete the National Register Multiple Property Documentation Form. Guidelines for Completing National Register of Historic Places Forms, Part B. National Register Bulletin. National Park Service, Washington, D.C.
Mehls, Steven F., and Carroll Joe Carter. 1984. Colorado Southern Frontier Historic Context. Colorado Historical Society, Denver.
Mehls, Steven F., Collette C. Chambellan, and Cara Muniz. 2001. Cultural Resources Class 1 and Reconnaissance Study of the Interstate 25 Improvements Project, Pueblo, Pueblo County, Colorado. Prepared for CH2M Hill and the Colorado Department of Transportation. Manuscript on file, Western Cultural Resource Management, Inc., Boulder, Colorado.
Pueblo Regional Planning Commission. 1981. Pueblo Historic and Architectural Survey: Master Resource File. Manuscript on file, Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver, Colorado.
R. L. Polk & Co. 1915. The R. L. Polk Directory Co.’s Pueblo City Directory. The R. L. Polk Directory Company, Colorado Springs, Colorado; 1925. The R. L. Polk Directory Co.’s Pueblo City Directory. The R. L. Polk Directory Company, Colorado Springs, Colorado; 1950. Polk’s Pueblo (Colorado) City Directory. The R. L. Polk Directory Company, Salt Lake City, Utah; 1997. Pueblo (Pueblo County, Colorado) City Directory. R. L. Polk & Company, Kansas City, Missouri.
Reps, John W. 1979. Cities of the American West: A History of Frontier Planning,. Princeton University Press, Princeton, New Jersey.
Sanborn Fire Insurance Map Co. v.d. Insurance Map of Pueblo, Colorado. Sanborn Map Co., New York.
Sprague, Marshall. 1964. The Great Gates. Little, Brown, Boston, Massachusetts.
State of Colorado Board of Immigration, 1918, 1922, 1934 & 1942. Colorado Yearbook. Denver.
Stephenson, Norma J. 1978. Pueblo, the People: An Oral History, University of Southern Colorado and the Pueblo Regional Library, Pueblo, Colorado.
U. S. Bureau of the Census. 1901. Twelfth Census of the United States Taken in the Year 1900. Department of Commerce and Labor, Washington, D.C.; 1913. Thirteenth Census of the United States: Abstract of the Census. Department of Commerce and Labor, Washington, D.C.; 1921. Fourteenth Census of Population. Department of Commerce and Labor, Washington, D.C.
5PE4496
5PE4496
5PE4496
Official eligibilty determiniation(OAHP use only)Date___________ Initials________ Determined Eligible- NR____ Determined Not Eligible- NR____ Determined Eligible- SR____ Determined Not Eligible- SR____ Need Data____ Contributes to eligible NR District____ Noncontributing to eligible NR District
COLORADO CULTURAL RESOURCE SURVEY
Architectural Inventory Form
I. IDENTIFICATION
1. Resource number:
2. Temporary resource number:
3. County:
4. City:
5. Historic building name:
6. Current building name:
7. Building address:
8. Owner name and address:
II. GEOGRAPHIC INFORMATION
9. P.M. Township Range
1/4 of 1/4 of 1/4 of 1/4 of section10.
Zone ; mE mN
11.
Year: Map scale: 7.5' 15' Attach photo copy of appropriate map section.
12. Lot(s): Block:
Addition: Year of Addition:
13. Boundary Description and Justification:
III. Architectural Description
14. Building plan (footprint, shape):
15. Dimensions in feet: Length
16. Number of stories:
17. Primary external wall material(s) (enter no more than two):
20S 64W
SW SW NW NW 30
5PE4497NPF 062
Pueblo
Pueblo
Alfonso Marmolejo House
Alfonso and Josephine Marmolejo House
1912 N. Santa Fe Ave., 81003
Alfonso and Josephine Marmolejo, 1912 N. Santa Fe Ave., Pueblo, CO 81003
534402 4237319
NE Pueblo, COUSGS quad name:
10, 11, 12 37
Barndollar & Co. 1st 1871
The boundary of the potential historic district can be found in the Management Data Form for this district. The individual site boundary corresponds to the legal location of the parcel containing the building associated with the historic use of the property. Property boundary denoted by a chain link fence to north, extent of building's wall to south, North Santa Fe Avenue to the west, a chain link fence to the east.
Rectangular Plan
Length 48 x Width 40 = 1922 square feet
1
Stucco, brick
UTM reference
1961 (1974)
6th
13
18. Roof configuration: (enter no more than one):19. Primary external roof material: (enter no more than one20. Special features (enter all that apply)21. General architectural description:
22. Architectural style/building type:23. Landscaping or special setting features:
24 Associated buildings, features, or objects:
25. Date of construction: Estimate: Actual:Source of information:
26. Architect:Source of information:
27. Builder/Contractor:Source of information
28. Original owner:Source of information:
29. Construction history (include description and dates of major additions, alterations, or demolitions):
30. Original location: Moved Date of move(s):
Resource number:Temporary resource number:
5PE4497
NPF 062
Hipped roof
Asphalt - composition roofChain link fence, carport.
One story residential building with no identifiable style and a hipped roof. The exterior walls are brick and stucco. The main entry is located on the west elevation. The west elevation also has one casement window, and one three-light window. A low sloping canopy extends from the west elevation above the entryway. A carport type canopy extends from the south elevation to cover the vehicle parking area and is supported by four cylindrical iron posts. The original structure appears to be unmodified aside from new exterior wall materials, the carport and new windows.
None
Manicured lawn, mature evergreen, juniper trees, and decorative stones.
Small storage shed, front gable, wood siding.
1900Pueblo County Assessor's Office
UnknownN/A
UnknownN/A
Original owner unavailable through typical county Record search.Pueblo County Assessor's Office
Assessor's records show that the building was remodeled in 1958. It appears that the exterior of building has been resurfaced (partially covered with brick) with stucco, new window treatments have been added, and a canopy parking area added.
Resource number:
Temporary resource number:
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NPF 062
31. Original use(s)
32. Intermediate use(s):
33. Current use(s)
34 Site type(s):
35 Historical background:
36. Sources of information:
V. Historical Associations
VI. Significance
37. Local landmark designation: Yes No Date of designation:
Designating authority:
38. Applicable National Register Criteria:
A. Associated with events that have made a significant contribution to the broad pattern of our history;
B. Associated with the lives of persons significant in our past;
C. Embodies the distinctive characteristics of a type, period, or method of construction, or represents the work of a master, or that possess high artistic values, or represents a significant and distinguishable entity whose components may lack individual distinction; or
D. Has yielded, or may be likely to yield, information important in history or prehistory.
Qualifies under Criteria Considerations A through G (see Manual)
Does not meet any of the above National Reigster criteria
39. Area(s) of significance:
N/A
Domestic - single dwelling
Domestic - single dwelling
Domestic - single dwelling
House
This house is located in an area known as Mineral Palace Park which was settled by 1890. The neighborhood is different from any other in Pueblo because of its proximity to downtown Pueblo and the Pueblo County courthouse. Because of this, residents tended to look to the central business district for work instead of relying on the steel mills and rail yards for employment. The earliest known inhabitant/owner of this property could not be determined. The building appears to have been built in 1900.
See attached Continuation Sheet.
Resource number:
Temporary resource number:
5PE4497
NPF 062
40. Period of significance:
41. Level of significance: National State Local42. Statement of significance:
43. Assessment of historic physical integrity related to significance:
44. National Register eligible field assessment:
VII. National Register Eligiblity Assessment
45. Is there National Register district potential?Eligible Not Eligible Need Data
Discuss:
If there is National Register district potential, is this building: Contributing Noncontributing
46. If the building is in existing National Register district, is it: Contributing Noncontributing
47.VIII. Recording Information
Photograph numbers:Negatives filed at:
48. Report title:49. Date(s):50. Recorder(s):51. Organization:
This building lacks the integrity to be associated with any of the themes pertinent to the Mineral Palace Park Historic District. Although although it was built within the period of significance of the Mineral Palace Park Historic District, it does not retain enough integrity to be considered a contributing element of the proposed district. These integrity issues also render it individually ineligible for listing on the NRHP under any criterion.
The house has been significantly modified thus removing a great deal of historic or architectural integrity. Alterations include new windows, new cladding, and a new shed roof carport.
Yes No
The area of Pueblo now known as Mineral Palace Park was sparsely settled by 1890. At that time, the area consisted of a scattering of adobe style houses and subdivided lots. The more affluent citizens of Pueblo chose to live in the area abutting the Mineral Palace Park itself. The affluence of the residents produced a degree of architectural diversity until the 1930s, as affluent home buyers asked for a wide variety of housing styles, types, and sizes. The character of the neighborhood began to change after the Second World War with the increased use of the automobile. While there is no one predominant style or type of building in the area, the neighborhood is characterized by single and multiple family buildings in popular styles spanning its period of development. These styles include Queen Anne, Tudor Revival, and Second Empire. Predominant types include Bungalows, Classic Cottages, Hipped-Roof boxes, Split Levels, and Foursquares. With the exception of the eastern portion of the neighborhood, the area retains reasonably good architectural integrity. The eastern section was destroyed with the construction of Interstate 25, and the integrity of the areas immediately adjacent to the interstate has been largely destroyed. However, the historic fabric of the majority of the neighborhood has not ultimately been significantly compromised. It therefore appears that this area is eligible for listing on the NRHP as an historic district.
52. Address:53. Phone number(s):NOTE: Please attach a sketch map, a photocopy of the USGS quad. map indicating resource location, and
photographs.Colorado Historical Society - Office of Archaeology Historic Preservation
1300 Broadway, Denver, CO 80203 (303) 866-3395
1900
Roll 1, exp. 35
WCRM, Inc., Boulder office
A Cultural Resource Inventory of the New Pueblo Freeway Area of Potential Effect
12/06
Catherine Barrier, Steve F. Mehls, R. FiskeCH2M HILL and Western Cultural Resource Management
1515 Poydras Street, Ste 2110, New Orleans, LA 70112 and PO Box 2326, Boulder, Colorado 80306
504.593.9421 and 303.449.1151
5PE4497Continuation Sheet
Alexandroff, Marty. 1996. I-25/State Highway 50/State Highway 47 Survey, Project #NH-IR (CX) 25-2 (126). Manuscript. on file, Colorado Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver.
Ames, David L., and Linda F. McClelland. 2002. Historic Residential Suburbs: Guidelines for Evaluation and Documentation for the National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service, Washington, D.C.
Burrer, Weston C. 2004. The History of Mineral Palace Park. CH2M Hill and Colorado Department of Transportation, Denver, Colorado.
Cafky, Morris, and John A. Haney. 1999. Pueblo’s Steel Town Trolleys. Colorado Railroad Museum, Golden.
Clark, Clifford Edward, Jr. 1986. American Family Home, 1800-1960. University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill.
Gambrill, Kim. 1980. West City Limits Pueblo to Pueblo Dam: Colorado Department of Highways Project RS 0096(15). Manuscript on file, Colorado Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver.
Gearhart, Thaddeus, Chris Geddes, Lyle Hansen, Dale Heckendorn, and Holly Wilson. 2003. A Guide to Colorado’s Historic Architecture and Engineering. 2nd Ed. State Historical Society of Colorado, Denver.
Hand, O D, and Roxanne Eflin. 1995. Cultural Resource Survey of the Proposed Improvements to Interstate 25, U.S. Highway 50, and State Highway 47 in Pueblo, Pueblo County, Colorado. Colorado Department of Transportation Project NH-IR(CX) 25-1(126). Mainuscript on file, Colorado Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver, Colorado.
Kramer, Kerry. 1997. State Register of Historic Properties Nomination Form. Manuscript on file, Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver, Colorado.
Lee, Antoinette J., and Linda F. McClelland. 1999. How to Complete the National Register Multiple Property Documentation Form. Guidelines for Completing National Register of Historic Places Forms, Part B. National Register Bulletin. National Park Service, Washington, D.C.
Mehls, Steven F., and Carroll Joe Carter. 1984. Colorado Southern Frontier Historic Context. Colorado Historical Society, Denver.
Mehls, Steven F., Collette C. Chambellan, and Cara Muniz. 2001. Cultural Resources Class 1 and Reconnaissance Study of the Interstate 25 Improvements Project, Pueblo, Pueblo County, Colorado. Prepared for CH2M Hill and the Colorado Department of Transportation. Manuscript on file, Western Cultural Resource Management, Inc., Boulder, Colorado.
Pueblo Regional Planning Commission. 1981. Pueblo Historic and Architectural Survey: Master Resource File. Manuscript on file, Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Denver, Colorado.
R. L. Polk & Co. 1915. The R. L. Polk Directory Co.’s Pueblo City Directory. The R. L. Polk Directory Company, Colorado Springs, Colorado; 1925. The R. L. Polk Directory Co.’s Pueblo City Directory. The R. L. Polk Directory Company, Colorado Springs, Colorado; 1950. Polk’s Pueblo (Colorado) City Directory. The R. L. Polk Directory Company, Salt Lake City, Utah; 1997. Pueblo (Pueblo County, Colorado) City Directory. R. L. Polk & Company, Kansas City, Missouri.
Reps, John W. 1979. Cities of the American West: A History of Frontier Planning,. Princeton University Press, Princeton, New Jersey.
Sanborn Fire Insurance Map Co. v.d. Insurance Map of Pueblo, Colorado. Sanborn Map Co., New York.
Sprague, Marshall. 1964. The Great Gates. Little, Brown, Boston, Massachusetts.
State of Colorado Board of Immigration, 1918, 1922, 1934 & 1942. Colorado Yearbook. Denver.
Stephenson, Norma J. 1978. Pueblo, the People: An Oral History, University of Southern Colorado and the Pueblo Regional Library, Pueblo, Colorado.
U. S. Bureau of the Census. 1901. Twelfth Census of the United States Taken in the Year 1900. Department of Commerce and Labor, Washington, D.C.; 1913. Thirteenth Census of the United States: Abstract of the Census. Department of Commerce and Labor, Washington, D.C.; 1921. Fourteenth Census of Population. Department of Commerce and Labor, Washington, D.C.
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