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Historical descriptions excerpted from the print version of Silverton Magazine 2004, and the historical tour authored by Allen Nossaman. Edited by Silverton Magazine Editor, Samantha Tisdel Wright. Duotones, James Burke. ALL material herein is copyright San Juan Publishing Group, Inc. and may not be reproduced by any means whatsoever. To do so, will invite immediate legal action. For the complete historical walking tour, order a copy of the print version of Silverton Magazine from San Juan Publishing Group, Inc., PO Box 705, Ridgway CO 81432. (Email: Info@sanjuanpub.com) West side of Greene Courthouse Square San Juan County Courthouse. With its ornate gold-colored dome and clock tower, the San Juan County Courthouse is one of the most beautiful in the state. Built in 1907 at a cost of $79,000, the structure did not require issuance of bonds or an increase in taxes to construct. It is newly renovated and still fully in use. 14th & Greene
1421 Greene. (Kendall Mtn. Cafe) The Hoffman Rooming House occupied the entire corner lot at the turn of the last century. 1371 Greene. (Wyman Hotel) The Wyman Building, constructed of native red sandstone, was completed in 1902 by pioneer packer Louis Wyman. He hand carved the burro on the building’s nameplate above the corner as a tribute to the stubborn but indispensible creatures. The structure was home to the Silverton Commercial Club, Hemphill & McCrimmons Dry Goods and various lodges and professional men before housing a trucking firm, filling station and parking garage prior to its recent restoration as a hotel. 1345 Greene. (burned and boarded) This brick structure was erected by John Walters in 1907 and is typical of the construction which took place during the apex of Silverton’s building boom in the first decade of the 1900s. It first housed Fulton’s Market, and was the longtime home of The Economy Store, a clothing and dry goods outlet. It was adapted as a recreational center named The Eight Ball in the 1970s, when the town’s only bowling alley was moved into the basement. On February 24, 1993, the building was damaged when the heavy snow load left by a storm caused the roof to collapse. The building was gutted by fire in 2001. 1335 Greene. (Weathertop Wovens) This frame structure, built no later than 1876 by Frenchman Frank Chabrand as a saloon, is one of the oldest in Silverton. After one year, it became the shop of Silverton’s first butchers, John Scrivner and John and Charles Pearson. In 1881, it was acquired for a drug store by David L. Mechling, who left Silverton but returned in 1910 as the driver of the first automobile to enter the county. The building was adapted to use as a laundromat in the 1960s. The doorway to the right of the laundry was a separate, tiny storefront between 1881 and 1907, and among other businesses, housed a boot and shoe shop, a Chinese laundry, a jewelry store and a barber shop. 1333 Greene. (Silverton Brewery) As early as 1895, this building served as Silverton’s Post Office. In the 1920s, it was a Post Office in the back and in front, a drug store and mercantile run by Charles Cooper. In the 1940s, Frank Salfisberg took over the Post Office, moving it up front. Art Lorenzen moved the drug store to the brick building on the corner (where Hold Your Horses is today) and named it the Post Office Drug Store. 1327/1325 Greene. (Adelaide’s Antiques) The northern twin of these identical buildings was finished in 1901, eclipsing its neighbor by a couple of months. Fritz Hoffman graduated from secondhand goods to a first-class hardware store with this building’s completion and proudly had his name in stone over the cornice. Surveyor R.W. Hollis was the first professional tenant upstairs, which was also the location of the office of attorney William A. Way, who practiced law in Silverton for more than sixty years. The commercial space was a hardware store until 1982.
1309 Greene. This structure, which originally bore a nameplate for builder, W.C. Rogers, was erected in 1909 as a saloon. Prohibition prompted its conversion into the Star Theater in 1916, and it subsequently became the Gem Theater in 1925, and Lode Theater in 1938. The last motion picture theater screening in Silverton took place in this building in January 1990. 1303 Greene. (Mountains Calling) Constructed in 1895 by pioneer Silverton merchant George Bausman, this brick structure opened as Bausman’s General Merchandise. Attorney J.T. Whitelaw and Dr. E.L. Ingersoll were among the first professional men upstairs. The store became Sam Wittow’s Clothing Store and later the Post Office Drug Store, first in a series of community drug stores in the location until 1982. 13th & Greene
1249 Greene. (Funnel Cakes and Enameling Shop) George Wright also erected this building in 1875, and occupied it as the Alhambra Saloon for a short time. The structure has been divided into two fronts most of its existence and has housed everything from barbershops to shoe repair shops to assay offices. 1245 Greene. (Silverton Minerals and Gifts) New building built when snow caved in roof of former building on this site. 1237 Greene. (Rocky Mountain Gifts) This ornate frame structure dates from May 1884, when it was completed as the St. Julien Restaurant. Its French owner was remodeling a modest one-story building on the site when snow from an adjoining roof demolished his building. He decided to produce a much grander structure, aided by a healthy court settlement. The edifice housed a saloon most of its years, and the upper rooms were quarters at various times for the Western Federation of Miners and numerous professional offices. 1231 Greene. (Fetch’s) Built by town father Thomas Blair in 1883 after moving a small Chinese laundry off the lot. The frame building has housed a saloon most of its life, the earliest proprietors being Dave Lowenstein and Johnny May. The second story was Silverton’s Odd Fellows Hall from 1884 to 1893. During the last century, a series of proprietors operated The Club here, with imbibing on the ground floor and various echelons of gambling in both the basement and the second floor. 1227 Greene. (Indian Plaza) A frame building on this site, literally in the shadow of the massive Grand Hotel, was replaced with the current masonry structure in 1903 by butcher Bert Brown, who thought he would occupy the building but transferred it instead to Cunningham & Crocker, a longtime leading drug and jewelry firm. This partnership maintained a freestanding ornate sidewalk clock on the premises for many years. Druggists or jewelers occupied the building for more than fifty years, up through the closing of the Blue Cross Drug Store in the 1950s. . 1171-1191 Greene. (vacant) This building was long owned by the Savich family. The corner was rented to Tony Giacomelli who ran a family bar and cafe. The building also housed a liquor store run by Mary Mattivi and a bakery run by the Bonaventura family. 1157 Greene Formerly one of Silverton’s first gift shops and lapidary, run by Wiley Carmack who now owns Outdoor World. For years, the building was owned by Lou Purcell, owner of the Circle Route Garage. He rented the building to Johnnie Forman, who for thirty years ran the San Juan Grocery and Meat Market. The building also once housed the Purcell’s Silverton Light Company. 1151 Greene. (Romero’s) Prior to WWII, Art Thick and another barber ran the Silverton Barbershop here, and post-WWII, the Silverton Veterans of Foreign War Post moved in and established a club. 1139-1145 Greene. (Silverton Coffee Mine/My Favorite Things) New buildings constructed in 1997. 1129 Greene. (Brown Bear Cafe) Pioneer butcher Fred Humbolt erected this building in 1893. It was the longtime home of the Silverton Meat and Produce Co., which involved partnerships among Fred and Adolph Humbolt and Charles and John Pearson, the first butchers in the county. Upstairs quarters housed the Odd Fellows Lodge and the Woodmen of the World. The latter purchased the building in 1919. The Foresters Lodge and the Miners Union also met upstairs at various times. The ground floor became a saloon with its purchase in 1933 by Phil Sartore, and it was subsequently known as the Pastime and then as the San Juan Bar and Melodrama Theater. 1119 Greene. (San Juan Backcountry) In 1910, the Silverton Standard newspaper print shop. 1121 Greene. (White
Eyes Gallery) This frame
building was built
in 1883 and occupied by Horace Greeley Prosser and his wife, Laura, who
combined a furniture dealership and an undertaking parlor. They were in
business here until 1901, when they moved to the Miners Union Building
across the side street to the south. The building then housed various
clothing
retailers and a gymnasium. 11th & Greene 1045 Greene. (Weller House) Dates to 1902 and has housed a number of different businesses, including a tailor and candy store. Current owners Jim and Tiesha Weller now offer lodging and massage. East side of Greene 1142 Greene. (Ye Olde Livery & Kurrowong Gallery) Billed as the fanciest livery stable in Colorado’s mountains when it was erected in 1897, this building was the home of the Silverton Transfer Co. It was put up by Clint A. Bowman, who ultimately left San Juan County to found what was to become the Bowman’s Biscuit Company. His onetime partner John Melton operated the livery thereafter, and still later, J.B. Patterson was the owner. It featured an elevator to reach its second level. The facility declined after the advent of the horseless carriage. 1150 Greene. (Henry Smith’s Gifts) This was a part of the old Circle Route Garage complex established in 1913 when the “Circle Route” highway to Durango was being built. The garage operated into the 1950s. Greene & 12th. (K&C Mountain Traders) The original building on this lot housed the Circle Route Stage Stop. When automobiles displaced stage coaches, Lou Purcell established the Circle Route Garage, with gas pumps on the corner. Later, the building housed a mining museum and gift shop run by Zeke Zanoni, until the roof collapsed during a terrible storm in the mid-1970s. The building has housed its current businesses for many years.
1200-1218 Greene. All are part of the old Benson Hotel, and have housed a number of enterprises including a gift shop, restaurant, saloon, beer hall and beauty salon. Current occupants include: 1212 Greene. (vacant) 1218 Greene.• (Mother Lode) 1228 Greene. (Indian Trading Post) Built in 1896 by photographer and saloon owner John V. Lorenzen and his partner, Joe Grivetto, this picturesque building was the Chicago Saloon, a port in the storm for countless Italian immigrant miners through the years. It was thought more respectable than Blair Street taverns, but still made its own liquor during the days of Prohibition, as did a majority of Silverton saloons. 1234 Greene. (Outdoor World & Alpine House) Commissioned in 1972 by Wiley Carmack, this is one of the newest buildings on Greene Street and has always housed his outdoor clothing and equipment business. 1248 Greene. (Exchange Livery / Great Divide Company) Originally a two-story brick and stone structure, the Exchange Livery was constructed by the Doud brothers in 1906. It sheltered buggies and wagons downstairs and horses upstairs. Miners needing a ride to their claim would rent a horse for $2, ride to the locations, and turn the horse loose. The animal would walk back to town and up the ramp to its stall in the livery. The top story caved in from snow load in later years.
1250 Greene. (San Juan Grill, downstairs/Teller House Hotel, upstairs) This double-front brick structure was erected in 1896 by successful local brewer Charles Fischer, and its lodging facility soon was christened the Teller House in honor of mining-conscious Sen. Henry Teller. The first-floor frontages originally housed a series of saloons including onetime neighbors The Frog for the French and The Tyrol for the Italians. In 1916, the building was purchased and converted into the last home of The French Bakery, a grocery and bakery concern, which existed as a grocery until the 1970s.
1320 Greene. (Orange Crate) The open area in front served as an outside storage area for the Carl D. Curtis lumberyard, which was across the street (in a now vacant building). The building that is now the Orange Crate was used to store cement, plumbing supplies and materials that couldn’t be out in the open. 1330 Greene. (vacant) This two-story wooden building has housed various enterprises including an insurance office and clothing store.
1360 Greene. (Town Hall) Started in 1908, the seat of Silverton’s municipal government was finished in 1909, but not before a colonnade of four pillars fell off the front and the project changed contractors. It was built at a cost of $14,500 of the same native stone as the Wyman Building across the street and underwent restoration in 1976 with assistance of a grant from the National Park Service. On November 30, 1992 a fire gutted the building. Work to restore the building to its original state was completed in 1996. The restoration won several awards, including the National Preservation Honor Award. Reese Street 1111 Reese (Carnegie Library) Silverton’s Public Library was erected in 1906 as a Carnegie-funded institution, at a cost of $12,000. The interior furnishings of the library are largely original, and the lower level, originally designed as a men’s reading and club room, has been restored by the library’s board. The facility was the crowning accomplishment of a drive to provide library services. It replaced a series of free reading rooms which had been scattered throughout the community since the 1880s. 1060 Reese. Silverton’s Congregational Church was established in 1876 and formally organized on November 24, 1878. The cornerstone of the church building was laid August 20, 1880, making it the oldest Congregational Church structure still hosting services in the state, now meeting as the United Church of Silverton. The first call to worship was achieved by pounding on a saw blade. A detached bell stand was built in 1881, and the bell tower and steeple replaced it in 1892. The adjoining parsonage was built in 1884. 1005 Reese. St. Patrick’s Catholic Church has been in this brick edifice since its completion in 1905. The building took two years to erect from the groundbreaking in 1903, but much of the work was accomplished by volunteer labor among Italian miners also versed in masonry work. The entire project was paid off three years from its initiation. The rectory next door was built in 1906. The first Catholic church had been built a block up the hillside and had been moved once to the site of the current rectory. Snowden Street 1105
Snowden. The third of Silverton’s historic church structures,
this house of worship was put up as St. John’s Episcopal Church in
1898,
but a shortage of funds found the church board renting it to the school
for overflow classroom space until it could be furnished and opened as
a church in 1901. This building was the site of funeral services for
toll
road and railroad builder Otto Mears. After the decline of the
Episcopalian
congregation, the church was subsequently a Foursquare Gospel Church
and
a Southern Baptist Church. The belfry was originally part of the
schoolhouse
at the now abandoned town of Eureka. 1315 Snowden. (Old County Hospital) Francis M. Snowden built one of the first cabins in Silverton here in 1874. The present structure was built as a hospital by the Miners Union in 1907, and all the men in the organization donated a shift or two from the mines to work on the building. It became the property of San Juan County in 1939 and continued as a hospital until the mid-1950s, after which it was leased as mining company offices, and that of the Colorado Avalanche Information Center. Side Streets Photos Duotones by James Burke BLAIR STREET WALKING TOUR. CLICK HERE. |
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Published by San Juan Publishing Group, Inc., Colorado © 2000-2008 No part of this publication may be reproduced in any means whatsoever without written authorization from SJPG. Queries for re-print rights, email Info@sanjuanpub.com. |