Laserfiche WebLink
Resource Number: 5BL 11319 <br />Temporary Resource Number: 157508414007 <br />x <br />The 1923 directory for Louisville shows that Ludwig and Martha Eberharters son, Fred Eberharter, began to reside at <br />713 Spruce by 1923. He worked as a clerk in the Eberharter store at 805 La Farge at the time, and this was no doubt <br />a convenient location for his home. 801 La Farge appears to have been where he grew up. At the time he moved in <br />to 713 Spruce, Fred had recently married Sophie Swinberg. They had a son, LeRoy (1923-1982). Fred lived from <br />1904 to 1955 or 1956. <br />Directories show that Fred Eberharter lived at 713 Spruce until at least 1930. He, Sophie, and LeRoy are also shown <br />x <br />to be living at this location in the 1930 census. They paid $12 a month in rent, apparently to Freds mother, who <br />owned the property. <br />For the next several years, the house may have been rented to others. Fred Eberharter and his family appear to <br />have moved elsewhere. Fred Eberharter came to be associated with other properties in the Jefferson Place Addition. <br />Directories show that from 1943 to 1953 (while Martha Eberharter still owned it), 713 Spruce was rented to Joe <br />x <br />Campana (1911-1976) and Helen Campana (1928-1996). He worked as an auto mechanic. Helen Campanas <br />x <br />obituary stated that she and Joe owned Louisvilles White Front Inn (5BL8025) for many years. <br />Raymond Smith, who was born in 1938 and grew up at 801 La Farge in the 1940s and 1950s, recalled in 2011 that <br />{ <br />he would eat dinner next door at the Campana house at 713 Spruce on Thursday and Saturday nights because <br />|x <br />those were spaghetti nights.He was friends with the Campana children. The families were indeed close, as Rays <br />sister, Katherine, married one of the Campana boys. <br />In 1955, Martha Eberharter sold 713 Spruce to Stanislaw and Margarete Harbuz. They are the current owners and <br />residents. At the age of 18, Stan Harbuz was forced from his home in Poland to work in a Nazi work camp in <br />Germany in 1942. After World War II, he worked as a guard and immigrated in the early 1950s to Colorado, where he <br />worked as a carpenter. <br />x <br />Another address found for 713 Spruce, under Louisvilles old address system, was 435 Spruce. <br />36. Sources of information: <br />{‘| <br />Boulder County Real Estate Appraisal Card Urban Master, on file at the Carnegie Branch Library for Local History <br />in Boulder, Colorado. <br />xx <br />Boulder County Clerk & Recorders Office and Assessors Office public records, accessed through <br />http://recorder.bouldercounty.org. <br />Directories of Louisville residents and businesses on file at the Louisville Historical Museum. <br />Census records and other records accessed through www.ancestry.com <br />x <br />Drumms Wall Map of Louisville, Colorado, 1909. <br />Methodist Church Parish Map of Louisville, Colorado, circa 1923-25. <br />Sanborn Insurance Maps for Louisville, Colorado, 1893, 1900, and 1908. <br />, Boulder Genealogical Society, 2006. <br />Green Mountain Cemetery Index to Interment Books, 1904-1925 <br />Interview conducted by Louisville Historical Museum Coordinator Bridget Bacon with Raymond Smith, March 30, <br />2011. <br />{ <br />Archival materials on file at the Louisville Historical Museum, including newspaper clipping, Miner for 43 Years <br />| <br />Reviews Early Days,, April 4, 1990, reprinted from , 1932. <br />Louisville TimesLouisville Times <br />{| <br />Ooton, Jennifer. Trying the Soul: Louisville Man Recalls Time Spent in Nazi Work Camp. Daily Times-Call <br />(Longmont), undated (circa 2001). <br />VI.S <br />IGNIFICANCE <br />37. Local landmark designation: Yes No X Date of designation: NA <br />5 <br />