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Historic Preservation Commission Agenda and Packet 2014 08 18
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Historic Preservation Commission Agenda and Packet 2014 08 18
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3/10/2021 3:08:17 PM
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8/21/2014 9:13:59 AM
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HPCPKT 2014 08 18
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as were the business houses and the funeral was one of the largest ever held in <br />Louisville." <br />Virginia's son, Frank Hamilton (1877- 1956), then owned and lived at 925 Jefferson with <br />his wife, Sarah "Sade" or "Sadie" Hilton Hamilton (1877- 1942). Sadie was herself a <br />member of a pioneer Boulder County family from England. Earlier in his life, Frank was <br />a coal miner and operated a saloon in Superior, and he later became a deputy County <br />Clerk and a County road overseer. His obituary in the Daily Camera stated that he was <br />"one of the community's leading citizens." Sarah's Daily Camera obituary, according to <br />Columbia Cemetery records, stated that "she was one of the most popular residents of <br />Louisville." <br />The additional owners since the property left the Hamilton family in 1957 have been: <br />Everette Burd; Carl & Allegra Collister; Delbert & Leona Jones and Peggy Frank; James <br />Goudelock & Jo Ann Feigenheimer; Richard Jackson; Philip & Louisa Prescott; and the <br />current owner, Elizabeth Schulte, who has owned the house since 1979. <br />ARCHITECTURAL INTEGRITY: <br />From Jefferson Place Survey Form <br />925 Jefferson is a one -story wood frame structure, rectangular in plan, with its primary <br />facade facing east to Jefferson Avenue. The foundation is brick. The exterior is clad with <br />horizontal wood lap siding painted white. The main roof is hipped, with gray /green <br />asphalt shingles. There are two red brick central chimneys. A prominent wraparound <br />porch graces the full width of the front facade and 24 feet of the south side. The porch <br />has a hip roof with a frieze and dentils. The porch roof is supported on turned wood <br />posts with decorative brackets. Harkening to the days when this house was in the <br />center of a large land parcel, the approach to the house is at an angle, with a concrete <br />walk leading to four wooden steps at the corner of the porch. The stairs have a newer <br />turned wood posts and railings. The porch floor is wooden boards painted blue, and the <br />soffit is bead board painted white. The front door is clear finished wood with a nearly <br />full- height oval glass light. A crawl space below the porch is enclosed with painted wood <br />latticework. Windows on the original part of the house are regularly spaced, historic <br />wood 4/4 divided light double hung sash. The west end of the house is a 1957 addition. <br />This extends the full width of the house and has similar wood lap siding, a shed roof <br />with gray asphalt roll roofing, three 9 -light wood windows facing west and a side door <br />leading to the back yard. <br />3 <br />
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