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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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HPCPKT 2014 08 18
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Resource Number: 5BL 923 <br />Temporary Resource Number: 157508406003 <br />unknown date with asphalt shingles. Turned wood posts at the front porch stair railing are more recently added. No <br />other exterior modifications were noted. <br />30. Original location X Moved Date of move(s): <br />V. HISTORICAL ASSOCIATIONS <br />31. Original use(s): Domestic, Single Dwelling <br />32. Intermediate use(s): N/A <br />33. Current use(s): Domestic, Single Dwelling <br />34. Site type(s): Urban residence <br />35. Historical background: <br />This building is part of Jefferson Place, the first residential subdivision in Louisville. <br />Virginia Hamilton and her family owned this property for over 65 years, and this was their residence. Virginia <br />Hamilton was a school teacher in Louisville for many years, and this home was conveniently located near her place <br />of work, which was the school for first and second grade students at 801 Grant (5BL7974). Virginia Hamilton was <br />also one of the four charter members of Louisville's Saturday Study Club, a women's organization credited with <br />bringing culture to the coal mining town of Louisville. The Hamilton family was also associated with 833 Jefferson <br />(5BL8433) in Jefferson Place. 925 Jefferson has a connected history with 913 Jefferson (5BL8434) and 933 <br />Jefferson. <br />Marybeth Chambers originally purchased the lots for this property in 1885 from Jefferson Place developer Charles <br />Welch. She was involved in buying and selling a great deal of property in Louisville, as was her husband, John S. <br />Chambers. John and Marybeth Chambers, along with Lyman and Helen Andrews, operated the businesses Andrews <br />& Chambers, located on Front Street, then the Louisville Mercantile Company, located in the brick building that used <br />to stand at 701 Main. All were from New York State, as was Welch. Marybeth and John Chambers were a prominent <br />and influential couple in Louisville until John Chambers died, which appears to have occurred in the 1890s. <br />Marybeth Chambers then moved to Denver to live with a relative, according to census records. <br />County property records show that Asenath Virginia Hamilton, nicknamed Jennie, purchased the lots for 925 <br />Jefferson by 1891, when the deed was recorded. <br />Virginia Hamilton was from Missouri (born in 1851, it is believed) and her maiden name was Clemens. (Long after <br />her death, it was believed by some in Louisville that she had been the sister of Samuel Clemens (Mark Twain), but <br />they had been only distant cousins.) <br />Virginia Hamilton and her husband, Thomas, were living in Erie with their five children when he was struck by <br />lightning and killed at the age of 30 in 1878. He was principal of Erie schools and postmaster in Erie. <br />The widowed Virginia and her children, who at that time ranged in age from 1 to 9, ended up living in Boulder in the <br />early 1880s, then moved to Louisville. In the 1885 Colorado State Census, the family is shown as living on Main <br />Street in Louisville and Virginia was already working as a school teacher to support her family. <br />The County gives 1905 as an estimated date of construction for this house, but the house is believed to have been <br />constructed earlier. Boulder County has sometimes been found to be in error with respect to the dates of construction <br />of historic buildings in Louisville. The inventory record completed for 925 Jefferson in 1985 estimated that it was <br />constructed in 1880 -1890. The 1904 directory for Louisville has the Hamilton family, the owners of 925 Jefferson, as <br />living on Jefferson Avenue north of Walnut, which is an accurate description of this property. Also, although the 1900 <br />federal census does not indicate streets for Louisville, it does list the family as living very close to other families who <br />resided on Jefferson, and states that the Hamiltons owned their house free of a mortgage. It seems likely that the <br />house would have been constructed at around the time that Virginia Hamilton purchased the property in 1891. <br />The house at 925 Jefferson appears in the correct location on the 1909 Drumm's Wall Map of Louisville and on the <br />Methodist Church Map of Louisville that was made in circa 1923 -25. <br />3 <br />
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