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417 County Rd History
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417 County Rd History
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Last modified
12/20/2021 2:12:54 PM
Creation date
11/14/2018 2:57:21 PM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
CITYWIDE
Doc Type
Historical Records
Subdivision Name
Murphy Place
Property Address Number
417
Property Address Street Name
County
Quality Check
11/14/2018
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B. Franklin "Frank" Giles owned four of these five houses. According to a granddaughter of <br />Frank Giles, the southernmost house (now 401 County Rd.) was the home of him and his wife, <br />Etta. Next came two rental houses, then came the home (now 417 County Rd.) of Frank and <br />Etta's daughter, Ella Giles Phillips Fotis, and her family. The fifth house and the most northern <br />one (now 421 County) is the only one that was not associated with Frank Giles. <br />The reason that today there are just four houses is that one of the two rental houses owned by <br />Frank Giles was moved across the street by Lin Schreiter in the 1930s and is now 404 County <br />Rd. This was confirmed by Frank and Etta Giles' granddaughter, Sylvia Fotis, who grew up at 417 <br />County Rd., and is supported by County property records. <br />Frank Giles acquired, first, the large lot to the south of 417 County Rd., in 1907. As shown on <br />the 1909 map, it historically contained three houses. As mentioned, 401 County Rd., on the <br />corner of County and Parkview, became the primary family home for Frank Giles, his wife, Etta, <br />and their children, and he acquired 417 County Rd. in 1910. <br />Frank Giles (1863-1942) and Etta Sadler Giles (1874-1954) were from Pennsylvania and Frank <br />was a coal miner. They had three children: Ella, Franklin Jr., and Lottie. <br />Born in Pennsylvania in 1894, Ella Giles married Benjamin Harvey "Harvey" Phillips, who had <br />been born in Wyoming in 1886. They had three children: Hazel, born 1911; Benjamin, born <br />1913; and Orville, born 1914. <br />Harvey Phillips died in 1914. According to available information, he was shot in connection with <br />the Ludlow Massacre in southern Colorado and died on May 1, 1914. Information about his role <br />in this violent labor conflict could not be found. According to Phillips family tree information <br />accessed on Ancestry.com, Harvey Phillips had previously worked as a performer for Buffalo <br />Bill's Wild West Show. <br />It is strongly believed that 417 County Road is one of the houses that can be seen in the <br />following photo taken by Frank Jacoe in 1914. This was at the time of the labor conflict when <br />federal troops were called in to Louisville at the end of the long 1910-1914 mining strike (and <br />not long after the Ludlow Massacre). The photo is believed to show the houses on the corner of <br />County Road and Parkview. <br />
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