Laserfiche WebLink
living in Louisville near Pasquale and Filomena Romano in records.) Pasquale Romano worked <br />as a coal miner and, later in life, as the operator of a service station in an unknown location. <br />Records indicate that Pasquale and Filomena Romano lived on their property, but whether it <br />was on this specific tract that is the subject of this report is not known. The 1910 census records <br />and the 1916 Louisville directory both appear to show them living in this section of Louisville. In <br />1924, they took steps to divide their property among their three daughters in three comparable <br />parts. To their daughter Mary Romano, they conveyed Tract 704A; to their daughter Lena <br />Polluconi, they appear to have conveyed Tract 704 just to the west of 704A; and to their <br />daughter Jennie Lombardi, they conveyed the land just to the south of both 704 and 704A. The <br />following section of an undated Boulder County map shows the locations of these tracts. The <br />historic structures on Tract 704A are the subject of this report. Pine Street is the east -west <br />street shown at the top of the cropped image. <br />Mary Romano married John Romano (1885-1947). He had been born in Italy and came to the <br />U.S. in the early 1900s. They had a daughter, Helen Romano (1910-2001). Mary Romano <br />married then John Henry Waugh (1892-1982) in 1943. He worked as a blacksmith. <br />Helen Romano married Karl Stumpf (1909-1988) in 1938. He worked as a soft drink distributor. <br />They had children John Stumpf and Mary Stumpf. Mary Stumpf married James Weiss. Their <br />daughter was Lara Weiss, who married Christopher Seidel. <br />2 <br />