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Resource Number: 5BL11317 <br />Temporary Resource Number: 157508435013 <br />X Does not meet any of the above State Register criteria. <br />State Register Field Eligibility Assessment: Not Eligible <br />38. Applicable National Register Criteria: <br />A. Associated with events that have made a significant contribution to the broad pattern of our history; <br />B. Associated with the lives of persons significant in our past; <br />C. Embodies the distinctive characteristics of a type, period, or method of construction, or represents <br />the work of a master, or that possess high artistic values, or represents a significant and <br />distinguishable entity whose components may lack individual distinction; or <br />D. Has yielded, or may be likely to yield, information important in history or prehistory. <br />Qualifies under Criteria Considerations A through G (see Manual) <br />X Does not meet any of the above National Register criteria <br />39. Area(s) of significance (National Register): NA <br />40. Period of significance: NA <br />41. Level of significance: NA National State Local <br />42. Statement of significance: This house is associated with the historic development of Louisville as one of the <br />early twentieth-century homes in Louisville's first residential subdivision, Jefferson Place. Although Jefferson <br />Place was platted in 1880, little construction actually took place until the early years of the twentieth century. <br />The property is significant for its association with residential development in Louisville during the first half of the <br />twentieth century, and significant in the area of Ethnic Heritage: European for its association with European <br />(Austrian) immigrant coal -mining families who flocked to Colorado's coal mining communities in the late <br />nineteenth and early twentieth centuries in search of economic opportunities they could not find in their own <br />countries. It is especially significant because it has been owned by members of a single family throughout its <br />existence. The house is architecturally significant under Criterion C as an intact example of a Craftsman house. <br />43. Assessment of historic physical integrity related to significance: Since its c.1908 construction date, the property <br />has been modified very slightly and retains excellent integrity of setting, materials, design, location, <br />workmanship, feeling and association. <br />VII. NATIONAL REGISTER ELIGIBILITY ASSESSMENT <br />44. National Register eligibility field assessment: <br />Eligible Not Eligible X Need Data <br />45. Is there National Register district potential? Yes X No <br />Historic District Potential: This building is contributing to a Jefferson Place State Register or local historic <br />district, and contributing to a potential Jefferson Place National Register historic district. <br />There is also potential for a small State Register and local historic district comprised of this building along with <br />the associated adjacent houses at 722 Pine Street (5BL11317) and 720 Pine Street (5BL11316) located just to <br />the west. All three properties have been in the same family for over 100 years, and for 633 La Farge, the <br />ownership by one family has continued for nearly 130 years. Part of the significance of the history of these <br />properties is that they reflect the early settlement of Louisville by numerous German-speaking immigrants. This <br />potential small State and local historic district is significant under Criterion A, Ethnic Heritage, European, but <br />needs data to establish what ethnic or cultural traditions are significant as a result of the family's immigration to <br />Louisville. <br />6 <br />