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Historic Preservation Commission Agenda and Packet 2024 05 20
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Historic Preservation Commission Agenda and Packet 2024 05 20
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6/27/2024 10:14:53 AM
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6/26/2024 3:27:48 PM
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City Council Records
Meeting Date
5/20/2024
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Boards Commissions Committees Records
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Gigi Yang <br />Louisville Historical Museum <br />Department of Cultural Services <br />City of Louisville, Colorado <br />May 2024 <br />L <br />itvt)- <br />Louisville <br />COLORADO • SINGE 1878 <br />900 Main. History <br />Legal Description: W 73 FT LOT 7 BLK 1 LOUISVILLE O T <br />Year of Construction: 1947 <br />Summary: The history of 900 Main contributes to our understanding of Louisville's early business <br />growth and development and the use of property ownership for economic security, especially for <br />women. The businesses identified at this location are representative of changes in Louisville's <br />population, social trends, commercial district, and sustainable re -use of historic structures. <br />History of site prior to current building: <br />This property is part of the original plat of Louisville registered by Louis Nawatny in 1878. It was sold by <br />Nawatny in 1880 to John Little for $100. The early history of this property is documented in three <br />sections as John Little immediately divided and sold the Northwest quarter, the Southwest quarter, and <br />East half as individual lots. While the Northwest and East lots appear to be undeveloped in 1880, the <br />sale of the Southwest lot to Joseph Derfler notes, "quarter of lot 7 block 1 and House and all <br />improvements on % of lot" <br />Initial owners of the lots reflect Louisville's early immigrant demographics and family names including <br />Joseph Derfler and John Stoiber both from Austria, Victor Helburg from Germany, and John Little and <br />John Carlton both from England; whose families all arrived in the US and moved to Louisville in the <br />1870s and 1880s. <br />By 1910, members of the Carlton family owned all three partial lots. John Carleton (1838-1913) <br />purchased the East lot in 1880 and the Northwest lot in 1890. Jane Carlton (1849-1942) purchased the <br />Southwest lot in 1910. After John Carleton's death in 1913, his daughter Jane Ann Clark (1869-1938) sold <br />the Northwest and East lots to Jane Carlton in 1923, making her owner of the complete Lot 7 Block 1. <br />KES <br />
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