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Resource Number: 5BL 11289 <br /> Temporary Resource Number: 157508434005 <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. It is significant for its <br /> association with the Baima family, an Italian immigrant coal mining family, and for its 41-year association with <br /> the Sahm family. <br /> 43. Assessment of historic physical integrity related to significance: The property has integrity of location, setting, <br /> workmanship, feeling and association. Window modifications and infilled porches on the southeast and west <br /> sides, and replacement siding, date from the period of significance and do not represent a loss of integrity of <br /> materials and design. <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: Jefferson Place is eligible as a State Register and local historic district. There is <br /> potential for a National Register historic district. The house, shed and garage are contributing structures to a <br /> State Register and local historic district, and to a potential National Register historic district. <br /> Discuss: This building is being recorded as part of a 2010-2011 intensive-level historical and architectural <br /> survey of Jefferson Place, Louisville's first residential subdivision, platted in 1880. The purpose of the survey is <br /> to determine if there is potential for National Register, State Register or local historic districts. Jefferson Place <br /> is eligible as a State Register historic district under Criterion A, Ethnic Heritage, European, for its association <br /> with European immigrants who first lived here and whose descendants continued to live here for over fifty <br /> years. The period of significance for the State Register historic district is 1881 — 1980. Jefferson Place is <br /> potentially eligible as a National Register historic district under Criterion A, Ethnic Heritage, European. <br /> However it needs data to determine dates of some modifications, and to more definitely establish the significant <br /> impacts of various European ethnic groups on the local culture of Louisville. The period of significance of a <br /> National Register district is 1881 — 1963. Jefferson Place is eligible as a local Louisville historic district under <br /> local Criterion B, Social, as it exemplifies the cultural and social heritage of the community. <br /> European immigrant families flocked to Colorado coal mining communities, including Louisville, in the late <br /> nineteenth and early twentieth centuries in search of economic opportunities they could not find in their own <br /> countries. Louisville's Welch Coal Mine, along with other mines in the area, recruited skilled workers from <br /> western Europe. In the early years before 1900, most of the miners who lived in Jefferson Place came from <br /> English-speaking countries. <br /> Immigrants from England brought a strong tradition and expertise in coal mining. The English are widely <br /> credited with developing the techniques of coal mining that were used locally, and they taught these techniques <br /> to other miners. The British mining culture was instilled in the early Colorado coal mines. English immigrants <br /> also brought expertise in other necessary skills such as blacksmithing and chain forging. <br /> Later Jefferson Place residents arrived from Italy, France, Austria, Germany, Hungary, Slovakia, and Slovenia, <br /> among other places. The Italians eventually became the largest single ethnic group in Jefferson Place and in <br /> Louisville as a whole. About one-third of the houses in Jefferson Place were owned and occupied by Italian <br /> 7 <br />