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This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in downtown Denver, Colorado, United States. Downtown Denver is defined as being the neighborhoods of Capitol Hill , Central Business District , Civic Center , Five Points , North Capitol Hill , and Union Station .
St. Dominic's Church (Denver, Colorado) St. Elizabeth's Church (Denver, Colorado) St. Ignatius Loyola Church (Denver, Colorado) St. James Episcopal Church (Meeker, Colorado) Cathedral of St. John in the Wilderness; St. John's Greek Orthodox Church (Pueblo, Colorado) St. Joseph's Polish Roman Catholic Church; St. Joseph's Roman Catholic Church ...
The properties are distributed across 48 of Denver's 79 official neighborhoods.For the purposes of this list, the city is split into four regions: West Denver, which includes all of the city west of the South Platte River; Downtown Denver, which includes the neighborhoods of Capitol Hill, Central Business District, Civic Center, Five Points, North Capitol Hill, and Union Station; and Northeast ...
The oldest one-room schoolhouse in Colorado and the last standing building in Doyle Settlement. Four Mile House: Denver, Colorado: 1859 Residence Oldest house in Denver, possibly oldest frame house in Colorado. [1] James H. Baugh House: Wheat Ridge, Colorado: 1859 Residence It is a log cabin encased inside a 1904 frame house. 300 Spring Street
This page was last edited on 8 November 2016, at 09:18 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
The building of this church was sponsored by Antonio de Ordóñez y Alcocer, to give thanks to his patron Saint Cajetan (San Cayetano in Spanish). [2] [4] The La Valenciana mine was first worked in 1558, but abandoned in 1559 as it was thought to be exhausted. [5] The earnings from the mine financed the building of the church. [5]
By May 1761, a report said the mission had a house with a lock and a half-built church. [3] A church report in 1772 described the mission as having a population 64: 21 men, 24 women and 19 children. It described the location as being on an open plain with good lands, but that the Indians do little or no farming, and that there was no church or ...
St Joseph's was the site of a mass excommunication of more than 100 parishioners, after it was found that Father Malone had embezzled a large sum of money. 637 Galapago (also known as the Samsonite house), across the street from the church was built for the sum of $12,000 in the name of Father Malone's mother. The embezzled sum was also $12,000 ...