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The T. M. Callahan House, also known as the ‘’’Sweeny-Callahan House’’’, at 312 Terry St. in Longmont, Colorado, is a large Queen Anne-style house built in 1892 and expanded in 1897 and 1908. [2] It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1985. [1] It is now an event venue known as the Callahan House & Garden. [3]
May 20, 1983 (300 E. Simpson St. Lafayette: 17: Denver Elevator-Grain Elevator: Denver Elevator-Grain Elevator: February 14, 1986 (Tract 712 near State Highway 42: Louisville
the Dickens Opera House (listed in 1987), and; the Longmont Carnegie Library (listed in 1992). [4] [5] The district map shows an irregular outline enclosing an area equivalent to about six complete city blocks. [6] The district was designated in a ceremony at the Firehouse Art Center in February, 2017. "As a result of efforts that began in 2012 ...
Shiloh House may refer to: Shiloh House (Sulphur Springs, Arkansas), listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) in Benton County; Shiloh House (Zion, Illinois), NRHP-listed in Lake County; Shiloh House (Benton Harbor, Michigan), NRHP-listed in Berrien County; Shiloh Youth Revival Centers, a 1970's Jesus People communal movement ...
Callahan House may refer to: in the United States (by state then city) Matthew Callahan Log Cabin, Aspen, Colorado, listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) in Pitkin County; T. M. Callahan House, Longmont, Colorado, listed on the NRHP in Boulder County; J. W. Callahan House, Bainbridge, Georgia, listed on the NRHP in Decatur ...
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A farmstead house built in 1893 is included, and also a Tudor Revival house, the "Hoverhome" or Hover Mansion, which was built in 1913–14. [2] [3] The latter was designed by Denver architects Robert S. Roeschlaub and Frank S. Roeschlaub. The site also includes agricultural buildings dating from c.1902 to c.1910, developed after Charles Hover ...
In 1940, the museum opened to the public with exhibits in the carriage house at the Callahan House. The museum became a department of the City of Longmont in 1970. [1] In 2002, the new $6 million Longmont Museum & Cultural Center opened at 400 Quail Road in south Longmont, nearly doubling the museum's exhibition and program space. [2]