Quoted from the 1980 National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form: "205. Carl Enyeart House. 112 South Harris. 1910, one and one-half stories, shingle-faced, asymmetrical roof plan."
UnidentifiedCarl Fulton, holding two rock picks, and Charley Snyder, smoking a pipe, stand in front of a rough hewn log structure on Main Street, Swandyke, Colorado. The two-story log building (left) may be A.W. Coffin's Summit Hotel, later owned and managed by Fulton in 1902.
UnidentifiedCarrie (Davis) Condon stands at the entrance to a park, probably in the Denver, Colorado area. A sign posted on a tree reads "No Garbage Allowed Dumped on These Grounds". A dirt path leads through the pine trees. Circa 1899.
UnidentifiedQuoted from the 1980 National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form: "91. Carter Museum. 111 North Ridge. 1875, one story, horizontal log construction, salt box plan, tin roof, porch added before 1900 supported by turned posts and brackets with quatrefoil cutouts."
UnidentifiedQuoted from the 1980 National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form: "218. Castleman Cabin. 103.5 South High. 1979, one and one-half stories remodeled log cabin using original logs, gable roof, red standing seam metal roof, gable roof with cedar trim, scored plywood, rectangular plan."
UnidentifiedQuoted from the 1980 National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form: "60. Charles A. Finding Hardware Store. 120 North [correction - South] Main. 1885, two stories, stone false front, red sandstone, random rubble construction, pressed tin second-story addition on the front painted grey and applied to resemble the painted sandstone of the lower story, bracketed cornice beneath with rectangular coffers."
UnidentifiedCharles and Miriam Walker's house on Lincoln Avenue in Breckenridge, Colorado. Built during the months of March 1880 through February 1881, the two-story hewn timber house featured stacked square-bay windows. Behind the house (south) is a two-story board and batten wood building once used as a barn.
UnidentifiedCharles A. Finding (left) and another man stand in the doorway of Finding's redstone-front hardware store. A coal burning or parlor stove is visible through the open door. Etched in the glass window above the doorway is "C.A. Finding"; painted across the window frame are the words "Stoves, Tinware, Steam & Gas Fittings, Rope, Iron, Steel and Nails". The reflection of buildings across the street is visible in the large storefront windows. Adjacent the sidewalk and street is a standing water spigot. Quote from handwritten text on the reverse: "Finding Hardware Store - Mrs. Miner's father".
UnidentifiedInterior of the C.A. Finding Hardware Store on Main Street, Breckenridge, Colorado, circa 1894. Charles Finding, in suitcoat and necktie, leans on a desk against the wall. Another well-dressed man stands nearby. Potted plants line the shelf above and in the window. Calendars (dated 1891, 1892, 1893 and 1894) and illustrated posters and prints decorate the wall. A wooden spindle railing separates the office area from public space, with an ornate parlor stove on either side. Another desk, a bookcase and office chairs furnish the room and the corner edge of a glass case is visible in the foreground. Quoted from handwritten text on the reverse: "Probably Mr. Miner's office in his hardware store Breckenridge. Calendar on wall - October 1894".
UnidentifiedQuoted from the 1980 National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form: "172. Charles Levy House. 112 South French. 1900s, one and one-half stories, board and batten-faced, gable roof."
UnidentifiedQuoted from the 1980 National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form: "72. Charlie Richards House. 300 South Main. 1880, one story, clapboard-faced, gable roof, Palladian window on second story, scalloped shingles fill the gable."
UnidentifiedQuoted from the 1980 National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form: "135. Charlie Walker House. 211 Lincoln. 1874, two stories, broad-axe log construction, rectangular plan, pitch gable roof, bay windows on the east and west facades, visible second-story joints, random stone foundation, pediment-shaped lintels, colorful additions which retain the Victorian character of the town."
UnidentifiedQuoted from the 1980 National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form: "88. Charlotte Porter House. 213 North Ridge. One story, clapboard-faced, porched entrance with decorative brackets."
UnidentifiedQuoted from the 1980 National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form: "12. Chinese Laundry. 107 North Main. 1862, two stories, gable roof, broad-axe log construction, clapboard-faced street facade."
UnidentifiedQuoted from the 1980 National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form: "40. Chlipala Building. 401 South Main. 1978, two stories, below street level court, rectangular plan, deck for entrance to second story shops, square bay windows, flat roof, parapets, tabular steel deck railing."
UnidentifiedQuoted from the 1980 National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form: "122. Chris Kaiser House. 130 South Ridge. 1890s, two stories, clapboard-faced, rectangular plan, exposed coarse rubble foundations, irregular roof plan with many gables and dormers, two-story bay window, off-center open porch entrance with ground floor railing and square posts supporting the porch roof, a double-leaf carved oak door with an extended oval etched-glass pane in the center of each leaf. Also, multilevel, clapboard-faced front deck with wrought iron railings, octagonal gazebo at center and exposed coarse rubble foundation."
UnidentifiedQuoted from the 1980 National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form: "244. Christ George House. 200 South High. 1890s, two stories, cedar clapboard siding, balcony, simple gable roof with composition shingles."
UnidentifiedLow lying clouds hang over Breckenridge, Colorado, and the Tenmile Range. Looking west over a dense stand of evergreen trees, circa 1896-1900.
UnidentifiedQuoted from the 1980 National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form: "189. Colorado Mountain College. 103 South Harris. 1910, three stories, U-shaped plan, stretcher-bond brick arched windows, decorative stepped gables on U-shaped protrusions, ornate ramp/deck system for handicap access, turned columns with lights, balustrades."
UnidentifiedBuildings fronted with concrete sidewalks line both sides of Main Street in Breckenridge, Colorado, looking north. Circa after 1912. Utility poles line the east side of the dirt packed street. Across the street, two men and a dog stand outside the building adjacent to Evans Pharmacy. To the right is the Denver Hotel. The balcony and covered portico has been removed and boards are placed across the second floor doors. Next is a front gable two and half story frame building, then Bruch's Barbershop and Store with a barber pole out front. Further north is the Silverthorn Hotel.
Unidentified