Conrad Leslie (C.L.) Westerman's house on French Street, between Lincoln and Carter Avenues, in Breckenridge, Colorado. The two-story front gable wood frame home with bay window faced south. Covered front porch trimmed with decorative brackets. Two women sit on each gate post at the entrance to the home while three smartly dressed men lean on the fence. A wooden sidewalk runs along the front of the property and abruptly ends in dirt.
Westerman, OttoWooden buildings
77 Archival description results for Wooden buildings
Charles 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.
UnidentifiedEast facing side of Charles and Miriam Walker's two-story log house and wooden barn on Lincoln avenue in Breckenridge, Colorado. To the south (pictured left) is a white frame house bordered with a fence decorated with flags and banners draped from trees.
UnidentifiedJ. Frank Willis' one and half story front gable frame house on Gibson Hill, east of Breckenridge, Colorado. Circa 1880s-1903. Outside, Willis holds his bicycle by the handle as he props his left foot on the bike pedal. A second bike leans against a tree by a dirt path. He wears a cap, coat, and knickers with stockings.
UnidentifiedGroup portrait of all grades attending Breckenridge Public School in 1901. The students pose with their teachers in front of the 1882-built two-story frame building on Harris Street in Breckenridge, Colorado. A group of boys stand on top of the portico behind a sign with the words "Public School District No. 1". One student is identified: 3rd row, from the front, 7th person on the left is Roberta Klinesmith (married name Sharp). The schoolhouse was torn down and replaced with a brick structure in 1909.
UnidentifiedGroup portrait of students and teachers posed outside the 1882-built two-story wood frame schoolhouse on Harris Street in Breckenridge, Colorado. Above the portico is a sign with the words "Public School District No. 1". Circa 1890s-early 1900s.
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.
UnidentifiedThe west side of North Main Street, Breckenridge, Colorado, circa 1890s-early 1900s. Men stand on the wooden sidewalk outside the Corner Saloon owned by Johnny Dewers. Next door is a two-story flat roof building with awnings that advertise "W.P. Condon - Hardware - Dry Goods". More false front and wood frame buildings line the dirt packed street.
UnidentifiedFreemasons pose in the snow for a group portrait outside Masonic Lodge No. 47, on the corner of Main Street and Washington Avenue in Breckenridge, Colorado. The young men are dressed in sack suits, neckties and hats. Standing in the back row: [unidentified], Clyde McAdoo (on the right). Middle row: [unidentified], Oscar Paris (with white necktie), [unidentified]. Kneeling, front row: Harry Player, Bill Davis, [unidentified]. The two-story false front clapboard building has a glass storefront with an inset entry. Above between two sash windows is the Masonic symbol "G" enclosed in a square and compass and the number "47". Circa 1900s-1920s.
UnidentifiedMembers of Independent Order of Odd Fellows, Blue River Lodge No. 49 pose for a group portrait dressed in sack suits and the ceremonial I.O.O.F. sash. Most are wearing white gloves. The men stand side by side or sit in chairs placed in rows along the wooden boardwalk and on the dirt packed street. The photograph was taken in front of a wooden building with large four-pane casement windows, probably in Dillon, Colorado.
Westerman, OttoThe Blue River Hose Company procession on Main Street in Breckenridge, Colorado. Company members hold the leads to a fire hose cart decorated with American flags. Their uniforms include conductor's caps and bib shirts with the letter "H" sewn onto buttoned chest protectors. Men, women and children watch the parade from the Denver Hotel's second story balcony or from the covered portico below. Handwritten numbers identify the firemen's names: 1. Wm. F. Forman, Foreman; 2. R.L. Nute, First Assistant; 3. T.E. Eastland, Second Assistant; 4. B.O. Sheville; 5. R.R. Kirk; 6. Frank Collins; 7. C.C. Chamberlain; 8. R.M. McCollum; 9. Joseph Bush; 10. W.H. Woodside; 11. Ed Radigan; 12. Frank Davis; 13. D.W. Fall; 14. J.J. Madigan; 15. George Baker; 16. George Hannahs; 17. Ernest Campbell; 18. George Forman.
UnidentifiedThe boarding house at Brooks-Snider Mine on Shock Hill, west of Breckenridge, Colorado. Circa 1890s. Constructed of board and batten with side gables, the building has three front entry doors and several windows. A tall smokestack rises from the small wood addition. A woman, Nellie Rogers, stands next to a chair placed outside one of the doorways. Two men stand nearby. Fallen and dead trees cover the steep hillside behind them.
Ward, PJThe elevated wooden scaffold at the Gold Pan Mining Company in Breckenridge, Colorado. Circa early 1900s. Far left, a sluiceway with a rubber conveyor belt moved rocks from the gold excavating pit and into an ore trolley. The trolley moved up the elevated wooden scaffold and dumped the rocks over the edge, eventually creating a massive tailings pile. The Gold Pan Mine operations nearly reached the buildings and houses on the southern edge of town. Tenmile Range in the background; the Colorado and Southern (C&S) Railway tracks are in the foreground.
UnidentifiedThe Gold Pan Mining Company office building on South Ridge Street in Breckenridge, Colorado. Circa early 1900s. The two-story multi gable wood frame building with dormer windows featured five offices on the main floor, with bedrooms and a bath upstairs. A man dressed in a waistcoat and necktie stands on the covered porch. Boulders line the dirt walkway to the entrance. In the background is the elevated scaffold that carried rocks away from the Blue River and Gold Pan excavation pit.
UnidentifiedA rotary snow plow and four or five helper engines prepare to leave Breckenridge, Colorado, and begin the slow ascent to Boreas Pass east of town. Snowy Tenmile Range in the background. Circa February 1899, during the Big Snow event of 1898-1899.
Westerman, OttoStudents from the Missouri School of Mines travel by horse-drawn wagons down Main Street in Breckenridge, Colorado, on June 13, 1913. The group was on a school field trip to study the mines and mills in Valdora, Montezuma, and Argentine. Buildings line the west side of Main Street (pictured left to right): The Denver Hotel, after the portico and balcony was removed; The Denver Hotel's dining room, the two-story front gable building; Bruch's Barbershop and Store (with awning); a two-story false front building; a one-story false front building; and the Silverthorn Hotel, with side gables and a row of windows facing the street.
UnidentifiedGroup portrait of men and women on a wooden boardwalk that fronts the entry of a wood frame house. Sitting on the boardwalk is Irene (Clancy) Boyd. Back row, standing from left to right: Joe Pickett (cradling a baby in his arms), Josephine Pickett, "Mother" Pickett, Bessie (Warren) Blundell, Annie Jobe, "Mrs. Bond", and Lucy Fry. Standing in front row: Charles Bond and Nels Fry. Probably Breckenridge, Colorado, circa 1880-1890s.
Unidentified"Ski Photography Shoppe" on Main Street in Breckenridge, Colorado. Owner John A. Topolnicki, Sr. photographed Colorado backcountry scenes, abandoned mine sites and views of early Breckenridge, Arapahoe Basin, Keystone and Steamboat Springs ski resorts. He turned his photographs into postcards and posters for sale to tourists.
Topolnicki Sr., John A.Park Meadows Lodge in Breckenridge, Colorado. Located on Sawmill Road, two blocks west of town on the way to Peak 8 of the Breckenridge ski area. L-shaped, two-story wood frame building.
Topolnicki Sr., John A.The Denver Hotel on the west side of snow-covered Main Street, Breckenridge, during the "Big Snow" event of 1898-1899. Snowfall totaled over 32 feet that winter; it was so deep it reached the hotel's second-floor balcony. The two-story wood frame building featured paired gables and a shared false-front with the words "DENVER HOTEL". The Post Office shares the hotel's covered portico. Next door is a false front building with signs announcing "Bankrupt Stock" in the storefront windows.
Unidentified