
4 minute read
Most Endangered Places list gains sites
BY CARL BILEK COLORADO PUBLIC RADIO
Preservationists are in a constant race against time to save historic places at risk of being lost not just to the wrecking ball, but also to neglect and the elements.
Each year, Colorado’s Most Endangered Places, a program of Colorado Preservation, Inc., adds new sites to the list. is year’s theme is “Closer to the Heart.”
“It really begins with community. A grassroots movement,” said Katie Peterson, director of Colorado’s Most Endangered Places.
“History is not just museums,” she told Colorado Matters senior host Ryan Warner. “It’s living, you know, just driving by all of the places that my great-great grandparents or my greatgreat-great-grandparents did. Feeling and reliving your ancestors’ past is truly what history is about.”
Colorado’s Most Endangered Places works with communities and partners to raise both awareness and money to try to save sites at risk of being lost. In the past 25 years, it’s highlighted 135 historical sites in Colorado. Fifty- ve were saved and eight were lost.
Junita Martinez lives in the town of San Francisco, Colorado in the San Luis Valley. She is working to save a small one-room adobe structure called the Feminilas Building which was spearheaded by the women’s auxiliary in the 1920s.
“ e building has gone into disrepair, disarray. It’s because I don’t think people understood the signi cance of it even though it was the community’s aunties and grandmas and mothers that belonged to it,” said Martinez. “It brings our community together and we can actually see a building that’s part of the roots of our community, part of the heart of our community, which I like. is building is the heart of our village.”
Here are the endangered locations featured on this year’s list, as well as one previous structure now listed as “saved” and another previous structure that has been lost.
Endangered: Feminilas Building, San Luis Valley, Costilla County e Feminilas Building is in San Francisco, Colorado, near San Francisco Creek, which brings water to the region. It is the only known structure separately owned and operated by the women’s auxiliary of the men’s labor organization, La Sociedad Protección Mutua de Trabajadores Unidos (SPMDTU). It was spearheaded by the women’s auxiliary as a place to meet and fundraise. e one-room adobe building is at risk of collapsing due to the elements. Colorado Preservation, Inc. says the building preserves the unique traditions, language, and culture of the San Luis Valley and the contributions of Hispanic women.
Endangered: Far View Visitor Center, Mesa Verde National Park, Montezuma County e Far View Visitor Center was built in 1967 and is one of the rst visitor centers in the National Park Service. It closed in 2012. One idea is to preserve and renovate the building which features a unique architectural design and create a center for the Indigenous community in the region. Colorado Preservation, Inc. is hoping to partner with the National Park Service to save this building.
Endangered: Garcia School, San Luis Valley, Costilla County e Garcia School is another adobe building, constructed in 1913. It is on the State Register of Historic Properties and is one of the last structures of Plaza de Los Manzanares, the site of the rst European settlement in Colorado. e Centennial School District has received a Colorado Department of Education and Connecting Colorado Students Grant (CCSG) for $3.2 million to create an internet and remote learning center in the Garcia School.
Endangered: Koch Homestead, near Aspen, Pitkin County e Koch Homestead was critical to the settlement and development of Aspen. Also known as the Adelaide Ranch, the remaining structures are deteriorating. e Koch Homestead provided services like meat, produce, dairy, lumber, and fresh water to the rst miners and settlers in Aspen beginning in 1887. e U.S. Forest Service owns the property which is near hiking trails.
Endangered: South Platte Hotel, Je erson County e hotel was built in 1913 after the original, constructed in 1887, was lost to arson. It is the only building left of the South Platte community and represents Colorado’s narrow gauge railroad history. e building has been owned by Denver Water since 1987 and while it is slated for demolition, there is growing interest among the community and historic organizations to work with Denver Water to nd an adaptive reuse of the building.

Saved: R&R Market, San Luis Valley, Costilla County e R&R Market, now known as the San Luis Peoples Market in Costilla County, had been family-owned since
1857 and was in danger of being lost to the ravages of time. It was the oldest business in the state. Dr. Devon Peña has since purchased the building and has opened a store that provides fresh produce to the region and will soon o er a hardware store.
Lost: Craig Depot, Mo at County e Craig Depot, built in 1917 in the town of Craig, was demolished in April after plans to relocate it fell through. e depot at one point served as a key shipping stop in the region for wool. Before it was destroyed, the Museum of Northwest Colorado was able to preserve a clock, a bench, a destination sign, and some of the bones of the building which are made of Carnegie Steel. is story is from CPR News, a nonpro t news source. Used by permission. For more, and to support Colorado Public Radio, visit cpr.org
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