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2017-01-27_REVISION - M1990041
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2017-01-27_REVISION - M1990041
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Entry Properties
Last modified
6/16/2021 6:15:11 PM
Creation date
1/30/2017 10:46:15 AM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
DRMS Permit Index
Permit No
M1990041
IBM Index Class Name
Revision
Doc Date
1/27/2017
Doc Name
Request for Technical Revision
From
Black Fox Mining LLC
To
DRMS
Type & Sequence
TR3
Email Name
MAC
WHE
Media Type
D
Archive
No
Tags
DRMS Re-OCR
Description:
Signifies Re-OCR Process Performed
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NPS F"104MG OMB AWOW M.1024-WIS <br /> (8m) <br /> United States Department of the Interior <br /> National Park Service <br /> National Register of Historic Places <br /> Continuation Sheet <br /> Section number 7 Page s <br /> distinctive style than the other types of social buildings. The massive <br /> stone Old High School (C7-10) and Register-Call Building (C4-1) with high <br /> arched windows and entrances are vernacular with Romanesque Revival <br /> elements. Churches built before the 1870s either are brick and wood frame, <br /> or a combination of the two, and are of a predominantly Gothic Revival <br /> style. The Clarke Elementary School (C4-14) and Gilpin County Courthouse <br /> (Cll-2) , both built in 1900, are Italian Villa style. <br /> The Presbyterian and Methodist congregations met in Washington Hall during <br /> the 1860s. The first permanent church in the area was the wood frame <br /> Presbyterian Church (B25-5) in Black Hawk, completed in 1863. In 1906, the <br /> building was purchased by the Black Hawk school board and converted for use <br /> as a gymnasium. It has fallen into disuse but occasionally serves as a town <br /> social hall. The Methodists began construction on their brick building (C5- <br /> 6) when the cornerstone was laid in 1864, but because of lack of funds it <br /> was not completed until 1871.° Both churches have simple Gothic Revival <br /> elements. <br /> III. Contributing Domestic Buildings <br /> Like the commercial and public architecture of the historic district, <br /> domestic architecture likewise shows distinctive evolutionary stages. Few <br /> residential structures remain in the district from the 1860s because of the <br /> lack of care and less permanent materials used in their construction, though <br /> one small wood frame house dates to 1859. Men with families were motivated <br /> to build more substantial houses than were transient prospectors who took <br /> time to construct only the most primitive shelter. But there were few women <br /> and children in the early years of settlement. Also, Indian attacks on the <br /> Plains interrupted supply lines, and sophisticated construction material was <br /> unavailable. As transportation improved and community stability was <br /> attained, better craftsmanship, better material, and the elaborate <br /> decorative elements brought in by the railroad, such as carved ornamentation <br /> for houses and iron fronts for commercial buildings, brought maturity to the <br /> construction trade in the three towns of the Gregory mining district. An <br /> 1870 delinquent tax list showed a number of log structures in Central City <br /> and Black Hawk. By the following decade, most of these had disappeared, and <br /> more substantial buildings dominated the architectural landscape as families <br /> were formed or the miners' and businessmen's affluence grew. <br />
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