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Archive of posts filed under the History category.

Highland or Highlands?

Most people familiar with Denver know there is a difference between the names Highland and Highlands to describe the area northwest of Downtown, but I suspect few are very clear as to when to use the one versus the other or if there should be any distinction at all. Even on my DenverInfill maps, I use the name Highland for the entire district, even though I know that’s not entirely accurate. So, in the spirit of civic enlightenment, here’s a brief primer on the difference between Highland and Highlands. My sources for this information are the books Rediscovering Northwest Denver by Ruth Eloise Wiberg and Denver, A Pictorial History by William C. Jones and Kenton Forrest.

The first attempt in establishing a settlement in what is today Denver occurred on September 24, 1858, when some Kansans established the St. Charles Town Association, which claimed the area immediately east of the Platte River and north of Cherry Creek (known today as Lower Downtown). However, they didn’t stick around to actually settle the site; instead, they went back to Kansas to seek a legal town charter from the territorial legislature with plans to return in the Spring of 1859.

Meanwhile, a separate party—from Georgia—established the Auraria Town Company on November 1, 1858 and immediately started building cabins and laying out streets in the area immediately east of the Platte and south of Cherry Creek. Consequently, we will officially celebrate the sesquicentennial of our city’s founding on November 1, 2008, thanks to those Georgians and their settlement named after the town of Auraria, Georgia.

Another party of Kansans, led by General William Larimer, showed up a few days later and unilaterally “assumed” the St. Charles Town Company’s claim and established the town of Denver City on November 17, 1858 in the same area east of the Platte and north of Cherry Creek. (Later, the St. Charles people would return but they failed to assert their claim.) On December 11, 1858, General Larimer waded across the Platte and established on the west side of the river the third town in the area, Highland (without the “s”). Of particular importance to this blog topic is that the western boundary of the town of Highland was Zuni Street (Gallup Avenue at the time).

Among these three towns, not quite one hundred cabins existed that first winter of 1858-1859.

The towns of Auraria and Denver City didn’t get along very well. A rivalry existed as to which town would become the dominant community. Although Auraria had the early lead, thanks in part to the fact that Denver City had the stagecoach station and the only official U.S. Post Office for the three towns, Denver City prevailed. On April 3, 1860, Auraria residents voted to merge with Denver City, and Highland joined in as part of the merger too. The new combined town was named just Denver, and had a population of about 4,700. The area that was once Highland became known within the local government as North Denver, Auraria became West Denver, and Denver City became East Denver.

Over the next decade or so, most of the growth in Denver occurred east of the Platte. But by the mid-1870s, the land to the west of the original town of Highland—i.e. west of Zuni Street—finally caught the attention of a real estate speculator. In the area around what is today W. 32nd Avenue and Federal Boulevard, a new upscale subdivision named Highland Park was platted in 1875 that was modeled after a Scottish village and included curvy streets with names like Argyle, Dunkeld, Caithness, Firth, and Fife. Dozens of additional subdivisions sprang up nearby and later in 1875, the town of Highlands (with an “s”) was established. The eastern boundary for the town of Highlands was Zuni Street (the western boundary for the original Highland), and Highlands eventually extended north to W. 38th Avenue, south to Colfax, and west to Sheridan. Its city hall was located at the corner of 26th and Federal where Denver Fire Station #12 is today.

Highlands was an elite suburb that looked down (literally and figuratively) upon the dirty, crowded, smoggy, crime-ridden city of Denver. Highlands prided itself on its clean air, beautiful gardens and tree-lined streets and, in particular, its high moral standards. Thanks to a fee of $5,000 to obtain a town of Highlands liquor license, there wasn’t a single bar in the entire community. While sinful Denver surged by 1890 to a population of 106,000, affluent clean-living Highlands counted about 8,000 residents.

Denver tried to annex the town of Highlands several times, but Highlands residents always voted against it. Finally, it was their financial state that caused Highlands to give in. The lack of an industrial tax base, a treasury depleted by the Silver Panic of 1893, and a long list of needed infrastructure investments left the town with little choice. On June 22, 1896, the town of Highlands voted to be annexed to Denver.

That’s the story. So what does this mean for us today with regards to the Highland versus Highlands question? I suppose it means that if you are referring specifically to the oldest part of northwest Denver closest to Downtown (east of Zuni Street including the little section of the Downtown street grid west of the river), you should probably call it Highland, and if you are referring to anything west of Zuni, you should probably call it Highlands. Or, call the whole thing Highland and distinguish the part closest to Downtown and the Platte River as Lower Highland. But please, please, whatever you do, just don’t call it “LoHi”!!


Steel’s Department Store Grand Opening

The December 16, 1922 issue of the “Steel Sparks” newsletter describes the scene on December 9, 1922 in Downtown Denver as over 120,000 people jammed the new Steel’s Department Store at 16th and Welton, now the renovated Sage Building.
To read the full account of the Denver store opening, which included in the basement a 500-seat Cafeteria complete with a 10,000-dish-per-hour dishwashing machine, click here to download it in PDF (2.9 mb).

Here’s a photo from the newsletter of the Steel’s Department Store the afternoon before the grand opening:

Throughout these many newsletters, President L. R. Steel has always been referred to in glowing terms and hailed as the glorious leader and beloved founder of the Steel’s department store chain. Interestingly, according to researcher Dave Dyer, Mr. Steel was deposed as the head of the company just two weeks after the Denver store opened. Perhaps he personally wrote the newsletter. In March, 1923, Mr. Steel died of a stroke and the company went out of business just a few months later.


More Steel’s Department Store Photos

If you’ve been following this blog over the past couple of months, you know that Dave Dyer in Texas is researching the history of Steel’s Department Store, the long-defunct company that built in 1922 what is now the Sage Building on Block 162. Dave’s been kind enough to send me scanned images and articles from the Steel Company’s newsletters when they relate to the Denver store. For previous blogs on this topic, go here, here and here.

Dave is nearing the end of his stack of Steel newsletters, so this may be it. Here’s a page from the December 9, 1922 issue with a photo of the completed building (with fake clouds added, no less):

One other interesting photo from the same newsletter is of the Steel’s Denver warehouse:

No where in the newsletter does it say what street it’s on, but it’s clear from the photo that the street address for the warehouse is 2133 – 2139, and the taller building next door has an address of 2145. Anyone out there think they know what street the warehouse was on?

UPDATE: Thanks to Scott (see Comments) for figuring it out: 2145 is the historic building with the brewpub attached to Coors Field. The Steel’s warehouse building is no longer there… demolished to make way for the stadium or perhaps razed even before then. It was still standing at least in 1979 when the photo posted at the Denver History Tours blog was taken.


Red White and Blue for the Sage Building

With exterior renovations complete, the Sage Building at 16th & Welton is recreating the look from its 1923 grand opening as Steel’s Department Store by decorating the building with bunting and US flags… nicely appropriate to celebrate next week’s Democratic National Convention. Here’s a shot from a few hours ago when just the first few flags had been installed:

When complete, it should look something like this:

Thank you, Evan Makovsky, for bringing this building back to life in so many ways!


Steel Building Under Construction

A few weeks ago, Dave Dyer, who’s researching the long-defunct L. R. Steel Company, sent me some scanned images of the company’s newletter showing the building once located at 16th and Welton before the current structure was built, and the rendering of the proposed Steel Building.

Dave continues to work his way through several years of the company’s newsletters, and when he comes across something about the Denver store, he sends me a copy. So, here are some of the latest images in the exciting saga of the development of the “new” Steel’s Department Store in Downtown Denver:

First, from the March 11, 1922 newsletter, a series of images of the old store being demolished:

Next, from March 18, 1922, the groundbreaking ceremony, featuring President Steel himself:

From May 20, 1922, a two-page spread of photos of the excavation for the new structure (zoom to view at full size):

Dated June 24, 1922, the new building is starting to rise:

From July 22, 1922, the new structure is almost topped off:

Don’t you wish our 21st Century infill projects would go from proposal to demolition to construction to completion as quickly as the Steel Building did?

Thanks again to Dave Dyer for his willingness to share his research! More to come.


Original Steel Building Rendering

As a follow up to my blog of two days ago about the historic Steel/Fontius building, Dave Dyer sent me another image from the Steel Company’s newsletter—this time of the September 3, 1921 issue, showing an artist’s rendering of the “proposed” Steel Building. Thank you again, Dave. This is good stuff.

By the way, I have it on good authority that the correct pronunciation of “Fontius” is fon-shus, not fon-tee-us.