Colorado Preservation, Inc. is a 501(c)3 nonprofit charitable organization, Federal Tax number 74-2403583

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Windsor Mill

Prominently located in the Town of Windsor and listed on the National Register of Historic Places, the four-story Windsor Mill was constructed in 1899 and used as a flour and feed mill until 1990. The building is a fine architectural representation of the progression...

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Toltec Hotel

Built in 1910, the Toltec Hotel stands as one of Trinidad’s treasures.  One of many architecturally diverse landmark buildings within the El Corazon de Trinidad National Register Historic District, the Toltec is the only surviving terra cotta building in...

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Sundial Plaza/Cranmer Park

The land for Cranmer Park was acquired in 1908, with the first recorded reference to any site development occurring in 1923, when construction began on the terrazzo terrace. At the time the park was named Mountain View Park given that the platform offers an excellent...

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Sullivan Gateway

Located on the north side of Colfax Avenue near East High School, the Sullivan Gateway is an impressive and grand entry to the City Park Esplanade. Built in 1917, Sullivan Gateway was originally conceived by George Kessler in his 1906 plan for Denver City Parks....

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Studzinski Block

Century-old Victorian commercial buildings which occupy an important place in the commercial history of the City of Pueblo. Fueled by press about the listing, the public rallied to convince the owners of the block not to demolish the buildings. When first listed,...

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Shield Rock Art Site

The Shield Site dates to 1200 A.D., and is in an area that has some of the oldest Native American pictographs and petroglyphs in the state. As part of the area’s Canyon Pintado Project, the site falls into phase II ofthe  trail and interpretive installation...

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Satank Bridge

Spanning the Roaring Fork River near Carbondale, the Satank Bridge is a singular throwback to Colorado’s earliest period of wagon bridge construction.  Its abutments are hand-laid stone masonry, which had been used extensively in the 19th century before the...

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San Rafael Church

Traditional Hispanic Catholicism collided with conventional Anglo Protestantism in southern Colorado and resulted in the construction of the unusual San Rafael Church. Located in the San Luis National Historic District, the church represents the clash and subsequent...

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Ralston Cemetery

In June of 1850, Lewis Ralston made the first documented discovery of gold in Colorado.  The creek where he “found color” was named Ralston’s Creek by members of his party. The pull of the stories of riches in the California goldfields was too great for them to stop...

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