The Colorado Governor's Mansion, also known as the
Cheesman-Boettcher Mansion, is a historic U.S. mansion in Denver, Colorado. It
is located at 400 East 8th Avenue. On December 3, 1969, it was added to The
U.S. National Register of Historic Places.
History
This building is located in Denver on the southeast corner
of 8th Avenue and Logan Street. The exact address is 400 E. 8th Avenue. The
Governor's Mansion is also known as the Cheesman-Evans-Boettcher Mansion for its
former owners.
The building was built in 1908 after a design by Denver
architects Willis A. Marean and Albert J. Norton. The house was originally
built as a residence for the widow and the daughter of Denver real estate
tycoon Walter Scott Cheesman.
The mansion was designed to accommodate two families. On
November 8, 1908, Cheesman's daughter, Gladys, married John Evans II, the
grandson of John Evans, the second territorial governor of Colorado. The
widowed mother and young couple lived together until the birth of the Evans'
first child, after which they relocated. On January 2, 1923, Alice Foster
Sanger Cheesman died.
Claude K. Boettcher purchased the mansion on February 23,
1923. Boettcher was the head of a financial empire that eventually included sugar,
livestock, cement, potash, steel, securities, utilities, and transportation.
Boettcher was famous for his lavish parties which included President Dwight D.
Eisenhower in 1952. Boettcher died on June 9, 1957, and his wife in 1958.
The house was inherited by the Boettcher Foundation. The
foundation offered the house to the State of Colorado as an Executive
Residence. The building needed a great deal of work, and its fate remained
uncertain for nine months in 1959 as three agencies of the State rejected the
offer. On the last day of 1959, Governor Stephen McNichols accepted the
building as a gift to the state.
From then until January, 2011, it has been the residence of
Governors Stephen L.R. McNichols, John Love, John D.Vanderhoof, Richard D.
Lamm, Roy R. Romer, William Owens, and William Ritter. The building was
restored in the 1980s under the direction of Edward D. White, Jr. Upon
taking office in January, 2011, Governor John Hickenlooper and his family
decided to maintain their private residence in Denver instead of moving to the
Governor's Mansion.
Architecture
The Cheesman-Evans-Boettcher Mansion is a formal, late
Georgian Revival house. The building is surrounded by a wrought iron fence with
cannonball finials on the brick posts. The walls of the mansion are red brick.
There is a white wooden frosting under a hipped roof with prominent gabled
dormers. The cornice is pedimented and dentiled. The west side portico has
massive, two-story fluted Ionic columns. There is a dramatic entry way with
grouped columns that support a porch which becomes a balustraded second-story
balcony. The semicircular sunroom was added by suggestion of Mrs. Cheesman in
1915, and it overlooks a small park now known as "Governor's
Park".
No comments:
Post a Comment