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| LITTLETON HISTORY | |||||
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Bemis Public Library
303-795-3961 Historical Museum 303-795-3950 Email comments about this page to Phyllis Larison QUICK LINKS — HISTORY
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Batschelet Building
George Anderson, whose office was on Main Street, drew the plans and served as contractor. The building front was constructed of red pressed brick. A wide staircase led to the second story which featured fourteen-foot ceilings and was used as an opera house and public meeting hall. In October 1908, at a Democratic rally in the hall, United States Senator Henry M. Teller and State Senator Ed Taylor addressed the voters. The first floor storefront was originally the One Price Cash House Company (O.P.C.H.), a dry goods dealer. Later it housed clothing and auto supply businesses. In the 1950s the Heckethorn Manufacturing and Supply Company (HECO) occupied the building. The Littleton Historical Museum has described the building as one of the finest remaining turn-of-the-century structures in downtown Littleton. Some of its attractive details are the overhanging eaves with decorative brackets and dentil moldings on the frieze.
Batschelet befriended the young Ralph Moody by hiring him as a cowhand on his ranch and letting him race his horses at the local fairgrounds. Moody later wrote Batschelet into two of his books, The Home Ranch and Man Of the Family, as "Mr. Batchlett." Edward Batschelet died in August 1912 of blood poisoning as a result of a wound to the head which he suffered in an altercation with three local men. He is buried in the Littleton Cemetery. At that time he apparently no longer owned the "Batschelet Building." It was called the Nickel Building. In 1994 the building was given historic landmark status by the city. At that time it was occupied by Georgio's restaurant and an appliance repair shop on the first floor and by offices and an artist's studio upstairs. Building owner Reeves and Associates reconstructed and restored the first floor exterior storefront by removing the frame and cedar shingle awning and replacing it with a glass, wood, and metal storefront facade similar to the original. In doing so, the original, decorative motifs above the first floor were discovered and retained. The windows on both floors were restored to full size. A cloth awning was installed above the first floor for the length of the building. Fritters restaurant occupied the west end of the newly reopened first floor space. In 2004, the upstairs contains offices; the first floor has restaurant and retail space. BibliographyBatschelet, Henry Earl and Evelyn Roberts Batschelet. Batschelet History. [n.l.]: Evelyn Roberts Batschelet, 1975. Littleton Historical Museum. "City Boards and Programs: Historical Preservation Board. Batschelet Building, 2569-2579 West Main Street." Littleton, Colo.: The Museum, 1993. Littleton, (Colo.) Independent. Littleton, Colo.: The Littleton Independent Publishers, 1888- . "Littleton Historical Building Survey (Main Street.) (Notebook.) Batschelet Building, 2569-2579 West Main Street. Littleton, Colo.: The Museum, 1992. ____. Photographic Archives and Biography/Place Name Files. Moody, Ralph. "My Home Town." Article in Littleton (Colo.) Independent. Ninetieth anniversary edition, 20 July 1978. Mount Rosa Chapter, National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution. Littleton Cemetery. Littleton, Colorado. Littleton, Colo.: Mount Rosa Chapter, National Society Daughters of the American Revolution, 1983.
Compiled by Doris Farmer Hulse Updated January 2004
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