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| LITTLETON HISTORY | |||||
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Littleton Museum
303-795-3950 Bemis Public Library 303-795-3961 Email comments about this page to Phyllis Larison QUICK LINKS — HISTORY
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I. W. Hunt BuildingNational Register—Contributing Building to the Downtown District, 1998
The single story building is constructed of red pressed brick and is typical of early 20th Century Commercial architecture. The simple style of the building is not without some detail. Brick piers project slightly above the roofline and are caped in concrete. There is concrete coping along the roofline. The entrance is composed of white enameled brick. Perhaps the most important original detail remaining is the enameled brick "H"s inset along the top and the plaque above the entrance "I. W. Hunt, 1919."
Hunt's Ford dealership was not the only important commercial operation to occupy the building. The Red Comet Fire Extinguisher Company moved to Littleton in 1933 and purchased the building in 1949. They continued their operations in the building until 1963. Red Comet was one of the nation's leading manufactures of fire extinguishers and a major employer in Littleton. The proximity of their Littleton operation to rail lines allowed their extinguishers to be distributed worldwide. Ironically, a fire occurred in the building shortly after their acquisition. Although one of Littleton's most destructive fires, the $40,000 of damages did not prevent Red Comet from restoring the building. Today, another important company in Littleton is housed in the building. In 1983 the building was renovated into the Little Town Complex. It now has a second story addition stepped back from the façade. The building now housed the Littleton Independent, which has been the community's hometown paper since 1888. BibliographyFront Range Research Associates, 1997 Inventory, Littleton Historic Buildings, Inventory Record for the I. W. Hunt Building, Colorado Cultural Resource Survey Inventory Form 5AH1264. Inventory Sources:
Last revised December 2003 |
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