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Carbondale Architecture Tour
Item 13 of 43
This is a contributing entry for Carbondale Architecture Tour and only appears as part of that tour.Learn More.
789 Colorado Avenue was built in 1888, which makes it one of the older homes in town. In 1898 Philip Weaver sold it to JH Hartman, an English painter and paper hanger. He and his wife Isabella sold in 1907 to ZB & Mary Higgins. The next recorded sale was in in 1914 when the local Blacksmith, HJ Pattison, sold to Leo Leonhardy, who was a farmer. In 1920 Dorr Shores, a bank-cashier-turned- real-estate-agent, purchased the home with his wife, May. Wickman, Sinclair, Keepers, Vaughn, Messner, and Cullwick are names later associated with ownership of the home. This Late Victorian wood frame home displays the characteristic side gable with decorative shingles, wing construction, a simple front bay window, and turned posts. The rear wing and side wing were later added. Aluminum siding was added in the 1980's, and removed again in the 1990's.

Building, Plant, House, Fence

Late Victorian

Town of Carbondale 2010 Architectural Survey (Reid Architects, Inc.)

carbondalegov.org

Carbondale Historical Society