Osgood Castle - Redstone, CO
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member Outspoken1
N 39° 10.144 W 107° 14.493
13S E 306352 N 4337931
There's also a legend that spirits hover in a secret passageway that connects the nursery to the servant's quarters. But what spooks McEvoy, who has lived on the property for six years, is the ghostly cigar smoke.
Waymark Code: WMM4DF
Location: Colorado, United States
Date Posted: 07/19/2014
Published By:Groundspeak Charter Member neoc1
Views: 4

"THE HISTORY OF THE REDSTONE CASTLE

Welcome to the Redstone Castle, the baronial home of John Cleveland Osgood, also known as Cleveholm Manor. In 1900, John Osgood became the 6th wealthiest man in America, making his fortune as a coal and steel pioneer in the West. Osgood developed the village of Redstone as a model company town, part of his sociological experiment implemented throughout his Colorado Fuel and Iron empire.

Originally the town had 88 individually-styled European cottages, complete with plumbing and electricity, as housing for the workers. There was a clubhouse, schoolhouse, an Inn for bachelor workers and a model farm. Dignitaries and businessmen from around the world traveled to Redstone in the early 1900s to visit the model town and a Denver reporter dubbed it “The Ruby of the Rockies”.

John Osgood’s own home, built in the style of an English Tudor and used as a hunting retreat, was constructed of large stone blocks hand-cut and quarried from the towering sandstone cliffs just across the Crystal River. Sparing no expense, he used the finest craftsmen of the era to design the features of his 42-room, 24,000 square foot home.

The wood paneling throughout the home was all crafted by Gustav Stickley and includes English oak and Honduran mahogany. Louis Comfort Tiffany designed the fixture work including three giant brass globes carved with lion’s faces, pineapples and angels that light up the English Great Hall. Persian carpets line the hallways and floors.

The Great Hall has eighteen-foot ceilings and features a sandstone block fireplace carved with the Osgood Coat of Arms and supporting a trophy elk mount. Even today, most of the furnishings are those that Osgood and his Swedish-born wife, Alma Regina Shelgrem, purchased as antiques in Europe while their Castle was being constructed.

The Dining Room is an elegant Russian statement from the court of the Czars, with Honduran mahogany paneling hand rubbed to a cherry red finish, topped by ruby red velvet wall cover and a gold leaf ceiling. Distinguished guests such as Teddy Roosevelt, J.P. Morgan and Prince Leopold dined here on wild game with the finest silver and china on the table.

Done in a Persian motif, the Library overlooks the front grounds and is a reminder of the deluxe railroad cars that the elite traveled in across the U.S. and Europe. The paneling and bookshelves are Honduran mahogany topped with green leather, gold leaf stamped wall cover. The gold leaf ceiling is hand-stenciled around the borders in a peacock design.

After dinner, the ladies would have retired to the femininely-decorated French Music Parlor. The room features green silk damasque wall covering, a frescoed plaster ceiling and diamond dust mirror above a Carraran Italian marbled fireplace.

The upper floors of the Castle include the original bedroom suites used by the Osgoods and their guests, complete with oversized porcelain claw foot tubs and standing sinks. Each of the bedroom fireplaces is made of unique colored tile or Italian marble. In the secluded north tower is a two-room suite featuring a domed ceiling decorated with birds and flowers.

Finally, at the ground level of the Castle is the gentlemen’s Game Room and Bar featuring the original billiards and card tables. One can imagine the high stakes being gambled upon and the smell of cigar smoke still wafting in the air.

The Redstone Castle looks much the same today as when it was built. The Crystal River flows along the foot of the sloping lawn, surrounded by forests of ponderosa pine, spruce and aspen. It stands as a monument to a time gone by, when men of great industry and wealth changed a nation and tamed a wilderness."from here.

The property is only available to the public by paid tour. Tours run daily throughout the summer (Memorial Day to Labor Day0, then on the weekends (weather permitting) the rest of the year. Tickets may be purchased at several stores in Redstone. Ticket information may be found here and the tour schedule here. This is an excellent tour that is not rushed and photography is allowed.

John C. Osgood was viewed as both a captain of industry who experimented with socialism and a union-busting, robber baron. More information on John Osgood may be found here, here and here. The NRHP paperwork (PDF) may be found here.
Public access?:
This location is available only by paid tour. Full information and links above in the long description.


Visting hours:
Daily tours Memorial Day to Labor Day; weekend tours the rest of the year (weather permitting). Full information and links above in the long description.


Website about the location and/or story: [Web Link]

Visit Instructions:
  • Please submit a photo(s) taken by you of your visit to the location (non-copyrighted photos only). GPS photos are also accepted with the location in the background, and old vacation photos are accepted. Photos you took of paranormal activity are great. If you are not able to provide a photo, then please describe your visit or give a story about the visit
  • Tell your story if you saw, felt, or smelled anything unusual. Post pictures of what you saw.
  • Add any information you may have about the location. If your information is important about the location, please contact the waymark owner to see if it can be added to the description.
  • Be careful and do not enter areas which are off limits or look dangerous. No waymark is worth harm. Use your 6th sense, because sometimes there are unseen things which are telling you to stay out.
  • Use care when using your camera flash so you do not disrupt any possible nearby residents. Time lapse can be the best tool on your camera in many circumstances.

 

Search for...
Geocaching.com Google Map
Google Maps
MapQuest
Bing Maps
Nearest Waymarks
Nearest Ghosts and Hauntings
Nearest Geocaches
Create a scavenger hunt using this waymark as the center point
Recent Visits/Logs:
There are no logs for this waymark yet.