112 Redstone Blvd., Redstone Historic District - Redstone, CO
Posted by: Outspoken1
N 39° 10.846 W 107° 14.383
13S E 306543 N 4339226
Most of the contributing buildings in Redstone have been lovingly restored and either continue as homes and business locations.
Waymark Code: WMFP37
Location: Colorado, United States
Date Posted: 11/11/2012
Views: 1
"122 Redstone Blvd. One-and-a-half story rectangular dwelling with wood shingle siding and raised stone foundation. Steeply pitched hip roof with flared, overhanging, boxed eaves. Upper facade features three gabled dormers with wood shingles and windows with six panes. Dormers cut below eaves. Symmetrical facade with center, projecting, entrance bay with shed roof supported by slender, squared, wooden columns atop solid, shingled porch walls. Center door flanked by double-hung windows with plain wooden surrounds. Rear addition. Two historic buildings are also on the property: a board and batten shed (37); and a shingled privy with cupola." (from (
visit link) , section 7, pg. 6)
"The Redstone Historic District is located in and near the unincorporated community of that name in western Pitkin County, Colorado, United States. It includes the original community of Redstone as built by Colorado Fuel and Iron (CFI) for the coal miners it employed. In 1989 it was recognized as a historic district and listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
Redstone was originally a company town. John Cleveland Osgood, CFI's president at the time, spent lavishly to create quality housing for miners and their families, as well as various other public buildings, in an effort to forestall unionization. Architect Theodore Boal designed simple yet attractive structures by adapting various Victorian architectural styles. The district includes as contributing properties Osgood's estate, Cleveholm, and the Redstone Inn.
At first very populous and successful due to the high production capacity of the nearby coke ovens, Redstone was almost abandoned within a decade when it became too costly to transport coke from the remote community to CFI's new steel mill. A handful of residents remained, keeping Redstone from becoming another one of Colorado's many ghost towns. Some of its original buildings were demolished over the years. Eventually the town rebounded slightly and today is home to a small arts community; many of the remaining buildings have been restored. It is one of the few intact company towns remaining in the state." (from (
visit link) )