The land that today is Arlington Park,
Speer to 8th Avenue/Pennsylvania to Downing, (and
includes the Alamo Placita Historic District) was
purchased from Moses Hallett by a syndicate that included
Robert W. Speer in 1889. Development of the park began
in 1891 with the northern portion designated as Arlington
Park Addition and the southern portion designated
for an amusement park. The Arlington Park grand opening
was held on the Fourth of July in 1892. A crowd of
12,000 gathered along the banks of Cherry Creek to
view the main attraction--a huge theatrical performance
“The Last Days of Pompeii” which included
a large fireworks display to represent the eruption
of Mt.Vesuvius.
Development of the land was halted by the 1893 Silver
Crash and consequent depression. Named “Chutes
Park” in 1898, the park was developed to include
a railway, bicycle track, and even a waterfall to
travel down in small boats! Highlights included Professor
Barnes’ herd of elk which would dive off of
the chutes into a tank of water and Sadie Boynton
who would head down the chutes on a bicycle! The park
(and its bleacher seating) was destroyed by fire in
1901 and reopened as Riverside Park with a screen
to show early motion pictures. In 1902 the park was
re-opened as Arlington Park and by 1905, 150 homes
had been built within the subdivision (with original
boundaries being Downing to Steel and Bayaud to East
Fourth Avenue.
The containment of Cherry Creek within
concrete walls began in 1907. Property values in Alamo
Placita rose because the periodic flooding of the
creek was halted. Today, the area that follows along
the banks of Cherry Creek is one of Denver’s
most beautiful boulevards--Speer.
By the time of Robert Speer’s
death in 1918, only 45 lots remained unused within
the subdivision. Work on what is today Alamo Placita
Park began in 1927. The formal flower gardens stand
in the former lake bed and are one of Denver’s
loveliest gardens. Nearly ninety percent of present
Arlington Park construction was completed by 1930.
Both Speer Boulevard and Alamo Placita
Park were added to the National Register of Historic
Places and designated as official Denver Landmarks
in 1986.
Voted Denver’s Best Park in 1993,
the Alamo Placita/Arlington Park neighborhood offers
today’s residents the charm of the past along
with the many benefits of modern urban living.
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