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Arapahoe Acres
Arlington Park
Baker
Belcaro
Bonnie Brae
Capitol Hill
Cheesman Park
Cherry Creek
Cherry Hills Vista
Circle Drive
City Park
City Park South
Congress Park
Corey Merrill
Country Club
Country Club North
Country Club South
Crestmoor Park
Curtis Park
Downtown
Highlands
Hilltop
Humboldt Island
Mayfair
Montclair
Morgan's Addition
Park Hill
Platt Park
Polo Club
7th Avenue Historic District
Southern Hills/Wellshire
Stokes
University Park &
Observatory Park
Uptown/City Park West
Washington Park
Whittier & Cole
Wyman's Historic

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23rd Avenue to 40th Avenue & Blake Street,
Downing to York

The Cole-Whittier neighborhoods were in turmoil
in the post-World War II era. The Civil Rights movement,
Great Society and Model Cities programs, however,
had a marked influence on Cole-Whittier. Money was
poured into the area during the 1970s, providing a
new Recreation Center and the Ford-Warren Library.
Urban Renewal Funds helped plant trees and add Morrison
Park along Martin Luther King Boulevard (formerly
32nd Avenue) Many streets south of Martin Luther King
Boulevard were turned into cul-de-sacs and neighborhood
parks and playgrounds. The area further benefitted
by the rediscovery of its many fine old houses - a
theme that marked older Dnever neighborhoods in the
1970s.
By the 1980s, Cole-Whittier had become a neighborhood
of contrasts. It is an area for those looking for
real estate values who treasure being in the midst
of a dynamic, ever - evolving hub of the city.
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| The Cole-Whitter neighborhoods embody a history of
Denver. One of the city's oldest sections, it combines
a vast array of architectural styles ranging from stately
Victorian
mansions to modest 1950s housing. It is particularly
marked by numerous distinctive school buildings and
churches, each having a fascinating story in its own
right.
Early architecture in the neighborhood reflected
the railroad presence. Styles in the area include
Victorian,
Queen Anne, Bungalows
and Row houses. There are a few Victorian mansions
that were homes to railroad executives. Buffalo Bill
Cody spent his last years at his daughter's sedate
Queen Anne home at 2932 Lafayette Street.
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| Landmarks |
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ANNUNCIATION CATHOLIC CHURCH
3601 Humboldt Street
Romanesque Revival cornerstone of the Cole neighborhood
designed by Frederick W. Paroth in 1907. Wonderfully
old-fashioned interior features 20-foot-high Carrara
marble altar and stained-glass windows from the Mayer
Company in Munich, Germany. |
©1996 By Leonard Leonard &
Associates, Inc. All rights reserved. Duplication in whole
or in part without permission is prohibited.
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