The Tale of the Denver Spider Man

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Thank you. This may solve a mystery that has perplexed our family for decades and verifies a story my mother told.
"Shortly after my birth, my parents, older sister, and I moved to Henderson, Colorado into an old historic house built in 1887. It was located along the Platte River about 136th and Old Brighton Road south of Brighton. They nicknamed it, “Skunk Holler (Hallow)”. In fact, I celebrated my first birthday in this home. We lived there from approximately 1944 to 1947.
The history of the area is documented in Wikipedia. Quote: "In 1859, John D. “Colonel Jack” Henderson built a ranch, trading post, and hotel on Henderson Island in the South Platte River in Arapahoe County, Kansas Territory. Jack Henderson was the former editor and proprietor of the Leavenworth (Kansas Territory) Journal and an outspoken pro-slavery politician who had been accused of voter fraud in eastern Kansas. Henderson sold meat and provisions to gold seekers on their way up the South Platte River Trail to the gold fields during the Pike’s Peak Gold Rush. Henderson Island was the first permanent settlement in the South Platte River Valley between Fort Saint Vrain in the Nebraska Territory and the Cherry Creek Diggings in the Kansas Territory. Jack Henderson eventually returned to eastern Kansas and (ironically) fought for the Union in the American Civil War. Henderson Island is today the site of the Adams County Regional Park and Fairgrounds."
The 1887 Henderson Home was built on the land that Jack Henderson once owned. Overtime, it was a hotel, a boarding house, a brothel, and home to over forty known families. Being half Volga German (Germans from Russia), I researched the census records to learn about the history. Many of the families who lived in the area from the 1910s to the 1940s were of German descent. Many were Volga Germans.
My mother told several interesting stories about the house including one about a woman who was living alone in Denver. The woman would come home from work and find things moved or food missing. She did not think too much about it. She just assumed she had bumped the furniture before she left home or had eaten the groceries without remembering. One day, she returned home early and found a dirty and disheveled man standing in her kitchen. It turned out he was an escapee who had been hiding in her attic. He would sneak down during the day to use the bathroom and get a bite to eat. He was arrested and returned to prison.
At the same time, my parents would get up in the morning and find their attic scuttle (door) was moved slightly. My mother was scared, thinking that someone was in the attic. Day after day my father would put the scuttle back into place. Every morning they would find it moved again. She would insist my father go up there to check. This involved my father carrying a heavy ladder up the narrow steep stairs each day. Of course, he did not find a convict hiding or anything or anyone else for that matter. My father's ornery teenaged brother, who came from Kansas for a few months, was staying with them. After several days of this ritual, he finally confessed that he was the one moving the scuttle during the night as a prank.
The house has been moved to the Adams County Historical Society Museum complex at 9601 Henderson Road, Brighton, Colorado where it has been restored and furnished. It is available for tours along with a 1935 filling station, vintage firehouse, blacksmith shop, one-room school house, railroad caboose, Hoffman hall, and several museum buildings. Many events are held there including teas, car shows, craft fairs, heritage days, and holiday open houses.
I recall seeing a newspaper article about the man hiding in the woman's attic. I am looking for documentation to confirm or correct the story. I would appreciate your help in finding the article or information. I know that the Denver Public Library has some old newspapers available on microfilm."

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Well I guess he proved the doctors wrong eh? They said he would not live long yet he lived to be 84 ( outlived his doctor) like Benjamin Franklin! However he was a total sociopath for him to give his last words speech of thank you to the jury, D.A. and Judge that I will never have to be homeless anymore??? No remorse, guilt or empathy for his victims at all!

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