"The Hotel With A Personality:" Denver's Colburn Hotel

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Hi Sami,

I suspect copper was used due to its low price at the time of construction. According to this USGS report (page 42), the average price of copper per pound in 1904 was $12.80. Only a few years prior in 1901, the average cost was $16.10 per pound.

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My grandmother was the head housekeeping in the 1950. I remember us picking her up after her day was done. Love that place. ♥️

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It says that the Colburn stopped being a hotel in December of 1989, but I worked there towards the end of 1990 and it was still a hotel. That hotel started my long career in the hotel industry. I started working there in 1990 and still am working in hotels

Thanks for your comment, Dan. We used the following article to derive that date:

"Colburn Hotel closes after 64 years - Movers, shakers, even Red Fenwick's horse pranced at landmark," by Paul Hutchinson, Denver Post, December 1, 1989. The first sentence of the article states, "The Colburn Hotel, a fixture on Capitol Hill for 64 years, will shut its doors tomorrow, a victim of changing times and a struggling economy." 

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I stopped there September 4th 1976 whilst doing a Winston Churchill travelling fellowship I traveled from Washington DC right through many US states by greyhound bus

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Judge Ernest A. Colburn was my great-grandfather. I stayed at the Colburn one night in 1972 on a cross-country road trip. Nice to know a piece of the family legacy is still standing.

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