Genoa
MARTIN HOMESTEAD
57920 County Rd.
State Register 3/12/1997, 5LN.211
The homestead evolved architecturally over a period from 1899
to 1916. The Martins homesteaded the land in 1899, and the fourth
generation of the same family continues to work the farm. The property
includes the original sod house and a large frame barn, both typical
in design, materials, and workmanship for their place and period
of construction.
WORLD’S WONDER VIEW TOWER
30121 Frontage Rd.
State Register 12/13/1995, 5LN.194
The 1926 World’s Wonder View Tower rose on Colorado’s eastern
plains as a commercial and recreational center designed to profit
from the needs of rail and highway travelers. Tourist facilities
like the tower once dotted every major western highway. They now
represent a rare and disappearing resource.
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Hugo
HEDLUND HOUSE
617 3rd Ave.
State Register 3/12/1997, 5LN.100
The circa 1877 Hedlund House is part of the first homestead filing
in the Hugo area. The house is a wood frame structure typical of
its place and period of construction.
HUGO MUNICIPAL POOL
US 287 and 6th Ave., Hugo
National Register 7/24/2008, 5LN.206

On September 2, 1935, the Town of Hugo submitted a Works Progress
Administration project proposal for the construction of a “concrete
swimming pool together with bathhouse, landscaping and grading and
other necessary work to complete a City Park.” Actual construction
began a year later. Work halted twice, once so the WPA crew could
finish the Hugo gymnasium/auditorium project and again in July 1937
for the crew to mix and spread poison bait in the regional battle
against grasshoppers. The still unfinished facility opened to the
public on Saturday, June 18, 1938. The bathhouse is a good example
of WPA Art Moderne design, typifying the modern styles that predominated
projects in northeast Colorado. With walls constructed of adobe, the
bathhouse mixes traditional construction techniques with modern design.
The WPA used adobe construction on many projects as it was inexpensive,
but labor intensive, fitting with the WPA’s unemployment relief mission
by minimizing spending on materials and maximizing spending on labor.
The property is associated with the
New Deal Resources on Colorado’s Eastern Plains Multiple
Property Submission. (2007 photograph)
Full nomination (PDF, 364kb)
HUGO UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD ROUNDHOUSE
Adjacent to Union Pacific RR right-of-way
State Register 5/14/1997, 5LN.195
The 1909 roundhouse is associated with the operation and maintenance
of the Union Pacific Railroad in eastern Colorado. It is Colorado’s
most intact Union Pacific example and one of only four surviving
roundhouses in the state.
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Limon
CARPENTER BARN
30560 Colo. Hwy. 71, Limon vicinity
State Register 9/10/2003, 5LN.311

The circa 1900 Carpenter Barn is a good example of a modest sized,
platform-framed and gambrel-roofed dairy barn. The barn exhibits
the large loft indicative of the type as well as the grade level
concrete floor and abundant windows. Though moved from its original
construction site in 1950, the barn continued to be used after
its relocation.
LIMON RAILROAD DEPOT (Limon Heritage Museum)
899 1st St.
State Register 12/12/2001, 5LN.221
The town’s location at the intersection of the Union Pacific Railroad
and the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad, and its designation
as a division point on the latter, made Limon an important regional
rail center and a major source of local employment. The 1910 wood
frame depot is one of only three Rock Island depots in Colorado
remaining in their place of operation. Modernized by the Rock Island
in the late 1930s, the depot is important for its design adaptations
that allowed it to effectively serve and manage traffic at a major
rail junction into the 1950s. In 1990, the Mid-States Port Authority
donated the building to the Limon Heritage Society, and it now
serves as a museum.
LINCOLN THEATRE
245 E Ave.
State Register 3/10/2004, 5LN.327
The Lincoln Theatre is Limon’s longest surviving movie theatre. Opening in 1938
as the Cactus Theatre before assuming the Lincoln
name in 1949, the theatre has operated continuously to the present.
WALKS CAMP PARK
63551 County Rd. 27, Limon vicinity
State Register 3/11/1998, 5LN.94
Since the creation of the Walks Camp Park Association in 1915,
the agricultural community north of Limon has operated the park
as a recreational complex. The 1930 Grandstand, exemplifying a
basic design type common in the first half of the 20th century,
provides spectator seating for sporting events and community celebrations. The Recreation Hall,
moved to the park in 1944 from the former
Civilian Conservation Corps camp in Hugo is of typical CCC design
and provides additional sheltered space for a variety of community
functions.
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