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Harvesting Historical Riches
Got Preservation?
Originally published in Colorado
History NOW, September 2005
Baron Walter von Richthofen didn’t coin the “Got milk?”
advertising slogan, but he came awfully close. On September 15,
1888, the German-born promoter foreshadowed the popular white mustache
campaign by touting “the Swiss milk cure” at his new
restaurant, hotel, and sanitarium in the east Denver suburb of Montclair.
The Molkery, or “milk house,” offered fresh, unpasteurized
bovine beverages to the region’s many tuberculosis patients.
And if warm drinks didn’t do the trick, guests could sit on
sun porches constructed directly above the stables and inhale the
supposedly therapeutic fumes wafting upward through specially designed
floor grates. Not surprisingly, the baron’s business plan
failed udderly.
The Molkery’s recent preservation, on the other hand, has
been an unqualified success. A few years ago, the City of Denver
applied for a State Historical Fund grant to restore the aging property.
The building and surrounding grounds have been under municipal care
since 1908, when local citizens pushed the city to buy the former
sanitarium and turn it into a civic building. Immediately after
the purchase, the city opened up the structure’s interior
to accommodate neighborhood meetings, school groups, and church
gatherings. Craftspeople extended the once-odorous verandas, adding
neoclassical columns set on brick pilasters. Most of the original
character-defining features, including rhyolite stone bearing walls,
cupola, and top-floor stickwork trim were left intact. These modifications
served the community well until the 1990s, when deferred maintenance
contributed to the building’s gradual decline into eyesore
status.
Rather than putting the building permanently out to pasture, citizens
passed a neighborhood bond proposal that allowed the city to return
the Molkery to its historic place as a community center. A substantial
portion of the money raised through the bond went toward a cash
match for a State Historical Fund project. After receiving a $177,000
grant, the city reconstructed the missing cupola and three chimneys,
replaced fire-damaged roof framing, rebuilt the veranda’s
grand staircase, and stabilized and re-pointed exterior brick walls
and stonework.
Last fall, the city of Denver’s Parks and Recreation department
received two prestigious awards for their work on the Molkery, including
the Stephen H. Hart Award from the Colorado Historical Society and
the Community Preservation Award from Historic Denver, Inc. Named
after Colorado’s first state historic preservation officer,
Stephen H. Hart Awards recognize outstanding projects and individual
achievements in historic preservation throughout Colorado.
Today, the Molkery—more commonly known as the Montclair Civic
Building—houses Hands on Denver, a parks and recreation department
volunteer program designed specifically for citizen groups, individual,
and corporate service projects. Local groups can book space for
parties or meetings, and individuals are free to stroll the restored
verandas. But dairy cows are strictly prohibited.
BY BEN FOGELBERG, Editor
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