Apr 15 2009

Peter Cottontail!

Published by under Random Thoughts

Is there another neighborhood out there in Denver like Montclair that hosts a neighborhood easter egg hunt? Okay, not just an easter egg hunt but really a neighbors chatting, kids running and searching for eggs all around the quaint and beautiful Montclair Park kind of easter egg hunt. I tell ya, this neighborhood has that yesteryear charm we all fondly recollect or think of when yearning for a community with the small town, American dream, sort of town.  Continue Reading »

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Mar 18 2009

This Blog is for you!

Published by under Random Thoughts

This blog will be shaped by current residents of Montclair and anyone looking to move into Montclair. This is a great forum for potential homeowners to post questions, comments, etc. to the residents of Montclair and get answers! Sure, one can certainly ask their Realtor but no one knows a neighborhood better than a current resident. Montclair has folks who have lived here for several decades and new families taking root and starting their families here. They all take such pride in this beautiful, lush, friendly, diverse community. It is such a nice neighborhood, you hardly see homes for sale! True sign of a solid, good neighborhood.

Please share any history, facts, fun stuff, info, recipes, etc.!

Deb Goetz

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Mar 18 2009

Who is Baron von Richthofen?

Published by under Random Thoughts

Do you recognize the monument in the blog header? It’s in honor of Baron von Richthofen, one of the original founders of the fine Montclair neighborhood.

Neighborhood History from Wikipedia!

Montclair was originally developed as a small suburban community east of Denver. The land was purchased and developed by the Montclair Town and Improvement Company in 1885. One of its founders, Matthias P. Cochrane, originally came from Montclair, New Jersey and named the new community in its honor.[2] The other founder, Baron Walter von Richthofen, was a German nobleman and uncle to Manfred von Richthofen, the celebrated World War I flying ace known as the ‘Red Baron’. The community was originally designed to attract wealthier residents who were turned off by Denver’s “400 saloons and forty Market Street bordellos”. [3] To this end, homeowners were required to purchase and build on lots that were twice the Denver standard size of 25 feet by 125 feet.[4] Homes were required to be at last three stories high, made of brick or stone. In addition, town trustees had to approve all plans and saloons and alcohol were forbidden.[5]

The community became the incorporated town of Montclair in 1888. In 1893, the crash of the silver market and the ensuing Panic of 1893 brought all development to a halt. Baron von Richthofen then began to promote the town as a health retreat, calling it the ‘Carlsbad of Colorado’. However, due to his sudden death from appendicitis in 1898, plans for a health spa, art museum, hotel, casino and pavilions never materialized. By 1900, the US Census recorded only eighty-eight families living in Montclair.

In 1902, the newly created City and County of Denver began to incorporate the town of Montclair. The town objected strongly to its inclusion and fought the City of Denver all the way to the State Supreme Court. Montclair lost and annexation was made final in 1903. Then-mayor Robert W. Speer eased the transition by beautifying and extending Richthofen’s system of parkways and boulevards from the central city into the suburb, planting many trees and erecting fountains and monuments. In 1907, the Montclair Improvement Association was formed to push the City of Denver into providing “graded, curbed, oiled and lighted streets, water and gas mains, a sewer system, parks and parkways and other services.”[6]

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Mar 18 2009

Where is Montclair?

Published by under Random Thoughts

Montclair is bordered by 6th Avenue Pkwy on the south, Quebec St. on the east, Holly St. on the west and Colfax Ave. on the north. Mayfair is to the west, Park Hill is to the north, Crestmoor and Lowry are to the south and east.

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