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HomeMy WebLinkAboutAUNTIE STONE STREET NAMING PLAT - 54-89 - - RECOMMENDATION/REPORT W/ATTACHMENTSSTAFF REPORT PROJECT: Street Naming - Stone Street - #54-89 OWNER: City of Fort Collins APPLICANT: Same PROJECT DESCRIPTION: This is a request to name a publicly dedicated street that will serve the new Olander Elementary School, located in the Horsetooth West Master Plan, west of Taft Hill Road, and north of Horsetooth Road. The proposed street name is Stone Street. RECOMMENDATION: Approval EXECUTIVE SUMMARY: The Poudre R-1 School District has purchased Parcel F of the Horsetooth West Master Plan for the new Olander Elementary School. This school will be served by a public street designated on the approved Master Plan as a collector street. The row for this street has been accepted by the City. The purpose of the plat is to name the street. The proposed name Stone Street was selected off the official list of street names adopted by the City Council for naming collector and arterial streets. The historic significance of the name Stone Street is attached. Staff believes the naming of a public street in front of an elementary school after an historic Fort Collins pioneer is appropriate as well as educational. RECOMMENDATION: Staff recommends approval of the acceptance of Stone Street by a Street Plat. DEVELOPMENT SERVICES 300 LaPorte Ave. P.O. Box 580 Fort Collins. CO 80522-0580 (303) 221-6750 PLANNING DEPARTMENT Develcwnt Services db Planning Department Citv of Fort Collins "Auntie" Stone Elizabeth Hickok Robbins Stone, an important pioneer woman in our commu- nity, was born in 1801 in Hartford, Connecticut. After being widowed with eight children to support, she remarried Lewis Stone in Minnesota in the 1850's. They moved west to Denver to run a restaurant after the Indian Outbreak of 1862. In 1864, as the soldiers were moving to a new site down- stream from Laporte, she and her husband arrived to build a cabin on the Denver Road (Jefferson Street) and run a boarding house for the officers. A good cook, she mothered the soldiers out at the end of nowhere and they adopted her, nicknaming her, "Auntie" Stone. She was the first white woman to be a permanent resident of the fort, and her cabin, now in Library Park, is the only building surviving from those days. In 1866 she was widowed again, but she elected to stay in the evolving new town and mothered the community as she had the soldiers. She started the first school in her cabin and recruited her niece Elizabeth Keays to be the first schoolteacher of fourteen children. She opened her cabin as a hotel taking in boarders. Many notables came and ate there including General Sherman. When the fort closed in 1867, she became the first businesswoman by going into partner- ship with the gunsmith, Henry Clay Peterson. Together they built the first brick kiln and flour mill in 1869. Through her later years she continued to be involved in all things in the community. Her parties, gaity, and friendliness were enjoyed by everyone, and when women in Colorado received the vote in 1894, Auntie exercised this right at 93 years of age. The bell on City Hall tolled ninety-four times in December, 1895, to mark the pass- ing of this favorite pioneer who, in the days of the fort, had been known from Julesburg to the Green River as "Auntie." by Carol Tunner, Historic Preservation Specialist Excerpts from "Fort Collins Yesterdays" by Evadene Burris Swanson and oral interview with Mrs. Ernest (Margaret -"Auntie Stone") Rogers. 300 LaPorte Avenue • P.O. Box 580 • Fort Collins, CO 80522-0580 • (303) 221-6750 ITEM NUMBER STONE STREET PLAT IBM