HISTORIC DENVER
NEIGHBORHOODSSelect a highlighted area from the map below.

East Denver, including Park Hill, Montclair, Hilltop
and Lowry, is a relatively prosperous and largely residential area through which the park
and parkway system provides a touring route. East 17th Ave. Pkwy., East 6th
Ave. Pkwy., Montview Blvd. and Clermont, Forest, Monaco, and Richthofen Parkways are
interconnected greenways lined by many fine homes reflecting popular architectural styles
of the past 100 years. Richthofen Parkway leads to Montclair, an 1885 suburban town which
much subsequent infill, annexed to Denver in 1902. This heterogeneous district resembles a
catalog of residential styles from the 1880s to the 1990s Two historic districts on what
was, until 1994, Lowry Air Force Base commemorate the tremendous impact of the military
upon Denvers development.
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Capitol Hill
Denvers 19th-century millionaires built their showplace homes, schools,
clubs, and churches here, surrounded by lawns along gridded, tree-lined streets and
flagstone sidewalks. Some smaller homes, modest apartments, and institutional buildings
survive amid commercial intrusions, parking lots, and high-rise apartments, in this
architecturally rich and diverse neighborhood around the gold-domed state capitol.
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South Denver
The town of South Denver sprouted along the Broadway streetcar line and grew to be the
largest of the streetcar suburbs annexed by Denver. Incorporated in 1886, South Denver
stretched from South Alameda to Yale Aves. Between Colorado Boulevard and Pecos St. The
middle-class town was annexed to Denver in 1893. Well preserved for the most part, South
Denver has the Denvers best collection of bungalows and its first International
Style dwelling, the Hegner House (1935), at East Dakota Ave. (SW corner of South
University Blvd.).
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The settlement in Northwest Denver began after
1858, when Denver founder William H. Larimer waded across the South Platte River to
stakeout "Highlands." This area began to thrive during the 1880s following
construction of streetcar lines and viaducts over the South Platte River and railroad
tracks. A wave of Italian immigrants between the 1880s and 1920s established "Little
Italy" there, although Spanish-speaking settlers have been most numerous since 1950.
Highland Park, known as Scottish Village, because of its curving lanes with Scottish
names, illustrates over 100 years of low-cost housing built on tiny lots. The ethnic
peoples of Northwest Denver have added to a rich collection of churches, cafes, bars and
housing.
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