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HomeMy WebLinkAboutagenda.hpc.19880913AGENDA HISTORIC PRESERVATION COMMITTEE September 13, 1988 - Tuesday 2:30 P.M. to 4:30 P.M. FIRST FLOOR COUNCIL CHAMBERS City Hall REGULAR MEETING 2:30 I. Roll Call II. Approval of Minutes-August 23, 25th, 1988 23rd minutes were in last packet III. Committee Member and Staff comments IV. Public Comment V. NEW BUSINESS 2:45 A. Changes to Aspen Inventory of Historic Sites and Structures - Public Hearing VI. INFORMATION ATTACHMENTS A. Letter to Committee on Berko Decision B. Memo from Staff: Absence during National Trust Annual Conference, October 17-22, 1988 C. New York Times article on Aspen D. Historic Preservation in Annapolis-Article in National Geographic VII. EDUCATION OPPORTUNITIES A. "Rehab for Profit" seminar, Denver, Oct. 17th registration form B. "A Fearless Guide to Old Houses", seminar, Denver, September 24, flyer, registration form MEMORANDUM To: Aspen Historic Preservation Committee From: Roxanne Eflin, Planning Office Re: Changes to the Aspen Inventory of Historic Sites and Structures, Public Hearing Date: September 13, 1988 INTRODUCTION: Section 7-709 (page 7-34) of the Land Use Code states: B. It shall be the responsibility of the HPC, based on the recommendations Of the Planning Director, to evaluate the inventory of historic structures at least once every five (5) years, and to hold a public hearing to solicit comments on its evaluations. The purpose of the evaluation shall be to determine those structures which are to be removed from the inventory, any structures which should be added to the inventory, and to rate all structures which remain on the inventory. SUMMARY: Two historic city-owed sites/structures were not included in the 1986 Update of the 1980 Inventory of Historic Sites and Structures. These are: 1. The Holden/Marolt barns and Lixiviation Ruins site (determined-eligibld-- for listing- on-the National Register of Historic Places) (c. 1890) Rated "51' 2-.The_Marolt__House,_original office for the Holden Lixiviation Works (c.1890) Rated "4" The Planning Office recommends these two historic sites be added to the inventory. Five historic residential structures have been demolished in this year alone. These are: 1. 222 E. Hallam - Rated "4" 2. 701 E. Hopkins - Rated "3" 3. 718 E. Hopkins - Rated "1" 4. 720 E. Hopkins - Rated "1" 5. 726 W. Bleeker - Rated "1" The Planning Office recommends that these five historic structures be removed from the inventory. RECOMMENDATION: The Planning Office recommends HPC approve the addition of the Holden/Marolt Barns and Lixiviation Ruins site and the Marolt House to the Aspen Inventory of Historic Sites and Structures; and approve the removal of the five demolished structures as listed above. Notes: hpc.memo.invent.changes 2 1275 Riverside Drive Aspen, Colorado 81611 September 8, 1988 Historic Preservation Commission City Hall ASDen, Colorado Bill Poss, Chairman and Members of the Commission: I am astonished and disanpointed by HPC's decision to have the Berko House removed from downtown to another site. This decision seems to effectively erode what I presume is one of the major goals of the HPC, ie: to protect and preserve the character of Aspen as reflected in its early architecture. Having worked successfully with the city of Salem, Massachusetts in its efforts to preserve and orotect its architectural heritage against a monolithic and politically strong move to renovate and "update" that town, I am appalled that Aspen, with its greater wealth and relative sophistication, is so weak in protecting its historic character. With the excention of those members who opposed this decision, I think you have seriously failed in your function as an historic preservation commission. I await the recuests to remove the old domiciles on Main Street. I cannot imagine that you will be able to be inconsistent in allowing that history to be erased as well. Perhaps you thought you were on a revitalization or urban renewal committee. The Community would be better served if you were. ..--Si-fich,rely, (1 , 7 Robl(t Murray n'-in 0 8 MEMORANDUM To: Aspen Historic Preservation Committee From: Roxanne Eflin, Planning Office Re: My absence during the National Trust Annual Conference, October 17-22, 1988 Date: September 13, 1988 Just to let you know, I will be attending the Annual Conference of the National Trust for Historic Preservation, held this year in Cincinnati, October 17 through the 22. Therefore, I will not be in the office that entire week, which is sandwiched between the two HPC meetings of October 11 and the 25th. If any of you have any projects requiring staff's review during that week, PLEASE submit them as early as possible. If you are interested in attending the conference, please see me as I have the schedule and transportation/lodging information. It should be excellent this year, covering a variety of topics facing communities and commissions/HPCs; I will be making a complete report upon my return. MEMORANDUM TO: Historic Preservation Committee From: Roxanne Eflin, Planning Office Re: New York Times Article attached Date: September 13, 1988 Thank you, Joe Krabacher, for sharing a recent article which appeared in the New York Times (August 7) on Aspen. Even the Times shares our feelings that Aspen's historic character is unique, lending "yet another dimension to the resort". Hurrah, HPC! »i ~0 ,c,~ , t~~LTHENEW_YORKTIMES, SUNDAY, AUGUST7,1988-~> 6,09»« - r ' 0 The Aspen Art Museum (590 North 1,51'.,44'L,"I 11471/1 .Allk ·.0 U.,2,7/3 ./1 1 ,\\ tours ($50, including lunch) are of-'% 0 By LAURA BISHOP Mill Street; 303-925-8050) is sponsor- W I 7, h··/*-·*_~ 54 -/\ 1. fered through the third week in Sep- 1 £ ing its second biennial exhibit of out- 4 :,1'-i-5--9A;. It ..1 4% ..9.- 2.-. 1 tember, depending on weather and · In summer Aspen's intellectual as- door sculpture in a variety of sites + 1 1 ,;+X -IL+ 47-0-1 9 1~ ~ ~ ( ~\ 6 . water conditions. 1 201 1 pirations are as lofty as the surround- through Sept. 25. Works may be seen ,©JUV, ' d > f $ 7 . I ./. I r. 1 , ~ Operating as Blazing Trails, the *ng Rockies. At this time of year the on the grounds of the museum, near 44-¥7) E-'+3~-4 ' * r - ,~~1 -~ . i . same company offers jeep rides that <· . i f 44* / *-r.-3.1 , jown's reputation as a glitzy ski re- the Music Festival Tent and at the T+v,1 25 5 <: include breakfast or lunch. Tours de- | $2",Ir Gort is temporarily eclipsed by its Music School Campus on Castle - f 4 + c ~ part at 8 A.M. and 1 P.M. through | image as a cultural center. Creek Road. 1¥ / 1 early October and cost $38. They visit 1 ; The music and art lovers who flock "Latitudes: Focuson Chicago"will Iff!& 4 - . I 'll, I'·i 't an old mining region and Elk Camp, k here are following a long tradition. ln- include painting and sculpture by art- *- 1 ,-1 0 1.,1 1 .1. which is located at the top of a local *ellectual stimulation was part of the ists from the Chicago area through , ski area. briginal plan for Aspen; Walter Pae- Sept. 11. Also through Sept. 11 is a 1 f ff-.={f fg# i. 1 449/ id kb), 11+ i For horseback riding try the 500- ~~kn~~~11515SBorcentfortrN):- show of work by artists who have acre T Lazy 7 Ranch (3129 Maroon Creek Road; 303-925-7040). Rates are been awarded fellowships by the , i# 1,ration as early as 1949. That event Colorado Council on the Arts and Hu- 4 provided the foundation for the Aspen manities. The next exhibit, Sept. 22 to i f f „1 1.- + 1 %41.=4 - 14,11. , $15 an hour; $50 for a half day, and -- ~ $65 for a full day. A breakfast nde (8 £NG to 10 A.M.) costs $30, and a lunch ride Music Festival, which continues to Oct 30, is "Images in Stone: Two (~Mi"' draw visitors today. Centuries of Artists' Lithographs," . L.M... 1 ' *' i, ,· : ' F , 4_,N, ., d' ¢ 0,!2#-,9YA T 1 -*t I. . =.- I -: ~ In contrast to Aspen's frenzied win- organized by the Blaffer Gallery of ,€ ty 1, -71 .r- + *t - *'0i 7.1.-*: available until mid-October. i , -,~+ 9- .,*-ilti*,4~11411 :Mit.:~~ (10 A,M, to 2 P.M.), $50. Riding is 01- 1/ 1 11 ter pace, the town slows down some- the University of Houston, which will ~•tizi_ what in summer and fail and takes on display 150 works by C@zanne, Degas, ,= DIF.,4/77 4 11. 1 - -4-.1-1114-*1 -·Ch~ 5 4 k - 2 ir .-*--41*= ~'911 -il'24< 2. ,·.:41'frf'-01¢h Fri I '.I· - i M_-£, I _, SLA 1 1-- F F k. -j *diR Getting Around hn informal tone. Outdoor cafes are Goya, Matisse, Picasso and others. 12-1.1 f -i 11 1.. 4 'Sk.* i -,/4*0"'*""'~+ 4 ¥AA« -i - *,hi0Ii . It' 4 . - E.r-IN 0 VI! 41 11-i' ll; I ..~1, ti.' 1 ''I 'T 7*· I ¢'*'~ 1.4- 10->~-~~-ie the Music FhestriTal, studen;Tgifeflet Ites~~t~rnughoSunc~oy;nand u~!;i~t 4. 111...11.- - .... , 1 -1 ~ The city of Aspen is berved by free lerformances on streetcoillers.----1 P.M. on Thursday. Admission is $2. .4- 4- . •93, 414 4 i 'F~ ' t t ,+ 4 +r- : shuttle buses with four different ' , Recent - restorations of vintage, The tenth annual Aspen Filmfest - i i ,*~ '~ 3,1,~1,1141: . 1-4 , ~--~ routes, running from 7 A.M. to 1 A.M. homes, hotels and the Wheeler Opera will beheld Oct.5t09. Most showings - • 4 1.-4.% .166 J - ~4 0' ' , -22 All bus routes start from Rubey Park House pointup the Victorian charm will be at the Isis Theater, 406 East i e</ 4 ' i + -k... f €·V h- ·/9 i,54·4 .. 1 ' ' ~1 1~-~144,4- · .*, (400 East Durant). County buses stop 2 3 11,1* -11- .Ste&@2,4.w ?? 2. at the base of Brush Creek Road and [hat lends yet another dimension to Hopkins Street, and at the Wheeler M L '44 6 - 2fc)frK¢* :..-, V'·1 - f...41.- tile resort. The architecture dates to Opera House. The focus of the event i - 1 1 : ; . --.., .- Y ' the ]880's, when Aspen was a boom- this year will be independent films. i *141, 'fiti '.44-i -1- _ 1 + '41 4.v *t'/ c.* \ ilig mining town. A lot of the new 1 Ticketsare $6; call 303-925-6882. - 1 -- 1 44+ 0.. 2- 11»- l 1 Fares are toned; the trip from homes echo the original· two-story ~ The Anderson Ranch in Snowmass B .*:,.·~~ . 2011;j52t~£02'- -9«1 i Victorian designs, with pointed roofs J has weekly workshops through Aug. fbnd scrolled woodwork. - 26 in woodworking, ceramics, photog- >-Not=11 the resort's pleasures are raphy and painting. Tuitions run be- 1 cerebral. There are plenty of oppor- tween $150 and $475. Call 303-923-3181. Top CEramics is one of the workshops at ST# 14<'Ab *fi J,' 1-4 lili / 15.: ..- ;11-*'6*-*1 *1·, 1 + r. 1~1.141.r,+ 11 tunities for hiking, river rafting, 99##?*999.Vi'.'',--.'-W.:.~:.2.'I.~04* horseback riding and jeep trips into the Anders,on Ranch in Snowmass. ..=% 16'fr~.04:1, dpil-*.An**Iit.<44 the mountains. Early fall brings crisp The Outdoors ~ days and the painting of designs on ' RIGHT Outside the tent at the Aspen 'r, *·*ar·,t,/3 : 2-2~f~3410 <he mountains by the changing colors The snow-capped Maroon Bells, ris- Music Festival, continuing until Aug. 22. :31tA-97 t 2/. @R MFI.-Ir.-..j *, ' 4'-4 .47 IR'·t,4$,0,0„,~.0 ,+1 '-Ai Of the aspen trees. Peak foliage gen- ing to an elevation of 14,014 feet, are erally starts in mjd-September. among the most photographed peaks 111,11[Iltll!11Ii!Illil!1mlnltlm!1111111111!111111!11111!11ml!11111ntilll!!1!1111HHI1111111!11111111,11]1Ili]Ili!111~!,11!!ilill!11Ill11'111Ii!ii!1ili'ill,!Ili{11!~Nill]Mi~111!HI!]Ii!!mll!11;!i!!lilii![!tll!118}111!11111!1!111111mlllIH!{11111!111,1!![!111!1111111 i,Illl!!1!11Ilililll{!Il!1!~111~I!11Ii,.Il,111!Ilil!ii'Ii!1!Ii 1!!Iil~~1!I~1!Ilillit!;1~Ill!1Iff!11 Aspen's upscale shopping and fine in Colorado. Against this backdrop dining come at a cost. Be prepared sits beautiful Maroon Lake. The area WHAT'S DOING IN for steep prices. 'is noted for its wildflowers and its changing moods in different seasons. - A bus to the Maroon Bells leaves twice an hour from the Aspen High- Aspen lands parking lot 9 A.M. to 5 P.M. through Sept. 5. Tickets purchased in the parking lot cost $2.50. You may drive to the Maroon Bells (11 miles . 1 L · Aiper has several tiers Fuel VV A 1.1 L 'W W 6,4, I [, rates, depending on ihe scalon, Sum- i mer rates tend to be a little lower f than ihose in winter. K · 9 The Hotel Jerome (330 East Main , Street; 303-920-]000,800 331-7213 out. ' side Colorado, 800-423·0037 in Colora- do) was bum in 1889 and, at 94 rooms, - ~ decorated with Victorian furnishings, · Is the largest hotel in Aspen. Rooms,· The Arts \ provide contemporary comfort A double rn,m for two people ranges , As part of the Aspen Music Festi- ~ from $125 to $400 during the week, Val, which continues through Aug. 22, $155 to$400 on weekends. *n Aspen Jazz Ensemble conce,·t on ] The Hotel Lenado (200 South Aspen Aug 13 will feature the trumpeter Street; 303-925 6246) 15 an elegant 1/incent DiMartino. The pianist 4 0-- -I#V~~f 8· LEFT Jeeps are used to climb bed and-breakfast inn. A double room , loshike Akiyoshi will perform Aug. 4.12-:* v . - r -4 % the hills outside town. with breakfast for two costs $90 to 20 Both concerts are at 8:30 P.M. in 6 $240 Sunday through Thursday, $110 ~ the Aspen Music Tent (Third and Gil- ... BELOW The Victorian Sardy to $280 on weekends. tespie Streets) and cost $15. A jazz Another elegant bed-and breakfast P ouse, restored, is now an in downtown Aspen Is the Sardy benefit for the Aspen Music School 4/ke~· I '€it . 4 Sc holarship Fund will be held Aug. 22 *4*@?. ,- elegant bed and breakfast. House (1 28 East Main Street, 303-920 j~~·~~•I· irl the Tent. Tickets cost r 4.- 1 - - * 2525). A former historic houle built in . , 1892, the Victorian structure was re- ' Festival concerts are also held at *t,40 *:pot?· ·M< - ' ' - gil -- %: I *' .4 stored as a hotel in late 1985. Most of ..r:*-3 1- the 15 rooms and 5 suites include a Lhe Paepcke Auditorium (behind the ~ ,*DD,- . 4 ~ 4 . whirlpoot bath. Double room with ~~~~E~~ ~~037itdS'Ant; 9%~S~:"3 : -:-im; ..:,gy:»'h f v , .LJ breakfast for two costs $100 to $285 €f 4 $22. The nutist James Galway per- ~400~.. · Sunday through Thursday, $120 10 $325 on weekends. forms Lomorrow through Wednesday J. "*ft·. I . *.V. '. ,~ N ' ,4~ 2/1.c,:,~ . A more moderately priced lodge is and the pianist Misha Dichter tomor- . rnw and Tuesday. Performance i... I, < ..0>,M...1(- -'--------~-°£-~~\ the 30-room Innsbruck Inn (233 West times'ary. . - 1 /4 -- / 113,=a~ I.6-6#.-/I --,Il Main Street; 303-925-2980), conver- 4 The Wheeler Opera House will be a-: >· . - - iently situated near downtown Aspent the setting tomorrow night for the ., 1 '. -. e..... 14 Rates are $59 to *78 for two people in 1 last opera of the season, Verdrs"FaE- - c -..2- ........a~*= a double room, including breakfast. staff,•• performed by the Aspen 7.....1 /1/L~-im/ Opera Theater Center. The Aspen Re- -4<. p/epcke Aiditofium "4 W ·'~IM#lur#ul:~a_ Dining sort Association's Visitors Center js Et-- 11 .4.,Tent • ~NATURE 1 o . 41 11 ,~,fl"~11 . also situated In the opera house, 19 wt:11:22-ZE:ZZ z~····~~ ill,A i, iii; j~~~~~~~~-'~~1'i,De 3222,~8~rn==Hz i next year. SMUGGLER '"-lIFI~GLVEg)ANIINg old wooden railroad car with seven MTN hour prior to each performance, For 00 1//libvate rooms The restaurant serves ~ more information call 303-925-3258. i a different five-course meal nightly, ~ The Festival also has a box office in Snow'mass, 10 miles from Aspen. Situ , High ~hool .ligts¥*kBO \ 21 smoked duck breast and baked ahi 1 aled on the Village Mall, it Is open 9 ~ IMust Schod '176:~,2,F:*&*2L~E~FA~ 1 (turla). Reservations are recom- ; A.M.{03 P.M. daily: ca]1303-923-5400. i N ~·' 1tz(fal¥3 <- --J mended. Dinner for two with a bottl~/ : The concert information line inum- -- L ~.FAR#Rm-MA--1 .....3 .E... ~ Gordon's (205 South Mill; 303-925, 1 ·.1~111~*~ ofwinecosts:9010:]20 f 1 ber is 303-925-9042. TIckets may be or- .0.-6. '93; is:ZE KN%73=ni=77=:al 7474), has modern art adorning th€ 1 dered by phone with a Visa, Master· Y -Ly-/ 7 Card, or American Express. There Is walls and an eclecUc menu. Swordi 1 a service charge of $3 an order. . 9/per,~ \©4 1 11 l , salad are typical choices. Reservaa , fish, goat cheese relleno and squid / The Snowmass/Aspen Repertory 1 -~···k_ C.B..dol Theater (105 Village Square off Snow- SNOWMASS 12>--.1 - _11:109 4 4 1. , :l • A. tions are required. Dinner for tw€~ 9 + with a bottle of wine costs $100 to,~ mass Mal]; 303-923-3773) presents ASPENMTN.~ ... 1.19,19.j '1·m Not Rappaport," ··The Nerd' . $]10. and "Tom Jones" through Aug. 25. , *~Ar.)im A popular Austrian restaurant 14 Performances are Tuesday through The Ne- Yort Tlme~/A* 7. 1- . phooer.*ubyamn P.yne the Wienerstube (633 East Hyman: 1 Sunday at 8 P.M. Admission M $]8. southwest of Aspen at the end of Ma- ofthe mountain (400 East Durantand Information on hiking trails in the Aspen, 303-925-7648) charges $40 to 303-925-3357). Specialties include 1 There are also some matinees, at $10, roon Creek Road) before 8:30 A.M. Hurler; 303-925 220). Maroon Bells Snowmass Wilderness $45 for a halklay trip and $50 to $60 Wiener schnitze], veal stroganoffd and chmdren's matinees, $5. , and after 5 P.M. For more Informa- The Aspen Center for Environmen Area Is available from the United for a full day, which includes lunch. bratwurst and sauerbraten. The res: - 'rhe Ballet/Aspen Dance Festival, tion call 303-925-8484. tal Studies (303-925-5756) offers na- States Forest Service €03-925-3445), Tours run through Labor Day. The taurant has a cozy garden .setting. .... . Dhlch ends on Saturday, features the The Silver Queen high-speed Ron- lure walks in two locations through which administers the area. company also runs fishing trips in Dinner for two with a bottle of wine t · bavid Parsons Company Wednesday dola transports summer travelers to Aug. 22. You can take a guided walk , Two companies in the Aspen-Snow- Septemberon the Gunnison River. runs $45 to $60. Ihrough .Saturday - al Aspen High Aspen Mountain's 11,212-fool summit around Maroon Lake starting at the mass area offer half·day or full-day The other company running white- Shavano'& Con the upper level of th¢- khool off Maroon Creek Road al 8 for spectacular views of the Elk Maroon Bells bus stop, or join a walk whnewater trips on the Roaring water tours has two jocations. Blaz- Snowmass Mall; 303-9234292), ha, 02' P.M. Tickets are $4,$10 and $24. For Mountains and the Continental Di- at the top of Aspen Mountain as soon I Fork. Colorado and Arkansas Rivers. Ing Paddles (corner of Mill and view of Brush Creek Valley. Choweil ~lore information call 303-925-2750. vide, The gondola runs from ]0 A.M. as you get off the gondola. Both are River Rats (318 South Mill Street m Hyman; 303-925-5651) and Snowmass Include fresh trout, leg of lamb an¢7 to 4 P.M. daily at least through Sept. 5 offered from ll AM to 12·30 PM Whitewater (50 Village Square in the duckltng with raspberry sauce. DInA. LAURA BISHOP is on thestaffof The and on weekends throughout the and 1:30 P.M. to 3 p.M. daily. Admig SUMMERTIME/FRESHAIR TIME: Snowmass Mal], 303-9234544). Half ner for two with a bottle of wine costk·,4 ~ew· Yorb Times bureau in Denver. month. Buy a ticket ($10) at the foot sion Is $2. 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I ' . 74 4 1 1 1 ; 1 ' 69 - " - 7,2, 1 ~'~.c.*:it ~~914~4~1.74'4&- . :.1.4 ,&.'.1,~3.4';4 7 :..# >4; ' hi€>17 ' .- ..4_.'4 1,;- *: ~: 153~14~~fREL ET-'Ft.,6,~49(1:441*4'.. 1 41:li #f ~ '~,GrJ;:*,f·94£»·4%9,5 ·; r ~; 14*>ii;-6/4-'*~;; .i, 1~'i~ :~ - ~ j-- ' 4¢4 - , , .. . 1 1, f.,77, *..6 1 , i . ·s - i=1/r •r--r~ t.:..T#LI '".7. .:f,7,8:.4424402$74*~t ' EM _ m'm,1,fiWu $'224*1}44' . dTAFF '4.62 .- I I & . e. :al>4*:42=g , . , '. F.46' ,. m <ten ' 1 . 1 -A . 0 -21./.' & et ~~'~JNNING WITH THE WIND,Our favored (orcursed, depending on one's view) ~ sloop bounds from trough to by other geographic factors as well. ~_~ crest throughtliclicavyswells About aTI hour's (Irive from both Baltimore of (Jlic.apeake Bay on a diroct and Washington, the area has becorne a mag- licading fur Atinapolishar- net for rity-weary inunigrantsand tourists. ~ bor. Off tostarboard Mancroft Wedged betweenthese twometropolises with I ,di- ~ Hall, massive stone dormi- theirsix million people, Anne Arundel Do, tory of the U. S. Naval Academy, looms County, with its county seat, Annapolis, is resplendent in the late afternoon sun over the booming. Though the city proper haslittle 0 , Severn River. room to grow, new subdivisions have sprouted "Ready to jibe!" shouts the helmsman; the likespring wheat around itand its adjacent crew of ten take up positions along the deck. peninsulas, boosting the region'spopulation 'Of· Two of us grab the handles of a "coffee to nearly 155,000. grinfler." I,ikes}limmycli,ncersin aspeeded- "Manyofthe newcomers are commulers up film, we winch away until the sloop's huge willingtospend twohoursadayon the road," :d, i scarletspinnaker drawstautand trim onour Chris Coile, oneofthearea's top realtors, told newcourse. Sailing into Spa Creek and the heart of Annapolis, wemooratthefootof Shipwright . , Street. Exhilarated by the hands-on experi- i ence of sailing in Annapolis's Wednesday- / ' ..1 night races, Ibeelinefor Marmaduke's, apub where local boaters gather for video rei)lays of - " £ the event. My crewmates, mostly from the Washington, D. C.,area, head home-with , thoughts, nodoubt, of moresailingonthe ; weekend. Lawyers, dentists, bureaucrats: 1 1, 1 1 They and thousands like them have macie , ' V i · 2 Annapolisasailingcenter forthe East Coast. .. i Behind the flash and glamourof its boating +.,3 scene,however, liesanother Annapolis, richly layered with history and tradition-a capital, , whose fortunes have always been tied to the ~ 3 ' Chesapeake Bay, Eighty years older than Baltimore, its huge sisternearthe headof the bay whosedeep hat- bormakesit Maryland'schief port, Annapolis ... , r 4 j has been Maryland's political capital since , early colonial times. News to many, it even : served briefly ascapital o f the United States. That was 204 years ago, during its golden age . ~ asa model English town in a rude new land. In those colonial days, when virtually all commerce was by water, Chesapeake Bay ''~ N i offered English shippers easy access to Mary- land's great tidewater tobacco plantations. It Five generations gather at the William alsoprovided food for a population that would Paca House to honor its namesake and their forebear, one offour signers Of the farm in the summer and fish yearround. Declaration OfIndependence who lived in Oncethedomain ofskipjacks, bugeyes, and Annapolis during its golden age. Dating otherlegendary fishingcraft, the Chesapeake pom the 1720s, the home (right) of has been all butconquered byinvading fleets another signer, Charles Carroll, is one of of pleasure boats, Today far fewer people the city's oldest. Excavations here in the earn a living from the bay than those who historic district by archaeologists from the spend their earnings to be on or near her University of Mao,land have yielded a waters. In the midstof it all is Annapolis, trove ofcolonial artifacts. 166 National Geographic, August 1988 0 0 ·'' 'M~'*·..'f~.Di·''Ii.. - . . 11 3 I :-(1 f' tk:-:·,I.9.::·.fe·.,2/1*:.:):-93'i:· ~·,·, t 1 ... 0 .. ; . i i - DAJ 4 -U U 922 ' A'. 0 . s i.'w..'3:44: bl':: '1.:?"ly,-'A .3 121 ~----1 -1 i ..99#. M .- V. . i I ~ . 1 h ... 1= "-- • . ' t..40· P, ......11 Lj / b.% \ -- -irx '. .2 I y; 1- , 1 -. il h 42?A .3 . 8 7; '74 - ':Sy.4.14.3:, 1.-7 . 1 - f • . /7/ /t -4.' /-/ • 0 4.41 t=-2/ 0 3~ 1 r Ut e AI, I; P.>-4. LT-/5. 144 -- " = , 1~ ·: r ,· 1.6.23 )-i.63211.Ivf/ttl?'* .t 4*.jj4#4/f/; .,.f -:4 .J- I -41232*UM.i~. Z ' 4' 4 1*·~.·w ~--v- 7..< 4.8~~~21*11 0.- 1... 0 :,ff,30 *7*1 9:2·biv!%64' · ., .- t;,>r, .:~·:a. . i '4~.., . I . , .. 1 .#. • C•. ./ 41 *:t ·» .c / -~- 221 - ~~4 -- A t#ll|IA ,: 01 #//3/714151&:1,, 0 •11181*hildlicir/ir ACADEMY~HAPa~~ 0-*ic 1.11,1111*lili Ill:[.11 ./ 27 WILLIAM PACA HOUSE 0 1 4 ANNAPOLIS ' 47 4@WiWLWL Of· ~ 1 St. John s College ~ .16 n 4,,- 1523 2 ~~ 1 U. SIN)310114081910 26 Gassaway·Felmeyer House 1878 <84 +2 2;~ / 2~~7 C y Bancroft 7 27 William Paca House 1765 Hall 28 James 8/Ce House 1767 4 Maryland In/, ca 1770 29 Palrick Creagh House 1735 5 Old Cily Hal! and Engine 30 Sands House. ca 1690 #f--. '5 4¢ 1 22> ..7 f Sualion 1764.1821 31 Middletor,Tavern 1740 ©, "f, A 6 Franklin Law Ollie.081850 32 Tobacco Prise House. ca 1720 4 Academy '406 ./1. 4£ U. S. Nava| 7 John Shaw House,ca 1725 33 Sh,plap Hcu,e, ca 1713 ~ ~'7'I'a~d"S1~rII~~0us~81681;936 N UltNCUCU:70 4. L l 51 1 'a / irl . 5.-4 4 10 Oid Treasury Building 1735 36 VIclualling Warehouse 1793 . ~&7 State Gate 2 j A- . 11 86·88 Stale Circle, ca 1880 37 Tradllion/ CUSIoms 4 .r·>.* I ./ 12 Bordly·Randall House, cs 1725 House.4 1770 . dy A % / Garden 9= 193.'1902, '71, 14 Commodore Waddell House 1868 39 Rtdoul House 1 764 13 Ope. House 1872 38 Retallick·Biewer House 1740 '6 1 * r : iJ4/ 15 M.Dowell Hall 1742 40 Aidout Row 1774 ,#ry q.'~'glibi,W*«64~ *010 4 . 16 Liberly Tree.400-year-old 41 Charles Carroll House 1726 '9 lunp poplai 17 Charisearroll, lhe Gate 1 Barrisler, House 1723 44 Lloyd Dulany House 1772 18 Ogle Hal¢(USNA) 1739 (slte 01 George Man.'s Tavem) - adi,/ 0& 44> ¥ Buildinge I 19 Chase-Lioyd House 1769 45 Callahan House. ca 1775 - M I* o hg i 20 Hammond-Hafwood House ~774 46 Zimmerman House 1887 49 1 -mo~ ' \ 4 21 Lockerman-Tillon House. ca 1770 47 Jonas Green House, ca 1690 i (iN ~ ~ 1 9> 22 Peggy Slewarl House, ca 1761 48 Banneker·Douglass f,1 &4 23 Chapel (USNA) 1904, t 939 Museum d Alro·American . · *f~3 6•aw 8 0 244/X 4:0 N m.5 ... 9 PX 9,2, 6*-4-»,12*.'" AIX~;L.~~_,~~~~ i e qb 24 John Brice Ill House, ca 1766 Lile and History 1874 · 41 1 1--- 25 John Brice 11 House 1690-1720 49 Acion House,ca 1735 4:114 L. ~ ~ f?*/ . . e.00Lil. 7 c~'/EF@@ULC~~~»,1~11~r ' € F»d ~ mr&$*~TrnEET O ~ , I 35 ,. 4 /,f H STREET e Guardiananget of a "museum without al~ ®£,t, Um ,~OW~, m *1. m F.WY... 4 ./ Information wails,"St. Clair Wright has never - 6 FRANKLIN LAWOFFICE lowered her guard in 36 years with the preservation group Historic Annapolis, Inc. Currently.Aghting to have "disfigur- / V B.iti;AGU,4*1 . ing"power lines (above, in background) / . AMMip&'I c buried beneath city streets, she and Washingtori~ 4*ZI \ I Governor To Say Bedge hergroup have been instrumental in 4 + 02. 4 restoring 470 buildings in the historic 1 1 -' , B ; ki_ • »'i.-3 24 08:,9 i¢* 413*; .pw district, which the National Park Service h . 0900#. 2*' 0 ~*~AM:i~'3'' A designated as a historic landmark in *' 1 < <--FLQW.La#Taylor ' : 7 , 1 I+ 90 'A~. ~~~42~ ~ ~\'4 1 1965. Believing that "landmarks are for N $4*%#ENSOC.35A WN=f/, 1 J'.1(> '16 . 4% - , ..4. *4 living,"she finds particular joy in seeing . I. 4-49 . 41 centuries-old buildings adapted to mod- 4.4 ,/ /VN,OMA.>04;K23NAREA ENLARGED - 1 5. 4» .LoNAr-zonic<.147Yi U S. Naval *ademy Annapolts ' 2, Yacht Club ~ - i ern use. Ashowcasefor 17 designated ~~ ~ ~R'ENV{:99···~*~ 3,4 1 I *~ ' 9/40 IJA:~ ' I architectural styles spanning 300 years, i\, historic Annapolis boasts more Prerevo- :e€. & . 4-03#2htf*~ Chesapeake .. Sailing School 4 lutionary brick buildings than any '€ .1 other U. S. city. Dating from 1695, the radial street plan reserves highest eleva- -' u / 1 4 0: 42 4 . L if b -\~ '41--gkt=¥G~ t tions for church and state, and allows ---, 3/J .2.4.98 77 - - 9- Pr „/Hilrim, / spa many vistas ofthe city's waterfront. / \ 2 <l Xia, £91~1 :E Riwil,IM-8,8 -M- 0 200 m NOATH ~ CITY BEFORE 1950 1 1 1 1 0 600 11 ~E] crry TOOA~ km 412 Jas Point 1«05 CARTOGRAPWIC DIVISION --/ 55€-\ 9 + shoalligh' 0 f ....CM:,1/DAR .... ' DESIGM ./.CY ;CHI{ICKA. I 0 ; m, ''...... 4 - 1 ' '1 - :=#49=*LE.. A.™.'. C...\ 70-» LED ...•ti FU~j' ..4-4.6.-I.....Unk. .1.2/,i.4..:,-i.·,4.--- . 1 9 MARYLAND STATE HOUSE ,/ \ 7 AMT·*,u,AM~. -- de To Eas *r-92:, , -':M:=.3.11 r 7 1 #---- 04 k ; 2.:4,:>si:s...,~91(99~*P.flet£ :I'll'll'll'll'/lill-m-i.'g.f,NA./t~ --i .-t- .-'·-4.,D 1,1-11--M>'·0,- -i,-·.:--~K;-;3,fR:>K'-~""9,~ -I'Nli; --.-- , ":Pfiff[<e?i.':,~&-1,:---- 1 'lle:.,{0.: .t , "f "I.-- -41 . 11'J , r 1 1 ' '.9, I T (60: _: 4, " 17, 1 , 1 8. , 1 + y 1 . I I.£1.,t manned lighthoue of 1 ,:.· g .:.,,2·'· itskind-untilthe U. S. 1986-77iontas Point Shnia /,1 ' 0. .. . # 4 Coast (Luard automated ir in · +3~-#6:j.,t~ 1-;-6· ,~1 0 Lightstands so i niywatch f , · I'le],0·7-¢99:' .4 ·2;'.r·f·'Ci' at themouth of the• Si,uni ' Coast Guard recently rede #41; ~; ; 0~8&~ff;:·t. RivernearAnnapolis. 77ie . .... i r~:*,1.40 i<4&2 ',~|':.~~,~~ signed bay channel mwkers ~ ;-'~f~.f".ff *,0 51 0 to accommodate large num- ' :4--. C ,·r''l, L.,a-4il.20' & 3 bers Ofospreys whose huge .,1 , 7 , f k'·'' •0 1100'~6~*I.4. nestsformerly obsfructed the· -;~ 1/~ ;.fl lights. Mao,land's "heautifia , : .... t,kr. D-'r......4149A '12,41-· swimmers,"blue crubs hape 1:.si:,~0!~t2-'~- "M,~, ,~ 4, replitce,l co,sters cis th.· 1,(13' s r' ' .--X:; SIE' 4,4- .,'4'44 ·7:· most valuable seafood crop, 190' . ''·234".)90+~ 't' Shedding its outgrown shell t 4.2.1,4 -t... k.0 '79·.1,1 ·····T (Ieft), one emerges in the 41. , f . soft-shell state savored by l'l·li~?2%'·5.:>~:·'f<14:.54,3 .5.~R epicures. ~| argue the case frir a free America. Three of the sovereignty became indisputable fact when prestigiousguest institution. By the 1900s Today if they have asewer leak or spill, e city'sgreathomes, in fact, were builtbysign- the delegates ratified the Treaty of Paris, many of its historic buildings had fallen into the Department of Health stops even·thing ersof the Declaration o f Independence. officially ending the Revolutionary War. disrepair. Renowned for its seafood, Annapo- in the river. But back then we used to swim The Annapolisraces, socialeventofthesea- The city fathers tried but failed to have lis became affectionately known as Crabtown. in the stuff. U'e'dpush it outofthe wa>' son, were often attended by a voting colonel Annapolischosenasthepermanent U. S. capi- For many those were Annapolis's golden with our hands." from Virginia, George Washington. After 1-he tal. Iii 1800, after meeting in Trenton, New years. One is 68-year-old Robert H. Camp- Even then, Bobby recalls, Annapoliq used 5 1 Revolution, when Annapolis wasserving nine York City, and Philadelphia, Congress finally bell, whose roots here go back more than 200 toentertain a fair number of tourists. "1'he>·'d monthsascapitalofthenew republic, Wash- settled into its new federal city, Washington, years. An mictioneerandappraiser, with a comedown from Baltimnreonside-wheelers ington made his most celebrated visit to the 35 miles westof Annapolis. long record in local politics, Bobby knows the like the Emnin Giles to see us countr>·folks. city, to resign his commission as commander in old days better than anyone else. In the small Like my father when he was >·oung, I user! I chief of thearmy. ~T'SBEENSAInthat Annapolissleptfor antique-filled parlorof his home at the footof to sell deviled crabs at the wharf. Two for a Washington's resignation on December 23, tile next century and a half. Except for Prince George Street he reminisces: quarter. Now the>'cost>·011 eight or ten dollars 1783, symbolized thesubordination of mili- brie f state assemblies every year or two, "When I was a boy, the oyster-shell piles each. and they call them crab imperial tary tocivilian rule that would be codified little disturbed its small-town atmo- around City Dock were as big as houses. \Ve "Pinkney Street used to be cal led Soap Sit ds nearly fouryears later in the Constitution. sphere. After the U. S. Naval Academy was kids used to slide down them in cardboard Alley," Bobby continued, dippinginto 19th- On January 14, 1784, in the old senate chain- foundedherein 1845, Annapolisbecameasort boxes. Sewers used to empty into the clock, centurylore. "The women there would take iii bero f the Maryland State House, American of company town, catering to its large and along with fish entrails from the markets. washing from the better-to-do folks up around 172 National Geographic, Augint 1988 Annapolis: C(linelot on the Bay 1 7 1 6 " 6 ... A.. 1 , ~ < , 9' 3:4 / t}:. 0 - '1 --f gp Crablown capers at the Navy-Marine #0044; 4 Corps Memorial Smdium (below) high- 46 -61 -, ., *43 .4 light the 42nd annualAnnapolis Crab f / e , 1 Feast, the world's largest, according to its , 6__ Notary Club sponsors. Some 2,400 hung,y .t- F .~f ,~ participants showed up at the stadium . . lastluly to consume 19,000 Alacyland . 0*' r I ' . 1 btue grabs. While disease and pollution aw~.,,~ ~ , , '44. 1 /4 I have caused significant declines in /1 0 ' oyster and rockfish harvests, the bay's ' 1 ':C hardy crabs are thriving. 1 I '71 . I A. j, , 2 t(41· r 01: · te:jb . 4 4 ' 6 ' ' , 6, f , . , . ' tre 04, . -4 ) . I. ..~ -ri 41 · , + : A ' I r. , e 11 4 4.61 C 04.5 0 I - ./1 1 0 9 94'f . .1 : 4 ..'' . /1.-4~ -- 746 1 '. '..0/3 0. 0 ' - L .re \ 4 9-/ . ... C ... /1 1 4-1 . .1 r 1 '' .a 1 - 0. : 42 i .. : :32: Irl , .pO , I --- - a<£2 2 '74. , . U N 1, ~ Maryland Avenue. When they were finished, thankslargely to acitizensgroup known as sol)riquet "dragon ladies." Knowing this, Armed Services Committee. And we asked all 1 1'1 ~ they'd toss the water in the street, and it HistoricAnnapolis, Inc. Atitsheadquartersin I am disarmed by her gentle countenance these groups to write to President Kennedy. ~ would all run down into City Dock. a Victorian house on Prince George Street, I and manner. Litter we learned hisdesk was piled high with "Ity my time Soap Suds Alley hael become met witli the person who, morethanany o ther, "In 1962,"slie tells me, "the Navy wanted letti·i·s saying, 'Don't destroy Annapolis. / Pinkney Street and turned mostly black, like is responsible for the look of present-day to appropriate three residential blocks to Well, theyclidn't. And now nothing can be Flee,Street. Otherstreets, like Cornhill, were Annapolis, St. Clair Wright. expand the academy. We did everything we 1)11 ilt or renovated inthe historic district with- f mostly w'hite Blacks and whites lived and Chairman emeritus of Historic Annapolis, could to stop them. We made up booklets out approval and guidance from the Historic ) worked together then, We had separate sheexemplifiesabreedof American women showing why this neighborhood was impor- DistrictCommission. Eventheshapeofashop schools and churches, but I'd say that we whose un flinching guardianship of local heri- tant architecturally and historically, and sign must pass muster. J were better integrated then than now." tage has earned them, at the National Trust sent them toevery preservation group in the Today many of thedistrict's meticulously 1 / Today Crablown stands transformed, for Historic Preservation, the respectful country that had a congressinan on the Joint restored bllildings have become holy places 1 -£/- / -- 1 11 Lf-4 National Geographic, August /988 Annapolis: Camelot on tile Bay 6 0, 4. i / forlegionsof visitingheritage buffs. The Paca's garden, with its reconstructed brick '7 + / Hammond-Harwood House on Maryland canal and Chinese Chippendale bridge, lies · ...4*4 ( Avenue is thought by many to be the master- likeanemeraldpendantovertheheartofold · ··'C'~ 6 6- ~ piece of renowned colonial architect William Annapolis, · r · "tth .· U Buckland.TraditionhasittliatMathias Ham- 1 . 45.- ~r*: i t. 1 mond builthisdream house forhis fiancde, .1-'.RESERVATION turned Annapolis 74.· *, ; ..,7 , j who then jiltedhim becauseshethoughthe ~-~ around. But there are some who k . cared more for the house than forher. use the term "gentrification" for But the real pride o f Historic A n napolisis 1 what happened.Oneiscity alderman :YA the William Paca House on Prince George Carl Snowden, a former black activist who , j. C~ Street, builtbyPacabeforehebecamethegov- walkedwithmethroughhisoldneighborhood 10, ~ ernoroffreeMarylandin 1782,Ican'timagine near City Dock. =5 ) thatanybuildinghasbeenmorepainstakingly Passing astrip of fashionable bars anc] ¥'07 ~ restored.Joints wereeven X-rayed to deter- restaurants, he pointed toa popular watering mine original nail holes. Admiring the mill- spot. "McGarvey's here used to be called the s 4·~'.··1'. Wkg 0 id, / work, I was amazed to learn that for 58 years Downtown Tavern and was a black bar." We mostof it wasburied underthe plasterand turned into a narrow, picture-postcard street b.. ·, paint of Carvel Hall, a 200-room hotel. In a that climbs crookedly to State Circle. "Thisi fiercely fought campaign, Historic Annapolis where I used to live: 8 Pinkney Street, " he i.. not only saved the house from demolition in said. "Today these houses are going for ex- , e ~ 1965 butalso wenton to restore its terraced traordinary amounts: $125,000, even D < 0 2,7 , h garden, which archaeologists helped unearth $200,000 for the nicer ones. Some people buy · F from the concretecrypto f aparkinglot. Today two and make them ·· 416 x How could these simpiZ~h € il<.. clapboard cottages fetch :'3 such prices? The lure of his- j . *,:61 %.. ..1 .W :/4 I I tory, no doubt diestreens (.1 ,+ :'~ ·11 .42 1 3 1 r ut recent his- , 1 14.4 tory has changed aspects of :·~# downtown Annapolis. To- 11.-4, 12 ' -11;1. day, for instance, few blacks --24 remain in the center city, 1 0 Many people therefore are 'P j.1 11, 44 9 surprisedtolearnthatathird 5 1,-3·£ -· · 4 ·~ - ofal] Annapolitan.sare black · -- 42. and that many live in public 7.7 4.14 71 housingnearthe edge ofthe 2.- i -r /1 ~ -- city. One summer night I i . dropped in on a group that callsitself the Downtowners, which describes the part of . ' Annapolis where their hearts I While children played : still reside. N Thanksgiving dinners are prepared for amongt}ie folding chairs, women peeled tin- needy families at the Chri.ftian Workers foil offsteaming dishes of chicken and baked 1 Mission. Members of the Mt. Moriah beans. With me at the table were Herbert and Church (facing page), whose old quar- Pauline Johnson, one of adozen orso black ters are now a museum ofAfrican cul- families stillliving downtown. "I'llstay on I Fleet Street till they carry me out in a box, " ture, meet in a building near the edge of town. A third of the population, blacks have deep roots in Annapolis-the slave vowed Herbert, whohaslivedin theold neigh- port where Kunta Kinte, immortalized by borhood 70 years. writerAlex Haley, landed in the 177005. As Annapolis draws ever more affluent in- habitants, others besides blacks are being dis- a placed-forexamp]e,those whohelpsatisfy 178 j National Geographic, August 1988 1: 044 6. .. 4..4, 7- 64.49 ' V *114&7ME##i&-24¢4, .,g-1 , 4 02.1 7% . 9.- '.,1.. I. : 1'ir·:,(ljh't:'1 'i'V, ' 13*~~~~ the city's voracious craving for seafood. town. People don't like the mess of a water- 07.9 Across the Severn, just beyond the Navy's man's operation. Frankly, there's more money David Taylor Research Center facility on a these days in boat slips than in fishing." placid backwater called Mill Creek, live a In the darkness of acold October morning dozen or so watermen. One of them, Jimmy I join Eddie Cantler and his partner, Buddy Cantler, ownsthe Riverside Inn, whereonany Sanner, foradayof oystering. day you can see legislators, midshipmen, and Warming up with coffee and doughnuts other savvy locals cracking blue crabs on over a space heaterin the cabin of Eddie's oys- brown butcher paper, dipping the succulent terboat, we motor north, under the huge twin ' morselsin drawn butteror vinegar, munching spans of the Chesapeake Bay Bridge. Reach- C. with beatificsmiles, anddroppingtheleavings ing Swan Point, north of Kent Island, we find into empty cardboard cartons. 40 or so other boats already there, waiting for Of Like mostof what Jimmy calls "serious" sunrise, thelegal startingtime. FK 0 watermen, his four brothers and son, Eddie, Nature's green light turns out to be adazzler fish for anything of value, though crabs and as the sun breaks above the Eastern Shore, oysters are their mainstay. gildingthe bay with shimmers of gold. Eddie While he tends to the soft-shell crabs behind and Buddy take up positions behind a metal 9 his restaurant, moving them from one water- culling board and activate two hydraulically filled tray to another during various stages of rigged tongs, operated by foot pedals. ' molt, Iask himifMill Creekwillever becomea The firstdipisladen with oysters. Butno- . rr. .1 parking lot for pleasure boats, like the creeks they're mostlyemptyshells. Cullingquickly, 'e in Annapolis. each man findsthreeor fouroysters more than "Well, we've already been zonedoutof the legal size of three inches. With the back of their hands, they sweep the L 1 shellsand undersized oysters back into the bay. "Oyster spats need shells ., r ~ to grow on," says Eddie. "We help cultivate them by 1 ,1 1! - turning the shells over. It's likeafarmertillingthesoil." r, ' By 3 p.m. two knee-deep 1:1'- mounds of oysters fill the 1 foredeck. The watermen havecaughttheirlimit-this year only 30 bushels a boat. Before the onslaught of 4 MSX, a disease that has q k devastated the bay's oyster 11 - . .. I I >,~ . ./ -': t, I - Un - 46:.1-4~,-43*' crop, they would have been r1 5.14 , allowed 50 bushets per man. - Butsmallerharvests mean. ~ "· higher prices. At WEI·.ehal' 1 t i Creek on Broad Neck Annapotis sojourner Walter Cronkite peninsula. a wholesaler peels off Six cap autographs the steeve of Chartie Sno- hundred-dollar bills and three twen'des for f den, a cook atifc'Garvey's, while the theda>-' scatch: S: 2 a bushel. Fai:. I :.:27·' 't res:nurants crwrier, Mike Ashford, looks fc- tight houn of Lack.w-tnrling 1.--r.- c n. 2 on. like thousands of other East Coast copt. surny tay. But the 0-·-5--e: 3€EK 2 72=.3 yachtrrs who cruise the Caribbecn-to- •bou.h 'le bert of the winter. .-her. Ch'·a New England circuit each year. Cronkite kike Ba-·- wak-ren end.n Lest ·r-9. r - ro-* mtisses the apportz,71» to ;top ..er in..1=™=mii th ?=fs 48-6/ bc=:3:_ ruic w.n·-,--- u k.ast: ther imaL i-cr: " r ------- Flti-fz 12 n= E- 2 - . af E-s·o•t·j_:ED.,- 1·-:f-ng --ke Ezz=: ·r- 1 -et, I -4, 1 A 150 .Nc: ic,ti Gecgr=pkic..4. r•:f r* 0%4 v. l.4*5*41*1911 i:*ma : .4 + - f 2* : 4 . ~f .23:*r. n -. Main Street belongs to the tourists, who office at Anne Arundel Community College, throng the restaurants, boutiques, trendy where he teaches biology "Except that there bars, and souvenir shops that have proli ferat- are so many ofthem. And everybody wants a ed. That's when Annapolitans gooutof their boat in his backyard, which means they have way to avoid downtown, with its clogged to live on the water. streets and woefullack of parking. "Boats have a tremendous impact on the ecological balance of the Severn and the bay," 11-~.UT TOURISM has become acornerstone he claims. "The worst problem is that most of ~~ ofthecity'seconomy. Lastyear them flush their toilets. And then there are 4.5 million visitors pumped an esti- the petroleum products: The motors all have mated 400 million dollars into local exhausts, and theyallleak. Finally, the paints cash registers, So, graciously or grudgingly, used on their bottoms have biocides inthem to the city makes room. It's one price, some say inhibit barnacles." the steepest price, to be paid for living in acity But boating is only one o f David'sconcerns. that fulfills two normallycon flictingdesires: to He cites the effects of uncontrolled develop- be cosmopolitan and to live life on a human ment: grading forhomes and highways, septic scale. As one residentputit: "How manyother systems, and road runoffs, all adding tothe citiesof 34,000 can boastasymphonyorches- bay' s woes. tra, an opera company, and three theater David, who lives ina small house in East- groups?" And the boats, it should be added. port, has no desire to live on the water. "But Always the boats. I want there to be places where I can see the Onesummerafternoon,inading}ty, Imotor water withouttrespassing, And I'dliketoget down Spa Creek, pastthedrawbridge where there without fighting traffic," cars yield the right-of-way to tail-masted Finally hesmilesatthe paradox o f growth in sailboats. Annapolis: "We'11 fight anew development Puttering into City Dock, a channel some and lose. The new people move in, become locals call"ego alley," I'm bedazzled by the good neighbors, and right away become envi- multitude of gleamingyachts-motor and ronmentally aware." sailingcraftof everydescription-tied to the The phenomenon David reters to is bulkheads. As yachtsmen polish their brass described by Mayor Dennis Callaha.n, him- work, halyards slap restively against a forest self a relative newcomer, as the "drawbridge of aluminum masts. mentality." To port, boaters sipping gin and tonics at "Once the castle is perceived to be full, the the Hilton's dockside bar are tossing cocktail inhabitants want to pull up the drawbridge," crackers to the ducks. Diesel fuel accents the he explains to me in his office on Duke of saltair, butsodoessomethingelse: the smellof Gloucester Street, success. For what I see here is the playing out In order to curb growth and preserve the of an American dream. quality of li fe, the citycouncil recently Three months later I witness the marketing approved a tough package of zoning laws. It of that dream, when the nation's largest in- includes critical-areas zoning for city shores, watersailboatand powerboatshows monopo- which the mayor maintains i5 more stringent lize City Dock for two weekends in October. than laws adopted by the state of Maryland to Many of those attending the sailboat show protect all of its Chesapeake shores. learned their ropes at the Annapolis Sailing This March he took me to see a five-acre School. With five branchesin the continental tract of wetland habitat at the headwaters of l-nited States and the Caribbean, the school Spa Creek saved from development bythat r·.0,1.urs more than 7,000 sailors a vear. legislation. Stand in Tona footbridge, hepoints 1 1.ird to believe, but some in Annapolis are through the reeds: nic.ne :o boating mania. One is David WH- "A walking path goes up from here along !: r-:'. 9.-s:ive A nr.a.x>!itanandmember o f the thatrise withaspectacular vietvof downtown ~ tr·-1 R: vcr .ASSOCIa:lon -apreservation Annapolis. My wife, Brenda, and I walked it r····1· '-ie Da: ed : . safecurding the riverand last fall. It's truly beautiful. And theycould 114 ..4-0,/1 have put another hundred condos here. rb 421 '1 t.4, r no,172'U-9.3 :-il *2.ing 299 But Annapoliss pasfion for presen·ation is ~ 4 461 -r in his tiny book-cruttered not limited to its environment and its historic b-90 (»·., int ort tlte Bay 181 . m '1 , 1 4 ' ' 3/ 4, l\ buildings. Callahan, in fact, wonofficein 1985 One of the most repeated wordsat the Naval 'lit li i largely on a platform of preserving the city' s Academy is leadership. Discipline, sports, 1 boatyards and maritime services, most of honorcodes-allareaimedatfosteringleader- -- --- ~ ~ ~ ·w ! which are located on the Eastport peninsula. ship. I was curious to learn how female mid- -444 :r "Wedon't wantto kill the goose thatlaid dies, 12 years afterbreakingtheacademy's 2<-h- I '· 4· l + thegoldenegg. Wehad toaskourselves: 'How entrance barrier, were measuring up. Battal- I. 03 -*..*k -Z». can you ensure that working boalyards will ion commander Ann Kelly, an attractive bru- ...9.· I' , D(, stay, when developers are offering owners nette from Wyoming, a picture of subdued 5'·. i I .. three million dollars for their property?' Our femininity, was about to inspect a company ~ '-. ' 1,~1~- new zoning laws were the answer. Now the offellow midshipmen in Bancroft Hall. \ · , 1 primary way the city will grow is through As the mids began to muster, a male plebe annexations. "chopped" a corner in front ofAnn. i 'O, "Beat Army, ma'am!"hebleated, and took 4 ~~~~|OR MANYPEOPLE(hename Annapolis his -e . % has become shorthand for the U. S. A vision ofspit and polish, the company . ~~ ~ Naval Academy, acon fusionof stood rigidly, chins scrunched against chests, termsthatriles some locals, Other than that, city and academy coexistin the har- monyofmutualadmiration. Hundredsofarea j familiesparticipateinamidshipmanprogram that provides the academy's 4,500 students 1 , . 1, with homes away from home. , ~ Visiting the tree-shaded academyyard < j is like stepping into a small federal city. · 1 Sedate buildings in the beaux arts style mix easily with the glass and concrete of recent , additions, like Rickover Hall, named for , ~,21~~ ~ 1 Adm. Hyman Rickover, father of today's 1 nuclear Navy. ~ = Inthatcenteroftheacademy'simposing 1161/ i science complex, Imet first classman Andy , '@b ' 1 li Johnson. Likemany attheacademy Andyhas ,ft the military in his blood-father and uncles 1 N graduates ofthe Air Force Academyand West 1,1 Point. Cutting an impressive figure in his t Navy blues, the six-foot-four midshipman from Austin, Texas, had two summer cruises under his belt, both in the Pacific. , ' "When I was on my cruises, I knew what was going on in the engine rooms from what I ~ ~' I learned here," he said, walking me through a room filled with huge turbines, pumps, and ~. boilers. "Over here is a gas turbine, which a , ' S.· P 21: lot of ourshipsare turningto fromsteam. You /U' ' fil can take the whole thing out and repair it, or ~ putanotheronein," Foracio ofonly 34,000, Annapolis q 1 boasts an enviable richness ofarts and We proceeded to an underground labyrinth crafts. Moe Turner (righO, one of 17 i of instructionlabs foradauntinglook atthe artists-in-residence at the Maryland technological gantlet all midshipmen must Hall for the Creative Arts, finds inspira· · ' run. Wave-generating tow tanks test the met- Non at Fleet and Cornhilt Streets. Tony 1 tle of scale-model ships designed and con- Smith (above) inspects an electric guitar structedlargelybymidshipmen, Wind tunnels that he helped make at the Paul Reed test model aircraft; Andy pointsouta friend Smith shop, whose customers include testing fuels foralunarlander. Inaphysicslab rock groups such as Santana, the Doobie students are learning the mysteries of lasers. Brothers, and Heart. 182 National Geographic, August 1988 , ..,v 2. L *i.3;3- ,~:~.494.4,4-<64:*04,41-· 4.-4 2 4 F . T , r . -•.----,~ir14~Er'/,Sty'.A-:. .-4/'t,/:.:is -./.- .*. . $ - r -,-. 1-- - ..f- 2, ..7- : ... . . - --. - . w. . CV-'. r.-9 I I I.*. I -0-- . --- -' *#2221.-33)163.2'420'--»/4.-- - c- ..,-7 4 a. -< + ' .. -. -1 . - i.~26.2.23.:-4,93:S'' .2.--,6 . --,--' ...../.-. j ~--449.1-'_tfair~=9* _ ' ~9242=4?2%95566-~glmit,gr~Ap*9~~11*~9,.trILiS:t.E,24-L+T~-EVOE:~-=22,2~ -.G-#.~P./.- 71;fil~--1/3-5:/2,83.5,;~L/;-TE flf&<4·*rev<w il;i,1.-liti~~.C;:I.fk.t oa#.Es= :.3 ' .--btlt_(PEE*?9. S -71~~~~*~~1~& ~ t~-2-1-s---f(gf-46'tr=~i-/33,5;L-1*. -Ept-72' i =a=W r/.-• - -'.:*164**f-£6%253~% Fis*. *Er=W ...1.-9--:€92' 96~3* .....41 4 . - -il .. Ki- /. I,••~.t · 41 . h. A - - tog-Ef t==-V.-L. . --/ , I. -- e.1,4 6 ./. 4 : ~i.lit-n =----- ---/1- _=PE=r--·-- , 6421. 4 . ./ r I ZE . .-I .-I *'. 2 - ....... --,t-C--.'DA-.211- f - . i L.:mi.1*|*i~**11~,5~41Ff-~34##SFFS)23*2*Zf..63· ..h 1 - r Rzes=»33=12.,/IC:"6£L'.,r=3241(-ST:fe- 7 4 - 1*/*Wk,th~ki:'-/ *, -*;-v-6(gSS=Pa,- 8%4-- -.----- - rM *-|*&<=-L-. -41*---' 7= .67%~5>.S-tOD~702=~7279 -·~17€~0 .. r'Ma'~~2~-*~*r21~~16*M M#74 - 9520##mia#~FNa=1512---za -'-=1 --5S=ZID 9:/' t6.· 16/Efte-=4-7-939/-*bff-.-,1,7-A-. 4 B 6 /-·Ream,-4,11££2-999'/~i;794 | 11---~C:Gi•4•r'~::al;1 f.-ty:9022-31&359*52*g. =96 I.-·2 . -- . -1 93~1~~315£43111 mi~EfiE#E=(Viat<gis# - .. 6.20dwirifi~:5:~1=72~#~0~~ :464,~--im=R"=1--=2 --- --T- -- -A-- - --. -----~55,~- - 1 ti--i-~i. .-* *4-- - -- .*i:- - -- , ~~-,c-151;ke,e•¥E~|2*i2~*~236*@*i>1*~Ekt=i-:/..%7>.~C'? ~ 32€i-L-0.22 r»-€,2-Amen - - -- - .-- L -- i 1 1 yen-=--..-:.f-.Lik=Le--€ - ---///-- -0 f-. --.- - - .- 1 . -t=22,51//3 - 1~53~3~3-tfi~-fit~i»int.-7 391,1 r·.- '4 --,2 ---- I. I 522«33 22*:,-»-ou#ers-*,Fti,p-kip=-vp*ca»#=-+, -,· *,·0.-6 19+E-15&~0~--I~ ~li*5 ~i:-.·-~:--_.-, eer ' ·- - *-,9-7-2-0*.7,-Tkij:=3,-:r:,59-f26'Merl'/'*I-*32£:1;,1/,/GA~#-4-i'Mi.-7:1:,SE,2~34;f-,Tr,-rsiliTJ~.I'Ljoirififggr.1-5%43:29426*T'-t-.2- 3%-- 5.-- 4 -47-789;*13235 13--33'~f-5- .«·coff#-5=776=/.ff 9*3~1.:i'?2~239€=turick.1-j~ 4336**»h-,72--- -I ..Ii---gwrwd=e b-~,-LE,·-0-2.iri.%Q~.'494:422~ -Flg~U'A€-.·53. · 3 --Atfi~725%.-fa-25'=-r--e.ze„-113--T,-15 '01-f~*~ ~22212:Offfi-~6,3342»~~=<.4,Eic-·4~. 0 : 0 .... 0. 0 . .1 1 0 -' ... . .0 1 : 0. .1 . 1, .. * .0 /1 7 2i?:1 y #,2.t .. , . ,. 9 1 / Victint of the May heat, amidshipmart • collap.ges at the U. 5.NavaLAcademy 1 during n dress parade when the sun h 4 -- spires neithergender. Composing 8 per- cent of the 4,500 midshipmen,women . . - 0 have steadily gained honors and respect : at the academy since they were first adniitted 12 years ago. 6 Many vie, butfew are chosen, forthe academy's first-rate, tax-paid educaton: I ..' 1- ILI'.I, I . .... 111 46 ., 1 le ;1 ./ ,. ... -0 4 7. ~4 41/4 f. I , - Lf. 49' 0/V . 1,1 1 1 0 . . .,a 1.1.61 1 r• '2 1 . Only 1,315 of 15,565 applicants were 41 1 1 successful lastyear. Tearful good-byes are common on induction day, as incom- .i ing students prepare for the isolation ambience of its host city, the Naval ofplebe summer. 77ianks in part to the 11 than t;ie otherservice academies. Academy enjoys a lower rate of attrition N. Squaringoff in frontofeachperson, Annchat- that hangs sweet around their centuries-old tedwitha few whilescrutinizingthem, headto "liberty tree,"students hereimbibethe wis- traditions, I joined several students iii the here," she added. "How can a basically toe, for dress-code in fractions. dom of centuries in a study program centered Yorker, defended hersenior thesison Plato at should take?1 never would have discovered library as Claudia Probst, a 21-year-old New uneducated freshman know whatpathshe Instead of some hard-nosed dressing-down on the "great books." her inspection seemed almostamiable. The instructors, whatever their degrees, her three inquisitors, it wasobvious, were had to choose my own curriculum." her pregraduation orals. Both the student and iny interest in Greek philosophy i f I had ' " Everyone has their own leadership style, " are called tutors and are required to teach learning from the experience. Back in the late sixties, when the hair was she explained. "Yelling is not partof mine. I all subjects. With asister campus located in "St. John'shelps ussee which ideas have long anc! war sentiments short, epitliets and use a positive approach." Santa Fe, New Mexico, thecollege consistent- ; stoodthetestoftime," shetoldme. "Andhow overripe fruitreportedly flewasmidshipmen As different fromeachotherasyinandyang ly ranks nearthetopin national polls foraca- : those ideas have innuenced thought across the paraded past St. John'scampus. Todayani- i are the academy and its neighbor, St. John's demic excellence. I College. Calmed by an air of timelessness Toobserveone of St. John'smosthonored disciplines. mosities have cooled. Six years ago, in "We don't pick and choose our own courses fact, a tradition was born when the Johnnies 186 National Geographic, August 1988 £ Annapolis: Camelot on the Bay 187 Rehab For Profit 3 --% How to make money rehabilitating historic and nonhistoric properties. A cooperative presentation of ~ NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® REALTOR® and The Center for Historic Houses of "~ National Trust for Historic Preservation \ 1/ / ascst L- ;4 who to contact in your local area. intensive coverage of the critical stages of the £..1-fri...1-W..924 ..... 1-he major portion of your seminar is spent in .j ex LOCations and dates rehabilitation process. In how-to-do-it order, you ~ ' are shown: Registration: 8:00 - 8:30 a.m. - C . 1Iow to select the neigliborhocwl, the prop- --9- COM /'41 00 < - Seminar: 8:30 a.m. t04:3() p.m. --·~--------- ~ PEEFEC Z:I~our - 10 'fj~FUNN c]' 4__ Cincinnati, OIl • October 17 project efficiently organii.cd *a--* ---1----- Denver, CO • October 17 · Your go or no-go decision criteria...the all- Savannah, GA · October 20 Birmingham, AL • October 19 important feasibility studies covering the pertinent information for the specific locality plus Nashville, TN • October 21 - w out the complete job and find the sources of your project. market, the site, the deal and the financing the names of organizations and contacts to help Richmond, VA • October 24 • Project planning and financing...how to lay you plan, organize, and successfully complete Newport, RI • October 25 financial backing Atlanta, GA • October 27 Raleigh, NC · October 26 1/1 1 ETA You get it all in 1-2-3 order, just as you d run _Od-ELE~t·Fltfl an actual project, every step to get you ready for Coinplete reference materials . Oklahoma City, OK • October 27 the implementation of your own rehab project. 7,1 .1,(A Philadelphia, PA • October 28 Included with your seminar are complete . intensive, bne-da¥ §81*inar of each topic covered, and reference publications. marion of enrollment. reproductions of all speakers' exhibits, a summary You will be sent directions to your seminar site and continuing education information with confir- i ~ This material will provide valuable assistance in One of the few areas left intact by the 1986 organizing and implementing yourown changes in tax laws are the tax credits available for rehabilitation projects. historic preservation. The combination of this , direct economic incentive and a growing public 1/3941, g kegistet early and save 20% appreciation for the usefulness of thoughtfully -0- restored properties offers sound new investment - · 1, 1. ·'j~~.~~ .1 \C=7-7-- opportunities. This special seminar shows you Pual.Eli O( -- Make reservations for yourselfand other key step by step how to rehab properly and profitably. people from your firm at least 30 days before the les designed to give you the information and --- _ ~~--~-~~-~~ ~ seminar you wish to attend and save 20% on insights you need to make the most of these tuition fees. You'll find this productive seminar a opportunities. The seminar is open to real estate valuable tool in leading your firm into new, professionals, investors and historic profitable and worthwhile enterprises. preservationists. S0ebial lobaiizid inforinatidil If you are unable to attend, you may substitute another person by calling the registration hotline. .-' +Ne kdy di@§ to rehab profits Although the profit potential is high, the Service charge of 20% on cancellations, no later rehabilitation of historic properties often calls for than one week before the seminar. Refunds by .Ill© 11 le:2~ - sensitive handling. In this final segment of your written request or by calling the registration Your rehab seminar is arranged in careful, seminar, you are shown how to gain the coopera- hotline. chronological order so you go away with the tion of the public and private sectors, how to Mail attached form or call: information you need in useful, logical form. The handle easements, and how to meet the Secretary NATIONAL session opens with a brief overview of the social of Interior's standards to gain tax credits, ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® Completion of the seminar will earn you six hours and economic advantages of preservation and To make sure you get all the information you Education Division of Continuing Education Credit in many states. rehabilitation. Then, you are shown the criteria need to operate in your area, each seminar will be 777 14th Street, N.W.,Washington, DC 20005 for what constitutes historic properties, how to presented in cooperation with local preservation Toll-free reservation hotline: register them with the appropriate authorities, and and REALTOR® organizations. You'll get (800) 874-6500 OR (202) 383-1288 . 41. i M!.1. 1.~ J.·16 't.41,~,1 401 11 4'. r·r T ... . r ' ... 1 - *14... 1 Tuition $120 including all course materials and six-month complementary membership in the National Trust for Histonc Preservadon. ~ $95 early-bird registration 30 days in advance, a savings of 20%. D YES! Enroll me and my associates in the Rehab for Profit seminar in the city checked below. O Cincinnati, OH • October 17 O Denver, CO · October 17 O Birmingham, AL · October 19 O Savannah, GA · October 20 O Nashville, TN · October 21 O Richmond, VA • October 24 O Newport, RI • October 25 O Raleigh, NC • October 26 O Atlanta, GA · October 27 O Oklahoma City, OK · October 27 O Philadelphia, PA · October 28 Name Name Firm Street City/State/Zip Business Phone ( ) O Enclosed is my check or money order for reservations payable to: NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® O Charge to my D Visa or O MasterCard Card Number Exp. Date Name on Card O Early Bird $95 O Late $120 Please answer the following questions: 1. Will you apply this seminar toward REALTOR® continuing education credit? El Yes O No 2. Please list your occupation: 3. How many years have you been in the real estate profession? O Not in real estate 0 2 years or less 0 3-5 years 0 6-10 years 0 10+years 4. Have you ever completed an historic rehabilitation project? 0 Yes 0 No 5. Are you a member of the National Trust for Historic Preservation? O Yes 0 No Mail uxis form or caU: NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® Education Division 777 14th Street, N.W., Washington, DC 20005 Toll-free reservation hotline: (800) 874-6500 or (202) 383-1288 An outstanding faculty Susan Baldwin, President of the Landmarks Preservation Council of Illinois has a professional back- ground which includes design, architectural history and historic preservation, and real estate development. Ms. Baldwin recently started Baldwin Consulting, Inc., a service to the Real Estate Development Community on historic property investments and project development. She has a graduate degree in Comprehensive Planning and Design and is working towards a Ph.D. in Architectural History. William MacRostie is a preservation development consultant with extensive national exposure. As a partner in the Heritage Consulting Group and president of the MacRostie Company, he works with clients to get their properties listed on the National Register and cenified for use of the Federal tax credits for historic rehabilitation. Mr. MacRostie received a Masters in Preservation Studies from Boston University. Tom Moriarity has a professional background in downtown revitalization, commercial area management and architecture, with expertise in historic preservation. Working out of Halcyon's Washington, DC office, Mr. Moriarity manages large-scale mixed-use development studies, marketing, and commercial area revitalization programs. He holds a Bachelor of Science in Architectural Studies and a Bachelor of Architecture from the University to Texas. Joseph K. Oppermann is co-owner of C. PhiHips & Company, P.A., a firm which specializes in the rehab/ restoration of older buildings and new construction of historic areas. He has extensive experience in grants, tax abatement, preservation legislation, and evaluation of properties for listing in the National Register of Historic Places. He holds a Bachelors and Masters degree in Architecture and a Bachelor of Arts degree in History from the University of Texas. var MA ///r /1/WRIA//6~ fl ¢¥?i Register now and save 20% on enrollment fee! NAT[ONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® Education Division BULK RATE 777 14th Street, N.W. U.S. POSTAGE Washington, DC 20005 PAI D ALEXANDRIA, VA PERMIT NO. 108 Cr f rj CIO 0 Cl) N LU,·faC 740. Z LA <1 X X03 o cy.1 0 CE H •OZ 1 0 • 4 2 0- Z -/ I 01 L , I.*3%\ How~~ V nakemoneyrehabilitating histc. residential and commercial I TtiQS. 6bI 9£292 NI133 'V 33 SONI A One Day Seminar ,-r-,1 17 By Anthony Monaco Peartess Old houses are both charming and intimidating! This seminar, via slides, lecture and house tour, takes the fear out of buying, renovating or evaluating older homes. ~ WHO CAN BENEFIT FROM THE SEMINAR: · Novices such as potential homeowners, future renovators and those who just love older homes. · Professionals, like real estate agents and appraisers. MN. THE SEMINAR: PART I · Learn the basics of architectural style from ornate Victorians /1 7 7 to simplistic bungalows and on through 1 950's ranches. -0· - · A fascinating "before and after" presentation documents an unusual Monaco restoration. ula PART II: THE EXTERIOR · Experience a thorough exterior examination of an old T house from the roof ridge to the foundation footing. · All aspects of concern from settlement to roof leaks~ ~~~ are carefully examined and explored. PART III: THE INTERIOR · The inner workings of the old house from the basement to the attic, are scrutinized along with structure, i systems, building details and much more to aid students in understanding and dealing with problems unique to older homes. PART IV: THE TOUR · The class visits several older homes getting a first hand look at many items covered in the seminar. FLEXIBLE FORMAT: :) · Specific needs of students can be addressed such as real estate, financing, estimating or "how-to" * r.. questions as they relate to old houses or restoration. ' :kit . THE CLASSROOM FACILITY: - -- ~---- -- · ~ -·--The historic-Tears/Mcfarland Mansion is a perfect setting for-thia education-aT-yer-ente ftaihitio'ie-rfiinit.-- -- THE INSTRUCTOR: , · Anthony Monaco is a licensed contractor and real estate broker, in addition to having earned a Master's Degree in Design. · In the past 12 years he has bought, restored and sold scores of vintage homes including some of f Denver's oldest and finest properties. · Many of these homes have been featured on historic home tours. · His work has earned the plaudits of the local press. · As "The Old House Expert", he appears regularly on KOA Radio's "FIX-UP" Show. .: 6 · He lectures to professional real estate and appraisal groups. 1 , · A version of this seminar has been accredited by the prestigious Society of Real Estate Appraisers. THE SEMINAR FORMAT: 9:00..........10:30 Architectural Style 6,~IL '1 1 ~~ ' ' .6 10:30 ........ 10:45 Coffee Break , P al 10:45 ........ 12:15 Exterior Examination 12:15 .......... 1 :00 Lunch (do-it-yourself) .t.•E---9¤]E-,140/'In'L..21~98...fi-. 1:00 ............ 3:00 Interior Examination :' 2·'- ''•111U2t~£!U£(U~L[~EtU[1~aUL~2L.,:af·7 3:00 ............ 4:30 House Tour n7J177: W - .2 Pil I c v. LOCATION: 1290 Williams St., Denver -1:@;ETATOTTP~ZW-- FEES: $30 Per Individual; $50 Per Couple 10*- , b Registration and payment must be made prior to class. , , 4..2,Id/231Eau~9471nt,~19 .1 6 I Fee includes handouts, coffee and snacks. 41 * 01 1 =1 = m 11 E 1 7~ I fs; - ; 9 •9 F*8~ 1 Hamit - 054 ~ Class Date: Sept. 24 A COLFAX A 1 Name(s) 11 14 th 1 Address 13 th 1 Ciw State Zip 1 1 Phone (work) (home) l<g , I- 1290 z 6 2 , CHEESMAN ~ Check enclosed for: $30 ( ) Individual; $50 ( ) Couple ' 2 5 A.; PARK ~ Make payable and remit to: 182 , --- 1 r.1 t. .1 v i A. R. 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