Barney L. Ford Building Explained

Barney L. Ford Building
Location:Denver, Colorado
Built:1863
Added:June 24, 1976
Designated Other1:Colorado
Designated Other1 Number:5DV.47.66
Refnum:76000551

The Barney L. Ford Building, a privately owned building in Denver, Colorado, is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. It was deemed significant for its association with Barney Ford, an escaped slave who became a prominent businessman and a Republican Party leader in Colorado.[1] The building is included by the National Park Service in lists of Underground Railroad-associated places,[2] for its association with Ford; the Colorado Territory was itself far from the Underground Railroad routes north from the slavery states in the U.S. South.

Building

Ford established his second building on the site in 1863, following his first building being destroyed in a fire that year. Beginning in August, he operated a hair salon and barber shop out of the basement, the "People's Restaurant" on the ground floor, and a bar on the second floor.[3]

Barney Ford

See main article: Barney Ford. Barney Ford was a black pioneer, civil rights activist, and civic leader. He was born into slavery in 1822 in Stafford, Virginia, and eventually escaped to Chicago.[1] He became an abolitionist after meeting Henry O. Wagoner, a member of the Underground Railroad, in Chicago. He was a businessman and a Republican Party, politician. He invested in real estate and hotels in Denver and Cheyenne, Wyoming and in 1854 he had the 14th highest income in the state of Colorado. He lobbied for voting rights for African Americans.[1]

Notes and References

  1. none. National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination: Barney Ford's People's Restaurant / Barney L. Ford Building . National Archives . 1976 . May 25, 2021 . With three photos from 1976-78.
  2. Web site: Aboard the Underground Railroad - Barney L. Ford Building . 2021-05-24 . www.nps.gov.
  3. Web site: Barney L. Ford Building. 2021-05-24 . History Colorado .