Kopper's Hotel and Saloon explained

Kopper's Hotel and Saloon
Location:1215-1219 20th St., Denver, Colorado
Coordinates:39.7528°N -104.9914°W
Architect:Eberley, Frederick Carl
Architecture:Queen Anne
Built:1889
Added:June 4, 1999
Area:less than one acre
Refnum:98001378

Kopper's Hotel and Saloon, also known as the Airedale Building, is a National Register of Historic Places listed building in Denver, Colorado. It was designed by Frederick C. Eberley.[1] [2] The Hotel and Saloon was constructed in 1889. The building was renamed the Airedale in 1919 and the pediment was modified accordingly. The facade is not believed to have undergone any other major changes at the time.

It was a working-class hotel. The saloon closed down due to statewide prohibition and the property was sold by its German owner (Albert Kopper, a Bavarian immigrant) at a time when anti-German sentiment was strong during World War I. It continued to be used as a hotel and rooming house into the 1970s.

The building is an example of Queen Anne commercial style architecture. The first floor has been extensively remodeled, but the upper floors remain largely intact.

German immigrants and their bar culture figured prominently in Denver culture of the 1880s when one third of Denver's saloonkeepers were German-born. Many of the bars were located along Market St. and Larimer St. to the southwest of Kopper's Saloon.[3]

The building has been home to a porn shop.[4]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 1919 - Airedale Hotel & Saloon - Denver, CO - Dated Buildings and Cornerstones on . Waymarking.com . 2013-03-18 . 2022-05-04.
  2. Web site: Kopper's Hotel and Saloon.
  3. Web site: [{{NRHP url|id=98001378}} National Register of Historic Places Registration: Kopper's Hotel and Saloon / Airedale Building / 5DV.518 ]. Ron Sladek and Benjamin Fogelberg . May 29, 1998 . National Park Service. and
  4. Web site: Best of 2002.