“The Scenic History of Denver Cemeteries: From Cheesman Park to Riverside,” by Phil Goodstein
As Mount Prospect declined, Riverside sprang up as Denver’s go-to cemetery. The names on graves there are a history of early Denver. Tabor, Cheesman, Hallack/Steck, Zang, Barth, Sopris. Phil Goodstein, known for his meticulous research, tells the stories of many of them in this first volume of a trilogy on Denver cemeteries. Along with brief biographies of the famous and infamous of Denver dead, Goodstein relates the history of the earliest Denver cemeteries and their fates.
One reason Denver has so many parks is Mayor Robert Speer. He wanted Denver to look like Paris, so he launched a system of parks and parkways. They range from sprawling Washington Park to tiny Sonny Lawson Park, named for Five Points’ first druggist, who operated the Radio Pharmacy. Founders and residents of early Cherry Hills read like a list of Denver’s who’s who: Grant, Gano, Buell, Shafroth, Blackmer, Koelbel. And later, musical comedy star Ethel Merman, who was married to Continental Airlines CEO Robert Six.
Thanks to its foresighted developers, thousands of Coloradans could afford to own homes in Northglenn, where prices in 1959 began at $11,600. Families today live in a self-contained community of parks, churches, schools and commercial development.
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