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Serving Colorado and the Four Corners since 1996 |
Silverton's
Greene
Street by Samantha Tisdel Wright Silverton, Colorado 2005 While one block to the east, Blair Street was doing her best to milk the money out of unsuspecting miners, the Teller Block was a paradigm of respectability in Silverton’s early business community, much as it still is today. Anchoring the north end of the block is a double-front brick structure, the Teller Building, which now houses the Ellis Tanner Gallery and the Green Table restaurant downstairs, and the charming, historic Teller House Hotel upstairs. If you had strolled into this 1896-era building at the turn of the last century, you could have chosen from twin saloons in which to quench your thirst—The Frog for the French and The Tyrol for northern Italians—while upstairs a lodging facility operated under the same name as today, in honor of pro-mining Senator Henry Teller. In 1916, The Frog and The Tyrol moved out to make way for the French Bakery, a purveyor of groceries and baked goods until the 1970s, later a restaurant and now a gallery of fine Indian Arts and Crafts. If you didn’t like the looks of the fellas at The Tyrol and The Frog, you could have headed down the block to the picturesque Chicago Saloon (now home to the Indian Trading Post), a cheerful respite for Italian immigrant miners. After wetting your whistle at your saloon of choice and getting a good night’s sleep at the Teller House, you might have stopped by the stone and brick structure next door (which now houses the Great Divide Co.), and for $2, rented a horse from the Exchange Livery to ride up to your mining claim. Turned loose, the animal would find its way back to town on its own and walk up the ramp to its stall in the livery, The animals were kept on the second floor; the downstairs sheltered buggies and wagons. The Doud brothers constructed the livery in 1906, and the top story eventually caved in from snow load. Although it dates back only to
1972, making
it one of the newest buildings on Greene Street, Outdoor World looks
right
at home among its historic neighbors. The building has always housed
Wiley
Carmack’s outdoor clothing and equipment business.
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