For more than 100 years, a small cabin stood on a steep, tree-covered mountainside in Keystone Gulch. When the 12-by-18 foot structure was first built in the early 1900s, it housed miners who would crawl...
Shame, it was in decent condition. Well that looks bad on their office.
In fact, Chief Preservation Officer Patrick Eidman said in an email that the State Historic Preservation Office didn’t even know that the demolition had occurred until Summit Daily reached out this spring with questions.
Shame, it was in decent condition. Well that looks bad on their office.