- Westminster Castle
Infobox_nrhp | name =Westminster University
nrhp_type =nrhp
caption =The Stanford White-designed Westminster Castle around 1908
location= 3455 W. 83rd AveWestminster, Colorado
lat_degrees = 39 | lat_minutes = 50 | lat_seconds = 50.28 | lat_direction = N
long_degrees = 105 | long_minutes = 1 | long_seconds = 53.19 | long_direction = W
area =
built =1892
architect= E.B. Gregory and Stanford B. White
architecture= Other, Romanesque
added =August 10 ,1979
governing_body = Private
refnum=79000572 cite web|url=http://www.nr.nps.gov/|title=National Register Information System|date=2006-03-15|work=National Register of Historic Places|publisher=National Park Service] The Westminster Castle, also locally known as "The Big Red Castle" or "The Pillar of Fire" is ahistoric landmark located inWestminster, Colorado , northwest ofDenver near the intersection of 83rd and Federal.Conception to construction
Now owned by the Pillar of Fire church, the "Big Red Castle" started life in 1890 with dreams of becoming "The Princeton of the West" when New Yorker Henry T. Mayham received approval to build a
Presbyterian university on his land atop a hill overlooking Denver, Colorado. This beautiful property was named Crown Point and was the highest point in the early, sprawling Adams County.An
architect named E.B. Gregory designed and laid thecornerstone for the university's main building which was to be constructed of gray stone from the Coal Creek area. But because of lack of funding, construction was delayed so Mayham hired New York architectStanford White to finish the design and oversee construction. One main design element changed by White was the stone--now a red sandstone from theRed Rocks /Manitou area. White's design was completed by 1893: 160' frontage, 80' depth, three stories tall, with a distinctive 175' tall tower.The University opens
Although the construction was completed in 1893, the doors of Westminster University did not open until September 17, 1908 thanks to the Silver Crash of 1893 and competition from a nearby Presbyterian college. Mayham's persistent fund-raising paid off when the first 60 students began classes in 1908.
Tuition was $50 per year and even included indoor plumbing!1911 saw some changes to the city in which the University was located. The town, formerly known as Harris (for an early settler), incorporated and changed their name to Westminster, in honor of Westminster University. The next few years were basically uneventful until, in 1915, the Board of
Trustees made the decision to exclude women from the University. It seemed like a good decision at the time, but just two years later they found themselves with no enrollment because all of the young men had gone to fight inWorld War I . The Presbyterian University closed its doors in 1917, never to realize its dream of becoming the Princeton of the West.Pillar of Fire
At its peak, the Crown Point property was worth nearly a half a million dollars. But after the devastating closure and three-year abandonment, was purchased by Bishop
Alma White of thePillar of Fire Church for $40,000 onJanuary 31 ,1920 . Included in the sale was the main college building, 45 acres of land, a power plant, and two houses (one a student'sdormitory , the other the President's house.)The sale was a good deal, but the state of the buildings left the church with $75,000 worth of repairs. Shattered windows, cracked walls, and broken plaster were the main structural complaints, but the once regal building had also become a glorified barn with thousands of chickens in the basement and farm machinery on the first floor.
In spite of the enormity of the work, the new Westminster University opened to students on September 7th, 1920, just eight months after the purchase. Within six years of opening, the school, now known as Belleview Schools, had received its accreditation and was ready for decades of education.
Today
Belleview Christian Schools still reside on the Westminster University campus which is home to a wide range of educational experiences including Belleview Christian Childcare & PreSchool (ages 2 1/2-4), Belleview Christian School (K-12), as well as Belleview Christian College and Bible Seminary. Although most of the teaching happens in newer buildings on the campus, classes continue in the historic main building which was entered on the
National Register of Historic Places in 1979. The building is also the home ofKPOF AM91 Radio, Colorado's first station to broadcast inHD Radio .The public is encouraged to come out to the campus for a family fun day that happens at the castle each June. "Open House on the Hill" features castle tours, carnival rides, games, food, and fun for the whole family sponsored by Belleview Christian Schools and AM91 The Point.
References
* Westminster Historical Society
* KPOF AM91 Radio
* Belleview Christian SchoolsExternal links
* [http://www.ci.westminster.co.us/city/history/ Westminster Historical Society]
* [http://www.am91.org/ KPOF AM91]
* [http://www.pillar.org/ Pillar of Fire]
* [http://www.belleviewchristian.com/ Belleview Christian Schools]
* [http://www.belleview-college.org/ Belleview Christian College and Bible Seminary]
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