While researching, it's always fun to find a new rabbit hole to go down to discover new things about our history.
While researching, it's always fun to find a new rabbit hole to go down to discover new things about our history. I initially found a story from 1908 describing how a priest managed to keep his congregation calm while he and the altar boys successfully fought a fire that began on the altar due to some candles. Rev. James Ryan of St. Leo's Catholic Church, suffered severe burns to his hands and neck. St. Leo's stood on Colfax between Ninth and Tenth Streets, but I had never heard of it.
It turns out that it was built in 1888, after the Irish and German Catholics had been sharing St. Elizabeth of Hungary. However, they did not want to worship together due to their cultural and language differences. So, St. Leo's was built to serve the English speaking Irish community.
By the early 1920s, Mexican and Spanish-speaking immigrants had started to arrive and join St. Leo's causing an exodus of the Irish from the church. In order to survive, they funded the construction of St. Cajetan's church in 1926 for the Spanish speaking catholics. So, there were three Catholic churches within a few blocks of each other.
St. Leo's (pictured) closed in 1965 due to declining numbers and was torn down within a few months. St. Cajetan's served as a church until 1973, when DURA bought it as part of its plan to redevelop the area into the Auraria campus. It still stands as a cultural center. St. Elizabeth of Hungary still operates as a Catholic church, but was the site of a horrific murder in 1908 that I posted about back in February.


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