Click Here To View the Current Newsletter The committee applied for non-profit status and became the Apishapa Valley Historical Society in in 2004. The boundaries for this area to the east, include the remains of the Foster House Stagecoach site along the Apishapa River and west to include Trujillo Creek, Gulnare, and Jaroso Canyons. In 2005 we received a grant from the State Historical Fund, a program of the Colorado Historical Society, to complete a structural assessment of the bank building to identify the deterioration of the fabric of this imposing building which occupies a prominent corner of the town of Aguilar. The intention of this assessment will be the base of a the conservation and maintenance strategy, eventually finding a use and proceed with a combination of restoration and rehabilitation of this historic structure. The assessment was initiated by the owner of the building and the nomination was prepared by the historical society. The completed assessment can be viewed at the Aguilar Town Library. In September 2005 the Colorado Historical Society announced the listing of the First State Bank of Aguilar/ Gianella Building in the Colorado State Register of Historic Properties in recognition of this property’s contribution to the heritage of the State of Colorado. The State Historical Fund recently awarded a grant to the Town of Aguilar to complete a cultural Resource Survey which will include a reconnaissance survey to select at least 10 properties for intensive survey in order to identify and document cultural resources which might become a baseline for future preservation efforts. There is an urgent need to develop a plan to prevent losses of cultural resources such as the loss of Aguilar’s historic elementary and high school buildings in 2004. This project will begin in the fall of 2006.
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