Pueblo Orphanages: Transformation Main MenuPUEBLO ORPHANAGESPURPOSENEED FOR ORPHANAGESHISTORY OF PUEBLO ORPHANAGESBACKGROUND HISTORYARCHITECTURETransformations of ArchitectureTHEIR STORIESStories of transformation of the peoplePHOTO GALLERY{Photos of Sacred Heart, McClleland, and Lincoln Home OrphanagesEXTERNAL LINKS/RESOURCESKatelyn Olds, Angelique Urenda, Amanda Arszman, Lisa Butler, Chanel Jamesf7b768c49f57a86b3626ea10bcee0a7e9e996241
Lincoln Home Current
12018-04-24T16:46:59-07:00Angelique84f19c42f68ef12327e8a0bfdc3332a36ff4bc6d289311Current picture of Lincoln Home in 2018plain2018-04-24T16:47:00-07:00Angelique84f19c42f68ef12327e8a0bfdc3332a36ff4bc6d
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1media/Lincoln Home statue plaque.jpgmedia/lincoln home6.jpg2018-03-06T21:00:00-08:00Lincoln Home49image_header2018-04-30T03:09:31-07:00 2713 North Grand
In 1905 The Colored Orphanage and Old Folks Home was known as, "the only home for colored children in an area of seven states." The Lincoln Home was started by the Federation of Colored Women’s Clubs in the city of Pueblo and became the only known black orphanage in Colorado. Built in 1906, the home moved in 1914 to two small red-brick houses that were built closely together on 2714 North Grand Avenue, where it remained until the city’s segregated orphanage system ended in 1963. In 1997 the Lincoln Home building on North Grand Avenue was listed on the State Register of Historic Properties, and in the early 2000s the building housed the Martin Luther King Jr. Cultural Center. Currently the building serves as a museum which is open to the public and can be toured. Which was a huge honor for Pueblo, Colorado. Pueblo’s black community traces its roots to the diverse residents of El Pueblo, the early trading post that was built near the present city in the 1840s. According to the Colorado Encyclopedia, after the Colorado Gold Rush and the Civil War, new black residents arrived from border states such as Kentucky and Missouri. Between 1870 and 1880 Pueblo County’s black population grew from 27 to 141. The area’s black population continued to grow over the next two decades. By the early 1900s, Pueblo’s black community was developing its own institutions, including the city’s first black newspaper.