Tuesday, October 12, 2021

Northern Hotel hosts history, Old Town mystery


Tales of ghosts, phantoms, spooky happenings abound


By Rob Carrigan, robcarrigan1@gmail.com

If you listen to the local folks' stories and the ghost tour guides of Old Town Fort Collins, they will tell you about fire alarms and the spooky figures and happenings centered around an ancient downtown hotel. Even today residents will tell you of a ghost child who wanders the space there, or of mother searching, or of phantom Shriners, or of young women cut down in the prime of their youth.

It was the Northern Hotel, in fact, tabbed as the last place the Mata sisters were seen alive. The sister's bodies were discovered in late April, 1978.  Rosemary Mata, 21, and Julia Mata DeLosSantos, 24, were found beat to death on a rural roadside up Buckhorn Canyon, west of Fort Collins

"They paint a picture of the early days of the Mata sisters' murder investigation. They feature a sketch of a man a witness said was last seen with the women outside the Northern Hotel in the early morning hours of April 29, 1978," writes Erin Udell, in a story presented in the local "Fort Collins Coloradoan" about the news clippings and other information saved by a sister of the Mata sisters, on the 40th anniversary of the Mata sisters' death.

"They explain how Santos Romero Jr., the Fort Collins house painter serving two life sentences for the sisters' deaths, later appealed that conviction, claiming innocence."

But the history stretches back further, with tales of more supernatural occurrences. 

"Perhaps more history of Fort Collins abides in the walls and bones of the Northern Hotel than in any other downtown structure. Step into its elegant lobby with the wide, sweeping staircase and hear the echoes of history," notes local historian Barbara Fleming, at poudrelandmarks.org.

She offers the following timeline:

1873—Fort Collins does not have much to commend it—noted traveler Isabella Bird describes the town as “revolting…with coarse speech, coarse food, coarse everything,” swarming with locusts and black flies. Marcus Coon, seeing a brighter future, builds the Agricultural Hotel on Mason Street.

1877—Somewhat more settled and civilized, the town boasts electricity, a railroad line and a soon-to-open college. Englishman David Harris purchases Coon’s hotel, moves part of it to the triangular corner of College and Walnut where the true-north town meets the older riverside settlement, names it the Commercial Hotel, adds rooms, and charges $2 a night, $5 a week. The small rooms contain only a bed, a chair, a chamber pot and a stand for water. Guests are either men or respectable couples. Women don’t travel alone. Harris replaces the wooden building with the brick one that still stands. Though it remains open, the hotel faces stiff competition. Fort Collins is growing. The seat of Larimer County, it is becoming a commercial and industrial center.

1904—The hopeful spirit of the new century energizes the town, home of a new sugar-beet factory and a thriving sheep ranching enterprise. A consortium of businessmen buys the hotel, renames it the Northern, and develops an “elegant, imposing, first class” establishment, according to newspaper accounts. Wonder of wonders, each room has a telephone. Some rooms even have private baths. Across the decades, the hotel sees the town through the War to End All Wars, a devastating flu epidemic, the exuberant twenties, an oil boom that goes bust, and the Great Depression.

1940—Ace Gillette opens a restaurant on the first floor with a large ceiling dome in the center. Rumor has it that city leaders don’t like the dome because it echoes comments they don’t want overheard. The dome will be hidden for years. Post World War II—After frequently housing soldiers during the war, the hotel continues in its sedate way, its distinctive Art Deco façade marking the northern end of downtown. But the old lady begins to show her age. Over the years, Gillette’s restaurant closes, the type of hotel guests and tenants changes, and, along with the rest of downtown, the trend is downward. Then, in 1975, a devastating fire traps and kills a 90-yearold man on the fourth floor. Another resident is jailed on suspicion of arson. The “pearl of northern Colorado” has lost its luster.

2001—Resurrected and remodeled, the Northern becomes low-income housing for senior citizens. New tenants occupy the ground floor. Restored to its “Art Deco glory,” as author Tom Noel noted, the stately old building is now an outstanding downtown landmark. This beautiful, venerable structure has come full circle from its glory days.









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