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On
another occasion, when a tourist was playing the slot machines, she
lost track of her daughter. When she began to search, she found
her perched on the staircase. Asking her daughter what she was
doing, the young girl replied that she was playing with Lilly.
Lilly evidently has an artistic side as her drawings, numbers, and
letters are often found in the hallway at the top of the staircase.
Although the walls are scrubbed down, the drawings always reappear.
According to the tales, Lilly is also said to like balloons, but only
in certain colors. For example, if a blue balloon is left for
her, it will pop. However, if a purple balloon is left, it will
begin to wander around the building on its own.
Others
have often seen Lilly peering from an upstairs window down to the
street below.
Buffalo Billy’s is located at 239-243 E. Bennett Avenue.
Imperial Hotel
Following the disastrous fire that razed most of the city in 1896, the
Imperial Hotel was built to accommodate the many miners and visitors
to the area. Located at 3rd Street and Bennett
Avenue, the building was opened as the Collins Hotel, luring guests
with modern amenities such as electric lights and steam heat.
In
the early part of the 20th century the hotel was run by an
Englishman by the name of George Long. Having emigrated from
Europe as a young man, he made his way to Denver, where he married his
first cousin. Before long, the couple was running the hotel, focusing
on service, comfort, and fine dining.
The
couple also began to have children – two daughters and a son. Perhaps because they were first cousins and too closely related, their
oldest daughter, Alice, suffered from a severe mental disorder. As the girl grew older, she became more and more difficult to control,
until her parents were finally forced to keep her locked in their
apartment next to the lobby. Today, this is the site of the Red
Rooster bar.
Some
time later, when George was going down the narrow stairs to the basement,
he fell to his death. Though it very well could have been an
accident, rumors began to abound that Alice had killed her father when he
approached the top of the stairs, striking him in the head with a cast
iron skillet.
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