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In 1874, most Denver commercial buildings used Italianate round arches — the default vocabulary of American frontier architecture. The Wells Fargo Building at 1338 15th Street used pointed arches. Gothic arches. On a money house in the Rocky Mountain West. Denver Landmark #28 is one of the strangest and most distinctive pieces of pre-statehood architecture surviving in Denver, and it was built to hold gold.
⚠️ Editor note: Research on this building is relatively thin. Supplemental sources — Denver Public Library Western History Collection, Denver Landmark Preservation Commission records — are recommended before final publication. Denver Historic Landmarks Map
Wells, Fargo & Company was the financial and freight infrastructure of the American West. Its express offices handled banking services, mail, and freight — including the gold and silver bullion that was the product of Colorado's mining economy. By the early 1870s, Denver had become the financial hub of the Rocky Mountain mining region, and a Wells Fargo office here was essential infrastructure.
The 1874 building at 1338 15th Street handled receipts and dispatch of Colorado's mining wealth — gold bars from Leadville, Cripple Creek, and Central City passed through this office on their way to Eastern banks and mints. The building was effectively a vault for the region's most valuable commodity. Denver's Oldest Landmarks
The Gothic Revival style — pointed arched windows, decorative hood molds over openings, corbeled brick at the roofline — was rare in frontier commercial architecture. Most Denver builders of the era used Italianate round arches because they were fashionable, structurally simple, and compatible with the brick construction techniques that came west with Eastern builders. Gothic arches required different forms and a different aesthetic sensibility.
The choice of Gothic Revival for a money business was likely deliberate. Gothic architecture carried connotations of permanence, solidity, and institutional reliability — the visual language of cathedrals and universities. For a company in the business of safeguarding other people's money on the frontier, projecting these qualities was a marketing decision as much as an aesthetic one.
No architect of record has been identified; the building was likely constructed by a regional builder working from Eastern pattern books, possibly influenced by Gothic Revival church architecture that was common in Colorado's early towns. Explore Denver
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Wells Fargo's Colorado operations in the 1870s were at the center of the mining boom. The company's express shipments from Denver included not just gold and silver but also the financial instruments — currency, drafts, letters of credit — that kept the mining economy functioning. The 1338 15th Street office was a node in this network, and its Gothic facade would have been among the most architecturally distinctive buildings on the street.
<strong>Wells Fargo Building — 1338 15th Street, Downtown Denver</strong><br/>Exterior viewable from public sidewalk.<br/>Interior: private commercial use — not regularly open to the public.<br/>Nearest RTD: 16th Street Mall (multiple bus routes and light rail connections).
1338 15th Street, downtown Denver. Nearest RTD stop: 16th Street Mall, with multiple light rail and bus connections. The 16th Street Mall free shuttle stops nearby.
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