Secor Clark House
Name: Secor Clark House
Address: 318 Pratt St.
Landmark Designation: 1999
Construction Date: 1891
Architectural Style: Second Empire
This home was constructed in 1891 for Judge Franklin Pearce Secor and his family. Martin Barb, a local contractor and brick maker, built the two story home the same year that Secor, lawyer, judge, and civic leader, was elected to the Colorado Legislature.
Secor was born in Racine, Wisconsin in 1852. Raised on a farm, he attended Wisconsin Normal School and then Michigan State University. After five years as a teacher and school principal in Wisconsin, he came to Longmont in 1881 where he studied law and joined the law firm of Byron L. Carr. Carr, a Chicago-Colorado Colonist, was later elected Colorado Attorney General, at which time Franklin Secor became Assistant Attorney General. Secor was subsequently elected a Boulder County Judge, and in 1891 was elected as a Republican to the Eighth General Assembly.
In 1898 Secor and his family moved to Chicago for several years and sold their home to successful local farmer, George Clark. In 1898 Clark moved his wife and family into the house after years of economic struggles were behind him, and he had been for some time a successful local farmer. Born in Shropshire England in 1849, Clark left his father's farm at the age of 21 and sailed to America. He spent two years working on a farm in Connecticut where he met and married Margaret Thurrott. Soon the couple headed west, and in 1873, they and their infant daughter, Alma, moved to the two-year old town of Longmont in the Colorado Territory.
Arriving in "close circumstances," Mr. Clark took any work he could find as a general laborer, and the couple lived first in the Sigley Hotel on Main Street and later in two tiny houses on Coffman and Pratt Streets. After a couple of years, Clark had saved enough to buy stock and equipment and lease a tract of farmland Northeast of town. The family moved to the country and into a three-room log cabin on the farm. In the years that followed, Clark's diligence and innovative farming methods paid dividends. Soon the "Clark Farm" was a productive 320-acre concern, and the family built a substantial frame house (which still stands on Ninth Avenue just east of the YMCA). Two more children were born on the farm, a daughter, Ethel, in 1882 and a son, Lynn, in 1887. George continued to farm and invest and acquired other farmland and real estate holdings in town as well. In 1898, he added the house at 318 Pratt St. to his holdings.
In 1911, George died of typhoid fever and his son, Lynn assumed responsibility for managing the family farms and business interests. Lynn's mother remarried and continued to live in the home until her death in 1939.
Lynn continued to manage the family farm and other business interests, in addition to his regular duties as a rural mail carrier. In 1946, he married Helen Noble Stapp, who worked for both the local school district and the Longmont National Bank.
After Lynn's retirement, he and Helen traveled extensively, but always returned to the home on Pratt St. After Lynn's death in 1962, Helen created the Lynn W. Clark Memorial Scholarship that provides yearly assistance to a selected graduate of Longmont High School. Among Helen's many charitable gifts were generous annual donations to the City of Longmont for the improvement and maintenance of Clark Centennial Park which is located on part of the Clark Family Farm which Lynn loved so much.
In 1986, Helen deeded the Clark home to the St. Vrain Historical Society
Reference
HPC 1999-1