The Historic Living Project
The Wyoming Cultural Trust Fund

318 11th Street, Laramie Wyoming

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This one-and-a-half story house Craftsman-style bungalow, built in 1914, was home to pioneer stockman and Albany County sheriff, Charles C. Frazer. It includes an eave-front roof and a full-length open front porch supported by four large, square, clapboard-sided piers. The current owners, Peter and Gail Shive, have enhanced this historic home with copper gutters and arts and crafts-style home paint colors. This home is included in the National Historic District, the University Neighborhood of Laramie.

This video is a brief summary of the The Historical Living Project, a video-based journalism initiative that provides residents and visitors with a historical narrative of the people and historic homes of Laramie, from its beginnings as a railroad town, to a thriving community that values its sustainable architecture and historic heritage. This project includes many of the houses in the National Historic District, the University Neighborhood of Laramie.

Peter and Gail Shive, Homeowner
Chamois Anderson, Producer
Keith Perschino, Film Assistant
Ted Haskell, Project Assistant

Sponsors
The Wyoming Cultural Trust Fund
UW Environment and Natural Resources Program
American Heritage Center

Partners
Albany County Tourism Board
Albany County Historic Preservation Board
Laramie Plains Museum at the Historic Ivinson Mansion

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