Last Updated: 01/07/2018 07:22
Agnes Phipps Memorial Sanatorium
Building 256
Building 256
EPILOGUE
In1921
Chanute
Field
,
located
near
the
small
village
of
Rantoul,
Illinois
in
part
due
to
the
War
Department’s
ground
school
at
the
University
of
Illinois,
became
the
Air
Service’s
training
center
for
Air
Service
Mechanics.
In
1922
the
Air
Service
established
a
technical
school
for
photography
at
Chanute.
By
1923
nine
of
Chanute’s
steel
hangars
had
been
converted
into
classrooms.
In
1934,
with
no
additional
funding
forthcoming
to
provide
additional
training
space,
the
Air
Corps
[prev.
Air
Service]
determined
Chanute
Field
no
longer
met
the
needs
of
a
modern
air
force.
Chanute’s
weather
was
also
deemed
inadequate
as
the
number
of
clear
weather
days
restricted
training
in
aerial
photography.
A new location was being sought to host the Air Corps’ training requirements.
Army
officials
had
established
two
major
prerequisites
for
a
new
training
site
location:
1)
space
for
a
bombing
range
and 2) the weather conditions at the new location should support aerial photography’s training requirements.
In
March
of
1934
Denver’s
leaders
started
a
campaign
to
bring
the
Air
Corps’
school
to
Denver.
On
2
April
1934
they
presented
their
formal
submission
towards
achieving
that
goal
to
the
War
Department.
An
Army
committee,
interested
in
the
property
currently
occupied
by
the
Agnes
Phipps
Memorial
Sanatorium,
arrived
in
Denver
on
26
May
1934 to evaluate their proposal.
Denver’s
civic
leaders,
enthralled
with
the
economic
prospects
offered
by
establishing
an
Army
Post
in
their
region,
offered
to
donate
the
site
to
the
Army
as
an
enticement
to
locate
their
new
school
in
the
Denver
area.
A
bond
was
floated
stating
Denver’s
objective
to
acquire
the
land,
along
with
its
17
buildings,
in
pursuit
of
this
endeavor.
Denver
voters
passed
the
measure
in
May
of
1935.
After
having
evaluated
86
sites
across
the
nation,
the
Army
recommended
the
Denver
location
due
to
its
weather
and
the
availability
of
land
for
a
bombing
range…not
to
mention
the
acquisition of the property at no charge to the Federal Government.
Funding
for
the
new
Air
Corps
Technical
School
was
approved
in
August
of
1937.
Chanute
Field
would
continue
as
the
headquarters
for
the
Air
Corps
Technical
School
and
the
home
of
the
aircraft
mechanics
school,
while
the
Denver
branch became the new location for the armament and photography training schools.
On
27
August
1937
the
Photography
and
Armament
Schools
hosted
by
the
“Denver
Branch,
Air
Corps
Technical
School”
were
open
for
business.
The
Headquarters
and
classrooms
occupied
the
buildings
formerly
known
as
the
“Agnes
Phipps
Memorial
Sanatorium.”
On
1
September
1937
Capt.
Harold
Stetson,
the
Army
Quartermaster
at
Ft.
Logan,
began
working
at
the
sanatorium
location.
He
raised
the
American
flag
on
1
October
1937…making
the
Denver
Branch
an
active
Army
post…and
training
began
at
the
new
Lowry
Field.
Capt.
Stetson
was
the
Constructing
Quartermaster
for
Lowry
Field
from
September
1937
to
January
1940,
supervising
more
than
3,000
WPA workers during Lowry’s early renovation and construction phase.
Lawrence
Phipps
was
paid
$200,000
for
the
sanatorium,
and
the
City
of
Denver
donated
the
properties
to
the
Army
on
8
December
1937.
The
War
Department
had
also
announced
the
naming
of
the
new
field
in
honor
of
Lt.
Francis
B.
Lowry,
only
possible
as
the
Colorado
National
Guard
had
deactivated
its
Lowry
Field
shortly
after
the
1st
of
the
year.
The Denver Branch of the Air Corps Technical School officially became Lowry Field on 21 March 1938.
520 Rampart Way
Denver, CO
[GPS 39°43'26.55"N, 104°54'5.02"W]
THE AGNES MEMORIAL SANATORIUM
A
description
of
the
sanatorium
for
the
treatment
of
pulmonary
tuberculosis,
built
at
Denver,
Colorado,
by
Mr.
L.
C.
Phipps, by Carroll E. Edson, A.M., M.D., and W. H. Bergtold, M.Sc., M.D., Denver, Colorado [
Source
]
The
Agnes
Memorial
Sanatorium
has
been
erected
at
Denver,
Colorado,
by
Mr.
Lawrence
C.
Phipps,
of
Pittsburgh,
as
a
memorial
to
his
mother.
At
attempt
has
been
made
to
have
it
in
every
detail
the
most
thoroughly
built
and
equipped
institution
possible,
and
Mr.
Phipps
has
spared
no
expense
to
this
end.
An
account
of
the
plans
and
construction
of
the Sanatorium may therefore be of interest.
Mr.
Phipps,
having
determined
upon
building,
for
this
memorial,
a
sanatorium
for
the
care
of
persons
of
small
resources
suffering
from
pulmonary
tuberculosis,
purchased
a
large
tract
of
land
in
the
suburbs
[Montclair]
of
Denver.
In
April,
1902,
he
laid
his
plans
before
the
gentlemen
whom
he
later
asked
to
be
the
Trustees
of
the
Sanatorium,
which
is
incorporated
under
the
laws
of
Colorado
as
a
permanent
charity,
and
before
the
physicians
whom he had selected for his Medical Board.
The
members
of
the
Medical
Board,
being
asked
to
make
all
necessary
suggestions
as
to
the
details
and
requirements
of
such
a
sanatorium,
gave
their
enthusiastic
attention
to
this
work,
and
recommended
that
the
institution
be
conducted as a closed sanatorium for the open-air treatment of persons of small means…[
More
]