Empson Cannery

Coordinates: 40°09′49″N 105°05′37″W / 40.163611°N 105.093611°W / 40.163611; -105.093611
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Empson Cannery
Empson Cannery is located in Colorado
Empson Cannery
Location15 3rd Ave., Longmont, Colorado
Coordinates40°09′49″N 105°05′37″W / 40.163611°N 105.093611°W / 40.163611; -105.093611
Area0.7 acres (0.28 ha)
Built1901
Built byJohn Howard Empson
NRHP reference No.84000796[1]
Added to NRHPJanuary 5, 1984
Empson Pea Cannery, c.1920

The Empson Cannery, is a historical cannery and factory building located at 15 3rd Ave. in Longmont, Colorado, It was built in 1901. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1984.[1] It was also known as the Kuner-Empson Cannery.[2]

Description[edit]

Of several buildings on the site, the red brick warehouse building was nominated for National Register listing. This is a 72 by 327 feet (22 m × 100 m) building, actually including three separate structures:

  • Northernmost section (c.1901), about 72 by 150 feet (22 m × 46 m) in plan, two stories, with 12 inches (0.30 m) thick solid brick walls; the bearing walls stand about 28 feet (8.5 m) tall. It is a two-story structure with a 7-foot high crawl space below. There are three weight bearing walls that are 28-feet high. The wood-decked, metal-finished roof is 107-feet long, with two brick chimneys.
  • The Middle Section (c.1907), of the building is attached to the northern portion of the first and second floors. It is 100-feet in length and approximately 72-feet wide. There is an 8-foot high basement space, and a loading dock on the east side.
  • The Southernmost Section (c.1912) of the building has solid brick walls, twelve inches thick. The structure is 76-feet long by 72-feet wide, with a full basement. Two brick chimneys are located on the east side.[2]

History[edit]

John Howard Empson (1849–1926), a confectioner from Cincinnati, founded the cannery and built the building. He is considered a "pioneer in the canning industry".[3] The main crop of the cannery was peas, and Empson received several patents for his pea-canning devices.[4] He also developed an improved pea stock that was both sweeter and smaller. Max Kuner was a pioneer in the pickle industry.[2][5]

At the turn of the 20th century, the cannery as a whole was the largest employer in Longmont, having a considerable economic effect on the region.. In 1903, the cannery was producing 300 railroad carloads of canned produce annually, and employed 400 workers.[2] It was used as the warehouse of the Empson Cannery (later the Kuner-Empson Cannery) until the end of 1970.[2][6][7]

Historical significance[edit]

The warehouse is historically significant as the building symbolizes the final step in locally produced food preserving and processing. It was the single largest building in the area, and it dominated the site on which it was constructed. "For over eighty years it has been symbolic of the cannery itself."[2]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. November 2, 2013.
  2. ^ a b c d e Roger L. Pomainville (May 23, 1983). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination: Empson Cannery / Kunner Empson Cannery / The Cannery". National Park Service. Retrieved October 11, 2021. With accompanying seven photos from 1983
  3. ^ Counter, Marguerite Frink. "Pioneer Canning Industry in Colorado". Colorado Magazine. 30: 37–48.
  4. ^ "Empson Receives Patent". Longmont Ledger. 13 September 1895.
  5. ^ "Amazing Photos Tell the Story of Old Canneries in Western Colorado". KEKB. Retrieved 14 May 2024.
  6. ^ Mann, Robert (13 October 1970). "Kuner-Empson Closing Down in December". Longmont Times-Call.
  7. ^ "100 Year History of Kuner-Empson Cannery". Boulder Daily Camera. 1 January 1964.

Further reading[edit]

  • Longmont Ledger, "New Canning Factory", 24 August, 1888, Page 2.
  • Longmont Times-Call. (75thAnniversaryIssue) "Early Longmont History is reviewed by Alonzo Alien", 27 June 1946, Page 1.