Bass residence Lyman K. Bass hired architect A.C. Williard to design a home in 1881. Bass was an attorney in practice with
Grover Cleveland and a U.S. Representative in the state of New York. In 1874, Bass married Frances Metcalfe of Buffalo. He moved to Colorado Springs in the hope of improving his health after contracting
tuberculosis. (See
Tuberculosis treatment in Colorado Springs). While in the city he became an attorney for
Denver and Rio Grande Railroad, General
William Jackson Palmer's company. Williard built a Tudor Revival home, lying alongside an undeveloped prairie. The couple named it "Edgeplain". It cost $115,000 to build. It featured distinctive stonework, with different colors and finishes, such as pecked and
vermiculated masonry dressings. Tinted mortar was used between sandstone blocks of different sizes. Inside,
John LaFarge designed jeweled glass, tiled fireplaces and opulent paneling. The couple entertained singers and musicians. Bass died in New York City in May 1889. Francis sold the home following her husband's death. It was owned by several people before it was purchased by Chester Alan Arthur and his wife.
Arthur residence Between 1901 and 1922, the home belonged to
Chester Alan Arthur II, son of President
Chester A. Arthur. He was called "the Prince of Washington" for the way he made the most of being the son of the President. He attended receptions and used the presidential yacht and car. After attending
Princeton University, he studied law at
Columbia University. After his graduation he went to Europe and stayed there for 10 years before he took the bar examination. He married wealthy divorcee Myra Fithian Andrews in May 1900 in Switzerland. Like Lyman Bass, Arthur and his bride came to Colorado for his health in October 1900. He had asthma and bronchitis. His health improved in the Colorado climate. He was made president of
Cheyenne Mountain Country Club. Polo became a favored sport as the result of top polo players to the area. Vice President
Theodore Roosevelt came to Colorado Springs, had dinner at Edgeplain and attended a polo match during his 1901 visit. After Alan Arthur and his wife Myra purchased the home, they had it expanded and remodeled by Thompson Hetherington and Walter Douglas, prominent local architects who built Colorado College residential halls. Their home was "one of the outstanding meetings places of the social leaders from Colorado Springs and Denver.
Subsequent residents Oklahoma businessman Joseph Abraham bought the furnished house in 1922 as a summer home for him and his wife Fannie for $30,000. Between 1926 and 1927 the
Phi Delta Theta fraternity inhabited the house. Abraham died and Fannie sold the house to John Shaver in 1929. He was owner of a department store chain from Minnesota to Washington and Oregon and sold his interests in 1927 to
J. C. Penney Company. John worked until 1943. His wife Charlotte was a gardener and studied painting. Both Shavers died in 1960. Their daughters sold the house to Colorado College in 1962. ==Colorado College==