THE CRYSTAL FARM HOUSE
The Mechau Home
by Carolyn Servid

On April 27, 2022 – The Board of Pitkin County Commissioners confirmed this home’s status as a significant Redstone landmark by adding the Crystal Farm House to their Historic Register. 

The Crystal Farm House was legendary in my mind months before my first visit. The petite five-foot elderly woman who welcomed me with open arms into her kitchen was also legendary. Paula Mechau, who became my mother-in-law, was the widow of acclaimed Colorado artist Frank Mechau. On one of my first dates with their elder son, Dorik, he enthralled me with stories—of his father’s all-too-brief artist career and of Redstone, the place that has served as touchstone for the Mechau family ever since that summer day in 1937 when Frank Mechau took Paula and visiting Paris friends to see the virtually abandoned village alongside the Crystal River.

The small kitchen was toasty from the fire burning in the cast-iron stove that amply filled one corner of the room. Paula Mechau was just as feisty and charming as I’d been told. On a corner shelf stood an over-sized-postcard image of “Tom Kenney Comes Home,” one of Frank Mechau’s best-known paintings. Seeing it there, in context, in the Mechaus’ Redstone kitchen, brought Dorik’s stories home—to the remarkable place, house, artist, and family.

When the Mechaus and their friends arrived in Redstone that day, they were dumbstruck to find the Redstone Inn open and serving lunch. Inside, they were surprised to be greeted by Lucille McDonald, the widow of Redstone’s founder John Cleveland Osgood.

Osgood, one of the wealthiest industrial capitalists of his time, created Redstone around 1900. He envisioned a model industrial community that would provide significant comforts and amenities for its workers. His goal:eliminate threats of unrest, unionization, and potential strikes against Colorado Fuel and Iron (CF&I), the parent company in which heheld a key position. 249 coke ovens were built at Redstone to bake coal extracted  at the nearby mining camp of Coalbasin. The finished coke was used to fuel CF&I’s steel mills in Pueblo, Colorado.

Osgood’s social experiment at Redstone lasted only ten years. He was squeezed out of CF&I when East Coast partners took control of the company’s Colorado coal operations, leaving him the village of Redstone and some adjacent properties. When Osgood died in 1926, Lucille McDonald inherited all of Osgood’s Redstone holdings. She tried unsuccessfully to sell the property as a whole. When the Mechaus came for lunch, she was quick to tell them there were individual houses for sale.

Paula was smitten by Redstone and the Crystal River valley. Frank, who grew up in Glenwood Springs, understood why.  By the end of the summer, they scraped together a down payment on the house McDonald had shown them—CF&I’s Manager’s Residence near the Redstone Inn. In Spring, 1938, they moved in, joining Redstone’s few other residents—two caretakers and their families.  Evidence of Osgood’s vision surrounded them—an elaborate Club House, a School House, the Inn, a commissary, his Cleveholm mansion, and dozens of individually unique cottages for workers and their families.

In 1944, the Mechaus worked out a land-swap with Lucille McDonald. They traded the Manager’s Residence for Osgood’s Crystal Farm House, two miles upriver on a ranch that supplied the community of Redstone.  No ordinary farmhouse, it was his temporary residence while Cleveholm, now called the Redstone Castle, was being built on a hillside overlooking the Crystal River. Boal and Harnois, the architects who designed Cleveholm and other Redstone buildings, also designed the Crystal Farm House. The Mechaus became its second owners.

In the wake of Frank Mechau’s devastating, untimely death in March 1946, the house became bedrock for Paula and the four Mechau children. Though they left Redstone periodically so Paula could work, they returned at every possibility. Paula lived most of the rest of her life there, welcoming visits from her children and grandchildren, and becoming a respected,well-loved teacher and vocal advocate for environmental protection of the Crystal River Valley.

The beautifully designed historic Redstone home remains an icon for the extended Mechau family. Weekend visits and longer sojourns bring past and present together. Its elegantly tooled stone chimney is a work of art. Its charming diamond-paned windows hold the original glass. A newer downstairs bathroom replaced a pantry, but the architects’ blueprints show how little else has changed. What is evident is more than seven decades of the Mechau family’s loving care.

Built in 1898, this old house is in excellent condition. It remains part of John Osgood’s legacy, but it has also become a treasury of family memories and stories left by the legacies of Frank and Paula Mechau.  

First published with spokeandblossom.com in 2018

Author Carolyn Servid moved from Sitka, Alaska to Palisade, Colorado in 2017 with her late husband, Dorik Mechau.  Her books include a memoir, Of Landscape and Longing, and three anthologies. Her essays have also appeared in various collections and literary journals. She also works as a book designer through sitkawillow.com.

 Photographer Kaylan Robinson is an interior, architectural, and still life photographer based in Western Colorado.