Robert Hall's Home Page;
Santa Fe, New Mexico and Beaver Creek, Colorado
September, 1998

Cathedral; Santa Fe, New Mexico

Spiral Staircase built without nails or central support.
Legend of the Spiral Staircase.
Although the Loretto Chapel between Alameda and Water Streets on the Old Santa Fe Trail is no longer used for worship, it nevertheless remains a place of congregation, mainly for tourists who come to marvel at the chapel’s ‘miraculous’ spiral staircase. The chapel, copied from Sainte-Chapelle Church in Paris, was built in 1873 to serve as chapel for the Sisters of Loretto’s school for young women. The story goes that when the building was close to completion workers discovered the design had not left sufficient room for the proposed staircase to the choir loft. The only answer appeared to be a cumbersome ladder, which was not an attractive proposition for the Loretto sisters who decided to pray about the problem to St Joseph. Their prayers were answered in the form of a carpenter riding a donkey, who arrived and offered to build a spiral staircase. He accomplished this with only a saw, hammer and T-square, manufacturing a miraculous staircase, which is held aloft by no visible means of support.

Dr. Bob Moser

Linda Moser

Dr. Bill Nelson

Peg Nelson

Bill Nelson, Jr.

Dr. Michael Nelson

Resort at Beaver Creek, Colorado

Dorothy and bronze sculpture of "The Paper Boy"

Bob, among the flowers

Glenna Goodacre's life size sculpture:
"Pledge of Allegiance", in Avon, Colorado
Glenna Goodacre was born in Lubbock, Texas in 1939. Originally a student of painting at Colorado College, Goodacre began her sculpting career at the Students League in New York, later achieving acclaim as one of the nation's leading sculptors.
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