Alice Bemis Taylor
Philanthropist
October 15, 1877 – June 22, 1942
Inducted 2010
Alice Bemis Taylor was the lead female founder
and benefactor of cultural and social institutions in early Colorado
Springs. She endowed and directed the construction of the Colorado
Springs Day Nursery (still operating today as Child Nursery Centers)
and Fine Arts Center (FAC). As the first woman trustee of prestigious
Colorado College, she provided it sustaining endowments. She directly
influenced significant architecture and preserved rare artifacts
from underrepresented peoples. She also financed social welfare
organizations, scholarships, and aid to individuals.
Taylor’s father, Judson Bemis, became a philanthropist thanks
to his Bemis Brothers Bag Company’s success. The family came
to Colorado Springs when Alice was four, to improve her mother’s
health. Taylor was one of the founders of the Colorado Springs
Day Nursery Association and honored her late mother, Alice Cogswell
Bemis, by building the nursery, a magnificent structure. Later,
Taylor also honored her late husband, stockbroker Frederick Morgan
Taylor, by donating the most elaborate pipe organ west of the Mississippi
to Grace Episcopal Church.
Taylor’s buildings achieved National Register status. She
brought premier southwestern architect John Gaw Meem to local architecture.
Taylor commissioned him to design the FAC to make public her collections
of Indian crafts and Hispanic santos (carved images of saints)
at the Taylor Museum for Southwestern Studies. She also had Meem
design the Taylor Memorial Chapel at La Foret, her Black Forest
retreat, which is now a nondenominational conference center. Her
foundation helped finance acquisition of the city’s Rockledge
Ranch Living History Site.
Taylor was an inspiring role model and provider of opportunities.
The nursery’s master builder—with whom Taylor worked
on site—said this “brilliant woman” insisted
the building be inspirational for the children of working, tubercular
mothers. She endowed the maternity ward for Glockner (now Penrose)
Hospital. She created the model Bemis-Taylor Foundation ten years
before her friends created the El Pomar Foundation. Hers exceeded
all donations to the Community Chest (now United Way), and she
founded the Bemis-Taylor Child Guidance Clinic (now Pikes Peak
Behavioral Health Group). Her endowments for Colorado College still
garner almost $1 million annually. Alice Bemis Taylor is the woman
most recognized for leaving her mark on Colorado Springs.
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