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INTRODUCTION -- SANGREE M. FROELICHER HUT
HISTORY
Sangree
Froelicher Profile Battle
Maps Medals Photos
The
Sangree M. Froelicher hut was built in 1998 and originally
called the Belvedere Hut, as a memorial to the 975 men killed
in action and 3891 wounded in the Apennine Mountains
of Northern
Italy in the spring of 1945, during WWII. The Belvedere Hut
was privately owned, rented to the public, and booked by the
10th
Mountain
Division Hut Association (10th Mountain Huts.)
During the summer of 2002, 10th Mountain
Huts found it had a real problem on its hands. It's eastern
most contract hut,
Belvedere,
was
privately owned and the two Leadville owners had received an
unsolicited offer to purchase the hut, think chalet. Unfortunately
the would-be buyer was a large commercial snowmobile tour operator
located just east of Leadville on Colorado 91. It was his plan
to turn the hut and the 40 acres of fee land on which it stands,
into his mountain operations center. Cross
country skiing, snow shoeing and hiking through quiet forest
and alpine meadows would be "out" while hundreds
of snowmobiles would be "in".
Fortunately for 10th Mountain Huts, the
Belvedere owners, who were most supportive of and friendly
to 10th Mountain Huts, had
previously
provided
a right-of-first-refusal
to 10th Mountain Huts.
Aware that Denver's F. Charles Froelicher's
brother, Staff Sergeant Sangree Mitchell Froelicher, 1st Platoon,
Company B, 1st Battalion, 86th Mountain Infantry, had been
killed in action in Sassomalare, Italy, on March 4, 1945, 10th
Mountain Huts invited him - Chuck - to lead an effort to raise
the considerable funds necessary to purchase and endow the
hut. Chuck graciously accepted the invitation, provided an
alternative way to honor and recognize the name Belvedere would
be found.
The project had several components,
each of which was important to our state and nation:
1. The preservation and protection of 15 square miles of prime
open space in the Pike/San Isabel National Forest (please see
Map of Area).
2. The addition, rather than the loss, of one of 13 huts in
the astonishingly successful 10th Mountain Division Hut System.
4. The honoring of yet another 10th
Mountain "Trooper" who
was killed in action in Italy in the spring of 1945, this time
Sangree M. Froelicher.
On September 12, 2002, Chuck formed a committee
to provide support and help. It included members of his family
and old friends from Denver, Baltimore, Aspen and Vail. This
committee made astonishing progress. Starting with a major
grant from Denver's Gates Family Foundation, and donations
from other family foundations, veterans, Sangree's family and
admirers of the
10th Mountain
Division. The necessary
funds were raised, and the hut was purchased by 10th Mountain
Huts in
2003.
All participants and donors to date
have wanted to know Sangree "Mitch" Froelicher
better. For this reason Chuck Froelicher wrote Profile
of a Trooper, which is linked in the menu above. It is a remarkable
story about a 21-year old young man from Baltimore who was
posthumously awarded the Silver Star for his "courageous
and aggressive leadership" on the day he died.
10th Mountain Division and
Summit Huts Associations, Alfred A. Braun Hut System, and
Friends Hut operate under special use permits from the US
Forest Service, and are equal opportunity service providers.
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