Tarabino Inn

A Trinidad, Colorado Heritage Archive

The Guest Rooms — A Historical Record

During its bed-and-breakfast years the Tarabino Inn offered exactly five guest rooms, spread over the second floor and the gabled third floor of the 1907 house. This page preserves the rooms as the inn presented them. Nothing on this page can be booked; rooms, rates, and configurations are recorded here as history.

The inn's own description set the tone: while vacationing in Trinidad, Colorado, guests chose from suites with private baths, all within "our unique and elegantly-appointed Italianate Victorian mansion." Whether passing through on Interstate 25, using Trinidad as a hub for a Highway of Legends adventure, or settling in to explore the El Corazon de Trinidad National Historic District, the house promoted itself — with some justice — as the place to stay in south central Colorado.

Second Floor

The Walnut Suite with its carved dark walnut king bed and antique furnishings
The Walnut Suite, the grandest of the five rooms.

The Walnut Suite

The inn's grand suite: a king bed in carved dark walnut, a full sleeper for additional guests, and the only fully en suite private bath in the house. In the final years the rate card read simply "call for current rates" — a small-inn custom this archive explores on the policies page. The suite is documented in detail across three archival pages: overview, furnishings, and architecture and light.

The Chestnut Suite

A large suite built around a queen four-poster bed, with a queen sleeper in an adjacent parlor room — effectively a private apartment for families or longer stays — and a detached private bath. See the Chestnut Suite overview and the closer look at its parlor and four-poster.

The Chestnut Suite with queen four-poster bed and adjoining parlor
The Chestnut Suite paired a four-poster bedroom with its own parlor.

Third Floor: The Gables

The third floor tucked two more rooms beneath the steep gable roofs — the East Gable and the West Gable, each with a queen bed and sharing the attic story's distinctive sloped-ceiling architecture. The East Gable came with a private detached bath; the West Gable was opened only to parties reserving both rooms, which made the pair a favorite of small groups. For safety, the inn did not allow infants or toddlers on the third floor, and each Gable accommodated a maximum of two guests.

House Customs

Five rooms was the whole of it. The scale was the point: small enough that breakfast conversation included everyone, large enough that the house never felt empty. The pages that follow document each room as guests found it.