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Celebrating Heart and Soul of Golden Month: Golden Landmarks Association

Downtown buildings demolished during the 1960s and early '70s: The South School, the Courthouse, the North School, the Methodist Church, the Baptist Church, and the Catholic Church - Click to enlarge

Still celebrating Heart and Soul of Golden month, this is the eleventh in a series of articles describing the histories of Golden Cultural Alliance members. Today we're focusing on the Golden Landmarks Association.

In the decades after World War II, the world (including Golden) was on a “modernization” binge. Many of our Victorian-era buildings were razed and replaced at this time. The need for parking lots drove many of the demolitions. The population was spreading out from the downtown core, beyond walking distance, so if people wanted to visit downtown, they needed somewhere to park.

The Astor House was slated for demolition in the early 1970s. The space it occupies would have provided 8 new parking spaces. That was just one loss too many for some citizens, so they founded the Golden Landmarks Association. They persuaded City Council to give them some time to prove the value of the building. Volunteers peeled wallpaper, painted, made repairs, and shored up the foundation. They organized community events in the building and persuaded Golden’s voters of the value of preserving one of our oldest buildings. In the end, Council agreed to bring it to a vote, and Golden’s citizens voted to purchase and preserve the building.

Golden Landmarks Association volunteers, working on the Astor House 50 years ago – enlarge


The Golden Landmarks Association ran the Astor House as a museum for about 40 years. Many old Golden families donated antiques to furnish the bedrooms, dining room, and kitchen.

Golden Landmarks was also entrusted with the Richard Ronzio and Pete Morrison photo collections as well as other valuable Golden History documentation. They helped establish Golden’s 12th Street, 8th and 9th Street, and East Street historic districts, and did significant restoration work on the brickyard house.

In recent years, they have celebrated Golden’s Living Landmarks with an annual banquet toasting people and institutions who have made contributions to Golden’s history.

To learn more about the early years of the Golden Landmarks Association, read Arlone Child’s book, Golden Landmarks Association, Inc. the First Twenty Years, 1972-1992.

Highlights