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Coffee with Councilors, Train Rides, Live Music, and Good Jobs at the Arms Plant

Golden Eye Candy – Robert Saieg – Spring if Coming – click to enlarge

COVID Updates

24.9% vaccinated
% of Jeffco residents (16+) who have received either one or both shots – source

AS OF MARCH 5TH, Coloradans age 60 to 64, people with two or more chronic health conditions and grocery store and agricultural processing workers are eligible for vaccinations.

Appointments to Get the COVID Vaccine (Eligibility)
State of Colorado’s Find Out Where You Can Get Vaccinated page | Lutheran Medical Center | JCPH Clinic in Arvada (70+ only)

CHECK THIS SITE, which looks for available appointments all over the state. Might be useful if you’re willing to drive a bit: www.vaccinespotter.org/CO/

Jefferson County Public Health’s COVID-19 Vaccine Call Center: 303-239-7000

State Hotline to answer questions, including location of vaccine providers: 1-877-268-2926. It is staffed 24 hours a day.

Golden Testing Sites
Mines COVID Testing | Jeffco Fairgrounds COVID Testing

Visit the Jeffco Public Health website for information about Level Blue

Jefferson County Case Summary:
Cases in Jeffco –
Thurs: 37,675 | Fri: 37,801 (+126)
Deaths in Jeffco –
Thurs: 766 | Fri: 766 (unchanged)
Currently Hospitalized in Jeffco –
Thurs: 29| Fri: 31 (+2)
Known Cases in Golden –
Mon: 1511 | Thurs: 1521
Recovered – Thurs: 35,941 | Fri: 36,062 (+121)

More Public Health References
School of Mines COVID-19 case page. | Sign up for exposure notifications | CDC | Colorado | Jefferson County | City of Golden


Virtual Events

10AM Coffee with Councilors
Grab a cup of coffee and join your councilors online for a virtual Coffee with Councilors. Join District 2 Councilor Casey Brown and District 1 Councilor J.J. Trout the first Saturday of each month at 10:00 a.m. either by phone or in a video conference.

Join the Zoom Meeting online. Or you can join by phone only by calling (346) 248-7799.
Meeting ID: 852 5652 4602
Passcode: COGCWC

1-2:30PM Dungeons & Dragons for Beginners (1st of a 4-week quest–registration is for all 4 weeks)


Real World Events

10AM-3PM Saturday Train Rides at the Railroad Museum
11AM-2PM Brunch at the Rose
12-2:30PM Walk with a Geologist at Dinosaur Ridge

Live Music
1PM 
Maynard Mills at Dirty Dogs Roadhouse
1PM Liquor Biscuit at Wrigley’s
4PM Whipsnap – Future of the Funk @ Goosetown Tavern 
8PM Coldreplay @ Buffalo Rose


Demolition on the Way

This semi trailer has appeared in the parking lot at 311 10th Street (the Coors office building) – photo by Frank Hanou – click to enlarge

Golden History Moment

Works Progress Administration Post – Library of Congress Collection

80 Years Ago
The March 6, 1941 Colorado Transcript was brimming with optimism for the future. The Depression was finally easing up and we had not yet entered World War II. The previous December, President Roosevelt had announced that we would support our allies by becoming The Arsenal of Democracy.

To that end, the Federal Government was about to build an arms plant on the former Hayden Ranch, on Green Mountain. To Golden, the plant was a sure harbinger of prosperity. The plant would bring thousands of new jobs to the area, and all of those new residents would need homes. Surely, a significant number of them would want to live in Golden.

From the January 9, 1941 Colorado Transcript – click to enlarge

The plant was also bringing improvements to the infrastructure. Sixth Avenue was going to be significantly widened and improved to provide access to the plant, and it would be extended to Golden. The Denver and Intermountain Railway, which had carried people and freight between Denver and Golden since the 1890s, was being upgraded and a spur being built to service the new arms plant. There was talk of a new bus line to transport plant workers.

The lead article in the March 6th edition celebrated “Busy Summer In Prospect For Local Men – Regular Pay Checks Three Times More Than WPA.” The WPA had been a great boon during the Depression–it provided jobs and paychecks that kept many families fed and housed–but the pay for those government jobs was never generous.

The Transcript article explains that WPA “common laborers” had been working 120 hours a month at 38 cents per hour, for a total of $45.60 per month. The new “common laborer” union jobs at the arms plant were going to pay 71.4 cents per hour for the first forty hours and time and a half on Sundays, which they were expected to work during construction. This meant that pay at the arms plant would be $147 per month. Skilled laborers would earn more.

The Golden Local No. 410, which was based on the second floor of the Stewart building at 10th and Washington, had been founded in 1934. Several charter members were still on the roll, and the membership was expected to swell with the new jobs on the way.

Denver Federal Center from Google Satellite Images – click to enlarge

The Remington Arms Plant produced munitions throughout World War II, and afterwards that site became the Denver Federal Center.


Many thanks to the Golden History Museum for providing the online cache of historic Transcripts and to the Golden Transcript for documenting our history since 1866!

Highlights