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Smoke in Golden - Photo by Frank Hanou - Click to enlarge

114 Years Ago – Colorado Transcript, August 25, 1910

  • Golden was enveloped by smoke from fires in the northwest.
  • “Colonel” Theodore Roosevelt was expected in Denver the following week. (Roosevelt had actually served as President from 1901-1909…so why were they referring to him as “Colonel?”)
Early postcard advertising Lakeside Amusement Park
  • Plans were in place for a Jefferson County Fair, which would be held at Lakeside Amusement Park.
  • The Transcript was agitating to have gravel put on 10th Street. 44th Avenue (then called the “Golden-Denver Bouldevard”) was gravelled, and the Transcript worried that “automobilists, farmers and others who will travel over the new road (will) run directly from the perfect road in the country into deep dust or a muddy street as soon as they get within the city limits of Golden.”
Eliza West - Golden History Museum Collection
  • “Golden Woman Saves Girl from Death” described a woman, vacationing in British Columbia, who saved a girl from drowning by reaching down from a dock and catching hold of her hair until assistance arrived. The editor modestly neglects to mention that the “Golden Woman” was his mother, widow of George West, founder of the Transcript. (Go Eliza!)
  • “Capital a Suffragette Stronghold” explains that whereas Suffragettes used wear “short hair, impossible frocks, a man’s hat and other cranky accompaniments of ‘queer views’,” the current cadre were more likely to be “modishly gowned, attractive and in most instances socially prominent…whose graces and talents are distinctly of the most feminine kind.” (The 19th Amendment was still 10 years in the future.)
A selection of ads from the 8-25-1920 Colorado Transcript
  • The Dollison store advertised “American Beauty Corsets make beautiful women.” (No doubt intended as an aid for aspiring Suffragettes.)
  • The Golden Gem motion picture film was scheduled to show “Trailed to the Hills,” which was filmed in Jefferson County and featured a number of locals in the cast.
Steinhauer Field House - Photo by Richard Luckin
  • Fred Steinhauer had recently been appointed Superintendent of Denver Parks.” Steinhauer was an 1899 Mines graduate and had been a baseball star during his time at the school. Steinhauer Field House is named after him.
  • The Sheriff had made a quick capture of a horse thief, having located and jailed him within a few hours after learning of the theft. He found the man in Denver, put him in jail, and soon had a confession. The stolen horses & wagon were located in Watkins (map).
This 1880 engraving shows Golden’s “Smelters’s Row,” including the French Smelter – Golden History Museum Collection – Click to enlarge
  • New owners were running the old “French Smelter.” They decided to test the waste piles left by previous operators, and declared that their dump was worth a fortune.

Many thanks to Esther Kettering for sponsoring Golden History Moments for the month of August.

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