Skip to content

Search the site

Golden Eye Candy – Chris Davell – The Mini-Arch – enlarge

What’s Happening in Golden Today?

Take a Hike! – photo by Frank Hanou – enlarge

What’s happening in Golden? Melting! If you’re tired of being cabin-bound, go out and enjoy a brilliant Colorado day or a an enchanting evening under the holiday lights.

1PM Wild West Short Tour

Church Services

CALVARY EPISCOPAL
1320 Arapahoe Street
10:00 am – Christmas Day Worship – Historic Chapel

FIRST BAPTIST
1805 Washington Avenue
Christmas Day – 9:30am

FIRST PRESBYTERIAN
17707 West 16th Avenue
Christmas Day – 9:00am

FIRST UNITED METHODIST
1500 Ford St
Christmas Day – 10:00am

JEFFERSON UNITARIAN CHURCH
14350 W. 32nd Avenue
Christmas Day – online

SAINT JOSEPH CATHOLIC CHURCH
969 Ulysses Street
Christmas Day – 8:00 & 10:00am

Businesses

The grocery stores are all closed
Walgreens is open 9AM-6PM
Table Mountain Inn is serving a “Christmas Feast
Over Yonder Brewing will be open 12-8PM.


Golden History Moment

Click to watch a snippet of the movie.

Arcane History
As part of my annual complement of Christmas movies, I recently watched It’s A Wonderful Life. This 1947 classic featured James Stewart, fighting to keep his “Building and Loan” afloat. I wondered what Building and Loans were, and why we never hear about them anymore. I remembered seeing ads for the Golden Building and Loan in old Transcripts. What happened to it?

I searched Google for “Building and Loan” and found a good article explaining what they were: Building and loan associations were mutually held financial institutions that greatly increased the accessibility of home loans from the 1830s to the 1930s. Guided by a spirit of “mutual self-help,” participants pooled their money—generally within small, regional B&Ls—and in turn became eligible to receive dividends and take out a mortgage. From the mid-1930s onward, B&Ls began morphing into federal savings and loan institutions, which had a charter from the U.S. government and relied on federal deposit insurance. Source: Investopedia.com

The Golden Building and Loan opened in 1910. It was apparently well-managed, helped a lot of Golden people finance homes, and paid remarkably high interest–8% in 1930!

In 1933, there were bank runs all over the country, and in response, President Roosevelt closed every banking institution in the nation for a “bank holiday.” The Federal Reserve gradually permitted banks that they deemed to be solvent to reopen. Golden’s bank at that time, the Rubey National, never reopened, but the Golden Building and Loan opened after a 10-day “holiday.”

In 1940, the Golden Building and Loan became the Golden Savings and Loan. In later years it became First Federal Savings and it’s now Bank of the West.

(How did my Christmas column turn into the genealogy of a bank?)

Merry Christmas, Golden!


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