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Sip & Shop for the CAG Food Pantry, Anniversary of the Transcript

Golden Eye Candy – Frank Hanou – Lighted Walkway – enlarge

What’s Happening in Golden Today?

6-6:55AM Dynamic Circuit (Virtual)
8:30-9:30AM Power Training (Virtual)
10AM-5PM Holiday Art Market @ Foothills Art Center
10AM and 1PM Wild West Walking Tour
10AM, 1PM, and 3:30PM Wild West Short Tour
10:15-10:45AM Let’s Dance @ Golden Library
12-12:30PM Mondays with Mayor Weinberg (Virtual)
2-3PM Active Minds Mondays – Cryptocurrency (Virtual)
4-4:30PM Kids Martial Arts Class (Virtual)

5-8PM Sip Shop Holiday Party – Pop Up Thrift Shop | Wine Tasting @ The Golden Mill
Come Sip and Shop for a fundraiser for the Christian Action Guild. There will be complementary wine tastings and live music from the Back Porch Grass band. The Christian Action Guild will be there with treasures from their thrift shop. 

5-5:30PM Gingerbread Contest Awards Ceremony @ Golden Library
5:30-7:30PM Holiday Movie Party: Elf @ Golden Library


Golden History Moment

1st Edition of the Colorado Transcript – December 19, 1866 – read online

156 Years Ago
The Golden Transcript published its first issue on December 19, 1866. George West was the owner and publisher. George and his wife, Eliza Boyd West, both arrived here in 1859 during the gold rush. George began publishing his first newspaper—the Western Mountaineer—in December of 1859. After taking time out to serve in the Civil War, he returned to Golden and resumed his newspaper business—this time calling it the Colorado Transcript.

The extended West clan, with George and Eliza seated in the middle, grandson Neil West Kimball between them – Golden History Museum collection

The Wests believed in running the Transcript as a family business. Eliza wrote a regular column. Two of their three children worked on the paper (the third died young), as did their spouses. The paper stayed in the West family for nearly a century.

12th and Washington, circa 1865 – enlarge

The City and the Transcript have seen good times and bad together, and both have certainly had times when their continued existence was in question.  Four years after the Transcript was founded, Golden’s population had dipped to 587 souls.  A newspaper needs both subscribers and advertisers to survive, and that 1870 census was discouraging on both counts; however, the Wests had faith in the City they helped found.  They also knew something that was going to turn the tide of fortune—the railroad was coming!

Golden in 1873–three years after the arrival of the Colorado Central – enlarge

The arrival of the Colorado Central Railroad in 1870 rescued Golden from threatened oblivion, and by 1880 our population had rocketed to 2,730.  The railroad put Golden in a central position between Denver and the mountain mining towns.  Because of the railroad, the small city became an industrial and commercial hub, with smelters, grain mills, a paper mill, a pottery, brickworks, and one very significant brewery.  Washington Avenue became the place to shop for residents of both the City itself and the farms and ranches in the surrounding area.

End of Part 1 of 3 – The Story of the Transcript
Tune in tomorrow for part 2!


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