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Smoky Air, 4 New Deaths in Jeffco, and a Very Contented Junk Man

Golden Eye Candy – Smoky Sky from the Wildfires West of Golden – Patrick Klein – Click to enlarge

Public Health References
CDC * Colorado * Jefferson County * City of Golden

JCPHD updates these numbers Monday through Friday at about 3 PM. Here’s the most recent Coronavirus report from Jeffco Public Health’s Case Summary Page:

Cases in Jeffco – Mon: 4254 | Tues: 4281
Deaths in Jeffco – Mon: 229 | Tues: 233
Ever Hospitalized in Jeffco – Mon: 497 | Tues: 499 (currently 19)
Recovered – Mon: 3720 | Tues: 3750
Known Cases in Golden – Mon: 154 | Tues: 154

Jefferson County mask rule: masks must be worn both indoors and outdoors in public spaces where 6 feet distance cannot be maintained. This matches Golden’s requirement. The rest of the state requires masks only indoors. The Safer at Home and in the Vast, Great Outdoors protocol is in effect statewide. City and County fire restrictions are in place.


Virtual Golden

9-10AM Virtual Power Training
10:15-11:15AM Let’s Dance with the Library
6PM Wednesday Night Watch Party with the Library: Penny Serenade with Irene Dunne and Cary Grant
6PM Back to School Community Briefing with Mayor Weinberg


Real Life Golden

9AM Golden Walks: Wednesday Morning Celebrating Life
3:30-5:30PM Vaccine, License & Microchip Clinic
6PM Vinyasa Yoga in Lions Park with Gabriela Ferrat


Golden History Moment

G. H. Stuart Co. Store at 11th and Ford Streets – Click to enlarge

I’ve always found the G.H. Stuart Co. store intriguing. In 1951, Mr. Stuart bought a 30 year old coal business from the estate of Guy Buckman. Stuart continued delivering coal to the citizens of Golden, but soon added many new lines to the business. He became a scrap iron dealer and then added sand, wood, and flagstone. He added used bath tubs and stoves to his product line, followed by–well, pretty much anything that might have resale value. He sold used glass, used auto parts, and used trucks.

Stuart’s burgeoning scrap operation was located on Ford Street, on the south side of the Creek – excerpt from the 1938 Sanborn Fire Map Click to enlarge

As the range and quantity of his inventory grew, Mr. Stuart needed more space. 11th Street didn’t really extend beyond Ford Street, so he leased the right of way from the City, put a fence across it, and began storing his excess scrap iron and other goodies in that area. In 1954, both the City and Stuart were sued by the Agricultural Ditch and Reservoir Company, who said they needed that right of way to access their headgate and the ditchman’s residence. The lawsuit dragged on for a couple of years, and the city finally suggested to Mr. Stuart that the best way to resolve the issue was to move. I don’t know how the lawsuit was resolved, but Mr. Stuart was still there 27 years later.

The Golden Transcript published an article about Mr. Stuart in 1976. It began with, “G.H. Stuart has the kind of job most little boys dream of–collecting all kinds of ‘junk’ from nuts and bolts to antique bridles. He found a place to store his treasures 25 years ago, at 1051 Ford St., and he’s been buying and selling from this location ever since.” He recycled materials from the telephone and electric companies, Coors Brewery, Coors Porcelain, and other manufacturing companies.

The article says that at that time (1976), Stuart was selling lead, brass, copper, and iron to welders, recycling old batteries and radiators, and collecting “tools, pipes, appliance parts, chains, ropes, wheels, and old mailboxes” He reported that ladies liked to buy some of his odds and ends as decorating pieces–“old stoves, shovels, pails, and small pieces for decoupage.” Stuart said that he was doing what he really liked, and what he had always wanted to do. His store assistant reported that “He’s always happy, and I guess that’s what counts.”

Google satellite view showing the former location of G.H. Stuart’s store – Click to enlarge

Mr. Stuart closed the store in 1981, when Coors was getting ready to open their Wellness Center. The Denver Post got a nice picture of him, as he was getting ready to retire. He died in 1991 and is buried in the Golden Cemetery.


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

Highlights