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Winter Solstice, New Year’s Eve, and the Transcript Reaches the Century Mark

Golden Eye Candy – Jen Rutter – Short, Cold Day – enlarge

Today is the winter solstice–the shortest day of the year. The sun will rise at 7:15:26AM and set at 4:39:50PM. The total hours of daylight will equal 9 hours and 24 minutes. Now the days will gradually lengthen until the vernal equinox, June 21st, when we’ll have 15 hours and 2 minutes of daylight.


What’s Happening in Golden Today?

6-6:55AM Cardio Lift Interval (Virtual)
8:30-9:30AM Power Training (Virtual)
9AM Golden Walks – Wednesday Morning Celebrating Life @ Golden Library
10AM-5PM Holiday Art Market @ Foothills Art Center
10AM and 1PM Wild West Walking Tour
10AM and 1PM Wild West Short Tour
10:15-10:45AM Toddler Time @ Golden Library
3-5PM Hard Times Writing Workshop (Virtual)
3PM Ornament Making @ Windy Saddle
5-6PM Arte de mi Corazón (Virtual)
7:30PM A Christmas Story @ Miners Alley Playhouse

Holiday Food Drive for the Christian Action Guild Food Pantry @ Mountain Toad Brewery (map) and the Golden Visitor Center (map)

Holiday Canned Food Drive for BGOLDN @ On Tap Credit Union (map)


Live Music

6:30PM Open Jam/Mic at Over Yonder Brewing


Plan Ahead for New Year’s Eve

Buy Tickets Now!

Golden’s newest food hall is hosting a New Years Eve party!

Come celebrate the New Year with Morris and Mae! Join us on December 31st from 8pm-1am for bottomless champagne, appetizers, midnight balloon drop and DJ’s spinning into the New Year! Tickets


Golden History Moment

Transcript Headings Over Time – enlarge

The Story of the Transcript – Part 3 of 3
The West family had taken Golden from its founding in the gold rush era into the atomic age. They wrote about new industries, new businesses, and new schools. They reported when women got the vote, when Prohibition went into effect and then when it ended. They covered the Great Depression and both World Wars. They wrote about club meetings and church meetings, birth and death notices and wedding announcements. In short, they left a wonderful record of Golden’s first century.

After Fleet Parsons’ death in 1959, the Transcript was sold. Subsequent owners made a few changes. In 1966, it became bi-weekly (Mondays and Thursdays) and in 1968 it was issued tri-weekly (Sunday, Tuesday, and Thursday). In 1969 the owners went to five days a week, Monday through Friday. At this point, the name changed to the Golden Daily Transcript.

That transition wasn’t entirely successful. The owners at that time wanted to expand the paper’s role beyond local news. They included many stories from the wire services and covered national and international news. They added a comics section and a TV guide. There were fewer and fewer articles about local people, companies, schools, and events.

Readers soon let them know that they expected their local paper to cover local news, and the Transcript slowly regained its local focus. It went from five days a week back to two, then returned to the original weekly schedule. It cycled through a few different names in this era, going from the Golden Daily Transcript to the Daily Transcript, even reverting to the Colorado Transcript for several years. In 1983, they settled on the Golden Transcript name that they retain to this day.

1000 10th Street, now the City Hall Annex, was the home of the Golden Transcript from 1966-2007.

In 1966, after nearly a century at 1115 Washington Avenue (map), the new owners built a new home, located at 1000 10th Street (map), across from City Hall. The new building was much larger and enabled them to install new printing presses.

December 22, 1966 Colorado Transcript – enlarge

With the new equipment, they were able to offer printing services to 40-60 other newspapers. The 100th anniversary edition of the Transcript was printed on December 19, 1966–exactly 100 years after the first edition. That was the first edition of the paper printed on the new presses.

Moving the last equipment out of the old building and into the new – enlarge

They completed their move from the old home to the new in January of 1967. And so the Transcript and the City of Golden began their second century together.


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