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| Schuyler Colfax |
When gold was discovered in Denver in 1858, scores of miners came West looking for the Mother Lode. Colfax Avenue was the major artery linking them to the riches of the Rockies. Originally called "Golden Road", as well as Grand Avenue, Colfax Avenue had its name changed in 1868 to honor of Schuyler Colfax (pronounced SKY-LAR), a powerful Indiana congressman and Speaker of the House of Representatives at that time.
Colorado first applied for statehood in 1865, the same year as Schuyler's western tour which brought him to Denver in May 1865. Perhaps Denver officials thought that renaming the street would help the territory's cause. But if achieving statehood was the reason for the street's name change, it didn't happen overnight. Colorado did not become a state until 1876, eleven years later. Another reason for naming the street after him is most likely "Smiler" Colfax's great oratory and personal charm
made him popular with the citizens. Whatever the reason, to honor Colfax,
the city dedicated the road along the southern boundary of central
Denver to the Hoosier politician.
Colorado already had a champion in Colfax. The
first legislation for Colorado was drafted by his pen and pressed by
his voice. A delegation was sent to Washington for the creation of a Rocky Mountain Territory separate from the Kansas Territory. On January 6, 1859, Schuyler Colfax, representative from Illinois,
introduced a bill in Congress to organize a “Territory of Colona” along
the eastern slope of the Rockies. The territory was to include the western-most
parts of Kansas and Nebraska as far north as the 42nd parallel, as well as the
northeastern part of New Mexico. This name was taken from the Spanish for
Columbus and the New York Times stated that this name was favored by the
settlers of the area.
This new territory lay north of the 36° 30’ latitude line,
and by the Missouri Compromise of 1850 this meant that slavery would be
prohibited there. In this period of great conflict in the country over the
question of slavery, there was no way Southerners in Congress would allow the
creation of such a new “free” territory, so there were not enough votes to
support Colfax’s bill at that time.
Schuyler Colfax's bill for the organization of the territory was later adopted except they changed the name from Colona to Colorado. He believed Colorado was the richest land under the sun.
Schuyler Colfax was the Speaker of the House when the 13th Amendment was ratified, freeing the slaves. He made a point of being the last to sign the document, proud of the accomplishment.
Colfax was with President Abraham Lincoln just half an hour before his ill-fated attendance at Ford's Theatre that evening. Schuyler declined the President's invitation to the show, as he was leaving on his trip out West early the next morning. Good thing he did, as a House speaker opposed to slavery could have been an additional target for John Wilkes Booth. As he was leaving the President's side, Schuyler was handed what is believed to be the last speech written by Honest Abe, something he wanted read to the miners in Colorado. Schuyler's trip was postponed until after President Lincoln's funeral, but he made it to Denver in 1865.
As an interesting side note, Dr. Gerald Biliss, who lived at 1389 Stuart Street close to West Colfax Avenue, was a Civil War veteran and a member of the honor guard over President Lincoln’s casket. Interesting, also, is the fact that Colfax Avenue and Lincoln Street intersect at the Northwest corner of the Colorado State Capitol Building.
The purpose of Schuyler Colfax's trip out West was primarily to check on the status of the mining industries in Colorado and California. After the Civil War, the U.S. Government was basically broke, and saw mining as a way to both restore our treasury to pay for the war, and give jobs to soldiers returning from the war. Schuyler was also heavily involved with the creation of the nation 's first transcontinental railway, which was essential to transporting gold and silver to the coasts. Interestingly, the city of Colfax, California, and Colfax County, New Mexico were also named for him in 1865.
Schuyler Colfax went on to be Vice President of the United States under President Ulysses S. Grant. He was present with Grant at the surrender of General Lee at the Appomattox Court House, ending the Civil War.
In his 1878 autobiography, Cursed Rickets, Schuyler envisioned Colfax Avenue much like it is today:
(Actually, the quote was penned by the prolific Denver comedian Adam Cayton-Holland in his hilarious, now defunct column "What's So Funny". And it IS funny, because you can find this quote on legitimate, historical websites and publications!)
At first, most of the neighborhoods lining central Colfax Avenue were filled with mansions of the wealthy and elite of Denver. After the Silver Panic of 1893, the cost and demand for lavish houses decreased substantially. After a massive relocation to Denver's suburbs began, many of the large homes built along Colfax were transformed into group homes or apartments. Others were converted to commercial use and still hide behind deceptively modest store fronts.
Colfax Avenue has been called the longest street in America, but it isn't. It is the longest commercial street in the U.S.A., extending a total length of 26.5 miles through the cities of Aurora, Denver, Lakewood and Golden, Colorado, as the "Gateway to the Rockies" from the plains to the mountains. In 2006, the first Colfax Marathon was held, traversing this length of Colfax Avenue.
But that's not the end of the World's Most Famous Avenue! You can run a marathon and still not be at the end of Colfax. On the outskirts of Aurora, Colfax Avenue bends and follows I-70, then U.S. 36 picks up the Colfax name as a virtually seamless route to Watkins, Bennett and Strasburg. If you measure Colfax Avenue from West Heritage Road in Golden, all the way to Headlight Road in Strasburg, Colfax Avenue is 53.3 miles long! This clearly earns its' distinction as the "Longest Commercial Street" in America.
While Colfax Avenue is commonly considered to only run through
the Denver metro area, the road extends much farther. Colfax Avenue is a
part of U.S. Route 40, the highway which, during its heyday, ran 3,157 miles from Atlantic City to San Francisco,
traversing the midsection of the United States. Route 40 served America well, carrying more
automobile traffic than any other transcontinental highway.![]() |
| "East Coast of the West Coast" by Dyrhan Briskey |
| Denver Highway 40 Celebration - Now paved Coast to Coast |
The car culture of the 1950's led to an increase in travel throughout the nation. During the period after World War II, automobile-oriented facilities proliferated along East Colfax, particularly in the eastern section adjacent to Aurora. Sprawling motels in U-shapes, L-shapes, or other configurations were erected. Restaurants incorporated eye-catching rooflines and unusual architecture to lure passing motorists. Signage was also an important element in roadside promotion and employed neon, flashing lights to give the illusion of movement, and symbols (Western themes, crowns, and arrows) to draw attention. Colfax's status as a major thoroughfare led to more tourist traffic along the street. The motels that currently line Colfax are a memory to the Highway 40 era.
Over the course of 150 years, Colfax evolved from a dusty, dirt road to a bustling trolley route and now an urban boulevard; always serving as a main street throughout the city. However, when Interstate 70 was completed, tourists no longer used Colfax as frequently and businesses and neighborhoods suffered. Unfortunately, over the years, Colfax lost much of its vibrancy and main street feel and became noted for abandoned properties, large parking lots, and gritty images of prostitution and drugs.
Playboy Magazine reputedly once called Colfax Avenue, the "longest, wickedest street in America." The quote, though often used, is unsubstantiated, but Playboy did once use the word “wickedest” in reference to Denver. “Denver’s Holladay Street,” according to a 1961 article was among the “wickedest and wildest enclaves in all the wild, wild West.”
Today, Holladay Street is Market Street — once home of the most notorious Red Light District in the Rocky Mountain West, and now is one of the ritziest stretches of property in Denver.
The Colfax Avenue of today is awakening and regaining its Main Street glory without losing its unique charm. Currently various revitalization efforts have been established to revitalize the street and the old girl is making a comeback. Although its status as a highway has declined, Colfax is still a major transportation route. The 15 bus which services Colfax Avenue (affectionately called the "Nifty 15", "Dirty 15" or the "Vomit Comet"), has the highest rider-ship in the RTD system.
The Denver Post once asked, "The future of Colfax is about values. Is creating fancy lofts, swank restaurants and upscale boutiques enough, or is it also important to preserve the soul of this historic avenue that cuts through the heart of the city?"
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| Photo courtesy Save the Signs on Colfax |
1888-1889: The first subdivisions along Lakewood's West Colfax were established on the south side of the avenue.
1890: With 106,000 people, Denver is the 26th-largest city in the U.S., in part due to the growth on Colfax.
1890: National Jewish Hospital for Consumptives was established at Colfax Avenue and Jackson Street.
1891: The town of Colfax is incorporated along West Colfax Avenue.
1892: Brooklyn is established along the Golden Road, a town just nine blocks in length, and two-and-a-half blocks wide.
1897: The West Colfax neighborhood (including Brooklyn and the town of Colfax) was incorporated into the city of Denver
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| Colfax Trolley |
1901: Historian Jerome C. Smiley recognized the street as one of Denver’s principal roadways, “Colfax being the great east-west Avenue clear across its general geographical center.”
1906: The U.S. Mint begins minting coins on Colfax Avenue.
1912: The magnificent Cathedral Basilica of the Immaculate Conception Cathedral at the northeast corner of Logan Street and Colfax Avenue is completed.
1912: A coalition of booster and good roads groups (including the Chamber of Commerce Good Roads Committee, the Real Estate Exchange, and the Denver Motor Club) joined forces in a drive to make East Colfax the best road in the state. The group aimed to turn Colfax Avenue into the gateway to Denver for tourists visiting by automobile from the East.
1914: The Thompson/Bluebird Theater erected by Harry W.J. Edbrooke at 3315 E. Colfax.
1916: Colfax is paved.
1917: The Ogden Theatre is erected by Harry W.J. Edbrooke at 935 E. Colfax Avenue.
1926: The new East High School designed by George H. Williamson was completed, adjacent to the City Park Esplanade.
1932: East Colfax Paving in Aurora, Colorado.
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| East Colfax Avenue in the 1970's |
1978: Colfax Avenue’s nadir was aptly summarized by conservative columnist George Will: “The fear that [nuclear] war may blow civilization to smithereens loses some of its sting when you see Denver’s Colfax Avenue.”
1983: Sid King's Crazy Horse Bar, the city's most notorious strip club, closes.
1983: One Denver policeman commented on East Colfax in December: “During the early morning and the night shift you get to find just about every facet of society down there: your dealers, pimps, hookers. I think it’s safe to say that anyone who is in the criminal element is on East Colfax at one time during the night.
1984: The Aladdin Theater at 2000 East Colfax Avenue was demolished and replaced with a Walgreen’s drugstore.
1994: A coalition among Aurora, Denver and Lakewood forms to rehabilitate the avenue.
2001: Construction begins on the Chamberlain Heights development in Denver. It is the first new residential development on Colfax in 80 years.
2004: Lakewood begins creating development guidelines to accentuate a retro feel for West Colfax.
2005: Denver adopts a "Main Street" zoning designation to lure more pedestrian-friendly and mixed-use development to Colfax.
2007: The University of Colorado Health Sciences Center and The Children's Hospital plan to open at the old Fitzsimons Army Medical Center in Aurora, creating a campus that could employ 16,000 people by 2010.
2012: The first annual Root 40 Music Festival is held on Colfax Avenue. The 40 West Arts District is created.
2013: The Aurora Cultural Arts District is designated.
Website: www.usmint.gov
Opening hours: Mon-Fri 8:00 am - 3:00 pm (opens 9:00 a.m. last Wed of the month).
Admission: Free.
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| Colorado State Capitol |
Tel: (303) 866-2604
Opening hours: Mon-Fri 7:00 am - 5:30 pm. Tours depart every 45 minutes 9:00 am to 2:30 pm. Dome open 9:00 am - 3:30 pm.
Admission: Free.
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| McNichols Building |
Phone: 720-865-4220
Hours of Operation: Thursday - Sunday 10:00am - 5:00pm
For booking, contact Tim Taylor at tim.taylor3@denvergov.org or (303) 906-1396 or visit our Rental Information page.
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| East High School |
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| City Park Esplanade |
The Bonfils served as a multipurpose theater; presenting plays, operas, movies, concerts, lectures and television productions. The theater was used as a sound stage for the Perry Mason television series, and Dick Van Dyke filmed early episodes of Diagnosis Murder there as well. However, in 1979 the Denver Center for the Performing Arts (DCPA) opened downtown. As the DCPA took off, the Bonfils Theater suffered. It became part of the DCPA and was later renamed the Lowenstein Theater, but its location far from the other theaters caused its closure in 1985.
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| Cathedral of Immaculate Conception |
At that time, TB was the leading cause of death in the United States. The hospital opened on December 10, 1899. Its slogan was “none may enter who can pay – none can pay who enter.” National Jewish is still a functioning hospital that provides millions of dollars of free/heavily subsidized care.
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| Photo courtesy Denver Public Library Western History Collection |
Colfax Viaduct--At the viaduct over Interstate 25 and across from parking lots at Mile High Stadium, a long-forgotten piece of Colfax remains. Called the "Bottoms," the area - from the late 1800s through the 1950s - was home to cigar stores, bicycle shops, churches, grocery stores, hay markets and midwives. Eastern European Jewish families first lived there, followed by Mexican immigrants. The viaduct was originally built in 1917 for cars and trolleys, and I-25 came later, wiping away many of the businesses and homes.
Overseen by consulting engineer H.S. Crocker, the Colfax-Larimer viaduct was completed in 1917. Built for both streetcars and automobiles, the viaduct was the longest concrete span of its kind in the world at that time. The viaduct was built to connect downtown Denver and west Denver over the South Platte River and the railroad tracks. By 1983, 35,000 vehicles crossed the viaduct daily, which was in need of repair. The new viaduct was completed in 1983.
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| Photo courtesy Aurora History Museum |
1918: The U.S. government selected Aurora as the site for Fitzsimons Army Hospital to treat the wounded—especially those affected by mustard gas and tuberculosis—during World War I.
1929: Colorado's Secretary of State recognized Aurora—with 2,000 residents—as a city, and tax revenues were appropriated for sewers, roads and fire stations. Most citizens were located just south of Colfax Avenue.
- During the Great Depression, Colorado’s congressional delegation managed to save Fitzsimons from closure due to cuts in military expenditures. President Roosevelt later visited Fitzsimons and was so impressed with the facility that he appropriated funds for its improvement.
- In 1942, the Army Air Corps built Buckley Field, enhancing the military presence in Aurora. This, coupled with the addition of Lowry Field, resulted in more employment, residents and money for the city.
- In 1947, Buckley Field was renamed Naval Air Station.
- By 1960, Aurora had 50,000 residents. The Naval Air Station is renamed Buckley Air National Guard Base.
- The 1970s were prosperous for Aurora with the city benefiting from new highway construction.
- The 1980s were a time of economic cooling off, as with the rest of Colorado.
- The 1990s ushered in economic prosperity. However, closures of the military bases, which began with the closure of nearby Lowry Air Force Base, threatened the city's well being.
- In 1995, the U.S. Congress targets Fitzsimons for closure. That same year, officials with the City of Aurora, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center and the University of Colorado Hospital present the U.S. Department of Defense with a plan to reuse the decommissioned base as a world-class medical campus. The Fitzsimons Redevelopment Authority is formed through an intergovernmental agreement.
- In 1998, the first biotech companies move to Fitzsimons.
- In 2000, Aurora’s population had increased to 276,393 residents Buckley Air National Guard Base re-designated as Buckley Air Force Base.
- The 1-square-mile life sciences city at Fitzsimons is home to the University of Colorado Hospital and Health Sciences Center, Rocky Mountain Lions Eye Institute, the Nighthorse Campbell Native Health Building, Research Complex I and Colorado Bioscience Park Aurora, with more to come.
- In 2008, the city is home to more than 300,000 residents.
West Colfax Avenue has a long and colorful history. Thousands of years ago Native Americans first made the trek between the foothills and plains on paths that would someday become West Colfax Avenue. By the mid 1800's, Ute Indians routinely used this route to bring trade goods to markets in Denver. Golden Road, as it was first called, ran through the countryside connecting the early settlements of Denver and Golden. That countryside today is West Denver and Lakewood.
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| West Colfax Trolley |
The West Colfax neighborhood, bordered today by Federal and Sheridan boulevards, started as the town of Colfax in 1891 and was annexed to Denver in 1897. The area was sparsely populated with several mansions and scattered squatters’ shacks. During this time West Colfax was known as “No Man’s Land” and “Jim’s Town.”
In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, a large wave of Jewish Immigrants from Eastern Europe moved into the West Colfax area. These immigrants turned “No Man’s Land” into Denver’s version of a European neighborhood. West Colfax Avenue was lined with two-story brick commercial buildings, saloons, stores, a hotel, and a restaurant. West Colfax Avenue had a constant flow of hay wagons and peddlers that came from the agriculture communities of Golden and Morrison en route to Denver.
As a link in U.S. 40, one of the first transcontinental highways, West Colfax Avenue was widened in 1935 and 1936. The roadway improvements were performed by president Franklin Delano Roosevelt's Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC). It was a program that offered employment during the Great Depression.
The designation as a major national route initiated "the golden years" for West Colfax as it became a tourist strip lined with motels, tourist camps, service stations and diners. Eventually, however, construction of Interstate Highway 70 to the north and the 6th Avenue freeway to the south, virtually eliminated Colfax Avenue as a significant route choice for vacationing and commuting travelers.
The neighborhood’s legacy
remains in buildings that reflect its past. Confluence Ministries at
14th and Quitman is housed in the former synagogue and Hebrew school,
Yeshiva Kneseth. The Charles Dickinson Library at Colfax and Hooker,
built in 1914, was the smallest of eight branch libraries in the
city. Historic buildings are being repurposed, and the BID is
actively restoring West Colfax’s unique neon signs, including the
iconic Lake Steam Bath and Aristocrat Motor Hotel signs.
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| Photo by Juli Scalzi |
A forerunner to what later would become Lakewood, the Jewish Consumptives' Relief Society opened in 1904 on Colfax to serve tubercular patients from across the country. Though most of the Relief Society patients were Jewish, the organization served thousands of non-Jews, many of whom were treated free of charge. The society changed its mission to cancer research in the 1950s, also changing its name to the American Medical Center. The property with its original buildings now is the campus for the Rocky Mountain College of Art and Design. A tower with the American Medical Center's initials can be seen from Colfax between Kendall and Pierce streets.
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| Dr. Charles Spivak |
Visit the Golden Hill Cemetery, also in Lakewood, to find the graves of Dr. Spivak and David Edelstadt, another Yiddish poet and an anarchist, who died of t.b. around 1892. Edelstadt's grave (a monument) was inscribed with one of his poems and a photograph of the poet. Spivak's grave was adjacent; Spivak donated his skeleton to the Hebrew University. The upper part of the cemetery contained the graves of the patients who didn't beat the "white plague;" many, unfortunately, are marked only with small metal plaques, now unreadable.
Landmark eatery | A stop on many Colorado travelers' lists, Casa Bonita Mexican restaurant, 6715 W. Colfax Ave. in Lakewood, once was a field belonging to the Jewish Consumptives' Relief Society. Property in front of the Relief Society was sold in the 1950s. Casa Bonita, famous for its cliff-diving acts, opened in 1974 in the JCRS Shopping Center.
West Colfax Avenue Timeline
Around 6000 BC.-1850s: Native Americans settled in the area currently known as West Colfax Avenue. The Ute Indians used the present-day West Colfax Ave as a trade route to access the commercial hub of Denver.1860s: As part of the Gold Rush, miners used West Colfax to access precious stones and minerals in the Rocky Mountains.
1874: Sloan’s Lake was connected to Cheltenham Heights by a canal.
"Over the past two decades, residents have watched the removal of many 19th and 20th century buildings along West Colfax. This included the leveling of nearly all of the
potentially historic buildings at the intersection of West Colfax and Wadsworth Boulevard. The demolition of Mountain States Telegraph and Telephone Exchange on the south side of West Colfax and Wadsworth made way for a turn lane. The West Colfax Feed and Fuel store north of the intersection was replaced by a gas station, which was subsequently replaced by a strip mall. The development of the northeast corner of this intersection by Wal-Mart initiated the demolition of the neo-classical Columbia Savings and
Loan, the Blu Bow motel, the Pig Parlor restaurant, and a storybook style farmhouse
from the 1920s. An observer standing at this intersection today would be hard pressed to find physical evidence of human activity before 1990.
Westland Shopping Center — were altered beyond all recognition or suffered demolition in the 1990s. This trend has continued over the subsequent decade as demolition and new construction never have removed various resources within the project corridor more than 50 years old. Despite efforts to save it, Lane’s Tavern was demolished for new construction in 1997, but the new construction never came to fruition and the lot remains undeveloped and for sale as of the present report. Other buildings, although not as old, have suffered the same fate." - Kris Autobee, Lakewood Historian
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| Colfax and Broadway Trolley by Joe Priselac |
"I walked away to the dumb downtown streets of Denver, for the trolley
at Colfax and Broadway, where the big Capitol building is, with its lit-up dome
and swarded lawns. I walked the pitch-black roads and came to the house I’d
spent my $1000 on for nothing, where my sister and brother-in-law were sitting
worrying about money and work and insurance and security and all that, in the white-tiled
kitchen." - Jack KerouacThe film is beloved by Mopar enthusiasts because it is one of the most significant movies ever to feature a classic Dodge muscle car. The film continues to be popular to this day and is considered a cult film. The start of the movie showed Kowalski cruising down Colfax Avenue to score speed at a biker bar. They even had Bob Palmer from Channel 4 news doing the interviews on television.
For The Glenn Miller Story (1953), the first feature-length movie ever shot in Denver, Lowry Air Force Base was turned into the site of a World War II USO show, and the corner of West Colfax Avenue and Fourteenth Street became a 1926 gas station. Starring James Stewart.
In the "Erection Day" episode of South Park, Jimmy tries to buy a hooker at Colfax Point, a reference to sections of the avenue noted for prostitution.
Another episode of South Park features a visit to Casa Bonita, a Mexican-themed restaurant and entertainment complex located on West Colfax in the city of Lakewood.
Denver area bands The Colfax Stranglers, Steele & Colfax, Colfax Slim, Colfax Speed Queen, all take their names from the street.
Five Iron Frenzy, a ska-punk band consisting of Denver natives, has a song called "Where 0 Meets 15". The title refers to two bus routes that cross at this intersection. In the song, the narrator is waiting at a bus stop. The songs lyrics describe how an experience at Colfax & Broadway made the singer feel as though he would be unsuccessful in his continuing attempts to save the world. The song was included on the ColfaxAvenue.com Compilation CD Vol. I.
In the movie About Schmidt, Jack Nicholson's character drives his RV along a stretch of East Colfax near Ogden Street. The viewer can clearly see the Royal Host Motel and the Ogden Theater in the shot.
In the movie Things To Do In Denver When You're Dead, Jimmy 'The Saint' Tosnia picks up a prostitute along East Colfax, in front of the Bluebird Theater.
In 1984, a sensational murder took the life of outspoken radio talk show host Alan Berg as he arrived home on the 1400 block of Adams Street, near East Colfax Avenue across from the Bluebird Theater (before it was a concert and fine film venue). Berg, who was Jewish, was gunned down in his driveway while exiting his Volkswagen, by white supremacists who had baited him in hostile calls on the air before the killing. The execution received national publicity. His killers went on the commit a major armored car robbery in another state. They were later caught and convicted of both crimes. The wife of Alan Berg wrote a book about the tragedy.
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| Sir Arthur Conan Doyle & Harry Houdini |
In the early part of the century the great magician Harry Houdini and legendary writer Sir Arthur Conan Doyle came together at the Ogden Theater at 935 East Colfax for the purpose of engaging in a debate over the reality or myth of Spiritualism.
The Satire Lounge was also the beginning of two very famous comedy careers, those of Tommy and Dick Smothers, better known as The Smothers Brothers who hit their peak in the late 60s. The Smothers Brothers were spotted clowning around somewhat hilariously in the bar and around the billiards table when a talent manager suggested they make it a career. Equally significant, the brothers lived in the only apartment above the Satire, which is now occupied by Joe who has been a Satire employee for some twenty years. One source indicates the brothers went on to San Francisco to do their first show.
Famed folk singer Judy Collins also did some of her earliest performances at the Satire. She was a student at East High School just a few blocks away.
More recently and for decades the Satire has been owned by popular patron of Denver's Greek community, Pete Contos. Pete's father in law is Ari Zavaras, former Denver police chief, director of Colorado Dept. of Corrections and more recently Colorado's top cop, aka the Manager of Public Safety. Contos has been prominent in the colorful annual Greek Festival at Assumption Greek Orthodox Cathedral. Pete told this editor he came to the USA from Greece in 1956.
In the 1960s, Sid King's Crazy Horse Bar
featured some of the most scantily clad women in the city. And soon, female
employees weren't wearing a thing. King, a promoter who saw his financial
future in the burlesque scene, introduced a striptease school, called the
"Navel Academy," and he may have been the
first adult-club owner to introduce silicone breast implants among exotic
dancers. King's club inside the New Orleans-style building at 1211 E. Colfax Ave.
lost its lease in 1983 and now is home to a restaurant and small businesses. Boxer Eddie Bohn opened the Pig 'N Whistle restaurant in 1926 on the birthday of his friend and former heavyweight champion Jack Dempsey, and it quickly became the hangout for athletes. (Rumor has it that notorious hothead and former New York Yankee Billy Martin got into a fight there.) The restaurant, at 4801 W. Colfax Ave., expanded to a hotel in the 1930s. Bohn's son, Punch, closed the restaurant in 1991, and Eddie Bohn died the next year.
Long before it became a venerable
institution for live music, The Fillmore Auditorium at the corner of East
Colfax and Clarkson Street
was once home to the Fritchle Automobile & Battery Co. From 1910 to 1917,
electric-powered Fritchle cars were built and charged at the site. Roughly 500
Fritchle vehicles were produced - Molly Brown had one - each able to run 100
miles between charges.World War II hero Audie Murphy used to hang out at the Senate Lounge in the Argonaut Hotel on East Colfax Avenue while his quarter horses raced at the Centennial Turf Club.
Actor/Comedian Jack Benny was at the opening of the Columbia Savings Bank, at the corner of West Colfax Avenue and Wadsworth Boulevard.
Rocker and ColfaxAvenue.com webmaster Jonny Barber wrote and recorded a song about the 15 Bus on Colfax called "The Dirty 15", where "anything can happen and it usually does."
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| Local band Rainville - "the longest street in america" album cover |







































This is great! Thanks for posting!
ReplyDeleteDane "Colfax" Stephenson
So, Dane, are you a descendant, or very well known on Colfax?
DeleteVery Interesting information. I learned a great deal about Colfax Avenue. Thankyou for all of the time& effort that was put into this.
ReplyDeleteThank you for all you time in research and writing! This is very interesting
ReplyDeleteThat was so good. Thank you so much. I learned so much detail about a street I've seen change slowly but steadily in the last 30 years.
ReplyDeleteWhat a great history! My grandmother always told me Colfax was the longest street in the U.S.A., and now I know why. I long suspected she wasn't correct, but your wonderful narrative and photos explain why. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteThis is great, very complete! Im using to get a better sense of what I felt when I lived for a year in West Colfax.
ReplyDeleteplease check this out, would love to have your feedback,
https://www.javieralvarezm.com/COLFAX
-Thanks,
Javier
Thank U for a fascinating journey back! You included a few things even I did not know (eg "Bob Dylan" & Don Cheadle). Have fond memories of eating @ Pig n Whistle, seeing "Vanishing Point" @ the Cin Twin, dancing @ Sid Kings one nite during 'Entertainers Hour' (Sid asked me to since his dancers thought I was attractive!) c.1975, drag racing on the 16th street viaduct- early 70's (though NEVER in the 'suicide lane'!), seeing "Chariots of the Gods" @ the Fox and telling my driving students how Colfax is the longest Ave. in the world (still? used to be). FYI for U and readers- I spent nite of Jun 16 1965 (flood) @ Ruby Hill (only high ground in our neighborhood! They just had a concert near there this summer!) Thanks for the nostalgic trip-right on from a native now in his 60's!
ReplyDeleteI read a couple of years ago that Colfax Avenue is still the longest "continuously named" street in the U.S. There are other longer streets, such as in New York City, that are continuous, but those streets' names change at least several times. Colfax is the longest with the same name from start to finish. I remember my 4th Grade teacher back in 1965 making that distinction in our Colorado History class, too. An historian & 3rd generation Denverite (like my Grandpa, & his same age, too) she was the perfect person to teach that class, because her ancestors, like mine were here from the "beginning". She had so many stories to tell! She made Colorado history come alive for us kids.
ReplyDeleteThank you for presenting this very detailed history of Colfax Avenue! It was a fascinating read & brought back lots of memories!
Shari G.
I didnt know there was so much rich history to do with colfax and even Denver. I have lived in CO mostly Denver lakewood and highlands ranch on and off for 20 years and always find myself coming back to Denver. Nothing compares ive lived in Seattle, San Francisco, Chicago, Miami and Denver by far is the best. I appreciate all the effort the author of this piece has put into the research. Thank you for the history lesson and colorful vocabulary used to describe my favorite city.
ReplyDeleteVery nice to read, and learn the history of my favorite cities in America. I'm from East Denver/Aurora area, so it's great to know how far we've come.
ReplyDeleteVery interesting article. Well done!
ReplyDeleteI'm trying to get more information on the exact location on Colfax of the Denver Drumstick in the 50s-60s. Thanks!
ReplyDeletehttps://www.facebook.com/JeffcoColorado/photos/jefferson-county-archives-throwback-thursdaywho-remembers-the-denver-drumstick-r/10157344499402359/
DeleteGreat site!
ReplyDeleteLooking for info or old pics of the White Swan Motel. Thanks! 😉
https://www.whiteswancolfax.com/
DeleteLanes Tavern is at Heritage Lakewood Park.
ReplyDelete