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Resource Number: 5BL 8029 <br />Temporary Resource Number: 157508415011 <br />In 1920, the Forte family was living at 801 Walnut and not at this location, but the Forte Store continued at 804 <br />Walnut. Michael Forte's occupation in the 1920 census was stated to be retail merchant for a general store, and Ora <br />was the proprietess of a general store. Similar occupations are stated for them in the 1930 census. <br />Michael and Ora had seven children. In addition to Leonard, Lorina, Virginia, and Olivia, there were also Alice, <br />Joseph, and Patricia. The following photo shows the children, parents, and grandmother Eufrasina Massaro (with a <br />photo of Eufrasina and Giuseppe Massaro on the wall): <br />According to a Forte family history written later by some of the Forte adult children: <br />In the early 1930's, during the Depression, Michael Forte was the first person to raise head lettuce in <br />the Granby area. He did this during the summer months while Ora managed the store. Later on he also <br />was the first to raise head lettuce on rented acreage between Blackhawk and Central City and later in <br />Nederland, Colorado. He served on the Boulder County Welfare Board between WWI and his <br />retirement. <br />Michael Forte also served as a member of the Louisville City Council from 1915 to 1917. <br />As for their mother, the Forte family wrote: <br />[Ora Forte] had to quit school after the sixth grade to help her mother in the boarding house. She was <br />self-educated to a very high degree.... She played the organ, conducted the choir and soloed in St. <br />Louis Catholic church. She produced plays for the townspeople of Louisville as well as Denver <br />neighborhood theaters.... Ora ran the store completely, from accounting, purchasing, sales and all <br />other interior work while Michael contacted and delivered to families in the nearby towns of Superior and <br />Marshall by dray wagon and later on by motor truck. <br />The St. Louis Catholic Church, in which Ora Forte was so involved, was located directly across the street at 833 La <br />Farge (5BL7994) during all of the years that the Massaro and Forte family owned 804 Walnut. <br />In the late 1940s, Forte's store was included on an advertising movie curtain that was made for the Rex Theatre at <br />817 Main, just a short distance away. The Rex's owner, Santino Biella, lived across the street from Forte's Store at <br />825 La Farge (5BL7993), just south of the St. Louis Catholic Church. Santino Biella included a number of nearby <br />businesses in the advertising on his movie curtain, including "M. Forte & Son," as shown here: <br />5 <br />