My WebLink
|
Help
|
About
|
Sign Out
Home
Browse
Search
1997 BUDGET
PORTAL
>
BUDGET and ACFR__ANNUAL COMPREHENSIVE FINANCIAL RPTS (30.080 & 30.040A)
>
BUDGETS
>
1973-1999 Budgets
>
1997 BUDGET
Metadata
Thumbnails
Annotations
Entry Properties
Last modified
10/3/2022 3:01:47 PM
Creation date
8/22/2022 3:30:11 PM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
CITYWIDE
Doc Type
Budget City
Ord/Res - Year
1997
Ord/Res - Number
51
52
53
Record Series Code
30.080
Record Series Name
Budget Records
Jump to thumbnail
< previous set
next set >
There are no annotations on this page.
Document management portal powered by Laserfiche WebLink 9 © 1998-2015
Laserfiche.
All rights reserved.
/
273
PDF
Print
Pages to print
Enter page numbers and/or page ranges separated by commas. For example, 1,3,5-12.
After downloading, print the document using a PDF reader (e.g. Adobe Reader).
Show annotations
View images
View plain text
General <br />Information <br />History <br />The Miner' Memorial Statue at the <br />City Hall is symbol of the history of <br />the people who made the town of <br />Louisville --the coal mines and coal <br />mining industry. In August 1877 the <br />first coal mine, the Welch Mine, was <br />opened and Louis Nawatny, a land <br />owner in the area, platted his farm <br />land into the town which he named <br />for himself --Louisville. Nawatny <br />registered his plat in February, 1878. <br />Coal miners moved to the new town <br />to work in the new, safer mine, and <br />from the beginning Louisville was <br />different from most coal -camp towns. <br />Miners lived in the town and walked <br />to their work at the mines. <br />Louisville is an area that was known <br />as the Northern Coal Field, an <br />extensive coal field in Boulder and <br />Weld County. Wages in the early <br />days of coal mining were relatively <br />high in the Louisville mines, and the <br />mines were relatively safe. However, <br />because the mining was seasonal <br />and strikes too often interrupted <br />production, the economy was <br />generally depressed. Family <br />gardens and odd jobs were the way <br />of life during summertime <br />unemployment. <br />From 1890 to 1928 the Acme Mine <br />operated directly beneath the original <br />town of Louisville. Worked on two <br />levels, the Acme produced nearly two <br />million tons of coal and was one of <br />171 coal mines in Boulder County. <br />There were 30 mines that opened in <br />and around Louisville. During the <br />peak years of 1907 to 1909 there <br />were 12 mines in operation. The use <br />of coal declined following World War <br />II and the last mines near Louisville <br />closed in 1952. <br />Many Europeans migrated to <br />Louisville to work in the mines. <br />Some came because jobs were <br />plentiful and they learned the skills to <br />become miners, some continued the <br />mining skills they had used in <br />Europe, and some probably were <br />recruited as strike breakers during <br />the several union disagreements with <br />coal companies. They worked <br />together in the mines, but they lived <br />with their own relatives and fellow <br />countrymen as neighbors. <br />The neighborhood of Italians and <br />French have gone just as the signs of <br />the coal mines. Flowers grow in <br />yards with never a hint of the <br />passageways underground. <br />The community has become a <br />middle-class haven where the <br />workers leave for all manner of jobs <br />in every direction. In recent years <br />manufacturing plants have opened in <br />Louisville providing employment <br />opportunities and attracting new <br />residents. <br />The unique history of Louisville and <br />the rich cultural contributions give the <br />community a character not to be <br />found in the new suburbs. <br />From: "The Louisville Story" by Carolyn Conarroe <br />Facts <br />Louisville offers a small town <br />atmosphere with convenient access <br />to the cultural amenities and <br />economic opportunities of the <br />Denver -Boulder metropolitan area. <br />The Front Range of the Rocky <br />Mountains, ten miles to the west, <br />offers a colorful backdrop to <br />Louisville and abundant recreation <br />activities. <br />1 <br />
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.