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The house is shown in the 1909 Drumm's Wall Map of Louisville. At the time of the 1910 <br />census, both brothers were living in the house. Both were listed as being coal miners. <br />Boulder County gives the date of construction of the original part of this house as being 1910. <br />This date appears on both the 1948 County Assessor card for 1209 Main and on the current <br />Boulder County website. Since Boulder County records are sometimes in error with respect to <br />the construction dates of historic buildings in Louisville, other evidence must also be looked to. <br />In this case, Mike Colacci and Jim Colacci purchased the lots in 1908 and the house is shown as <br />already being in existence on the Drumm's Wall Map of Louisville dated 1909, which was a year <br />before the date given by the County. Therefore, the construction date is assumed to be circa <br />1909. <br />According to an article the August 1994 issue of the Louisville Historian, which was based on <br />information from the Colacci family, Mike Colacci returned to Italy when the 1910 mine strike <br />started in the Louisville area and was immediately drafted into the Italian Army. He ended up <br />serving for three years, including time served in Ethiopia, before returning to Louisville. It is not <br />known whether Jim Colacci went through the same experience, but both brothers are listed in <br />the Louisville directory for 1916 as being back at the house at 1209 Main by that year. <br />According to the same article, Mike and Jim Colacci tried starting a dairy business together, but <br />it failed during the agricultural depression of 1919. <br />In 1916, Mike Colacci married Mary larussi (1899-1949). She had come with her family from <br />Italy in 1907 and they lived on the 1200 block of La Farge Ave., the block behind 1209 Main. At <br />the time of their marriage, she was 16 and he was 29. They had two sons, Joe and Anthony, <br />who themselves became important figures in Louisville's "spaghetti economy" of the 1950s, <br />1960s, and 1970s in particular, with Joe operating the Blue Parrot Restaurant and Anthony <br />operating Colacci's Restaurant. <br />The 1920 census shows Mike and Mary Colacci, and their young sons Joe and Anthony, living at <br />1209 Main. Mike was listed as being a coal miner, but the couple by then had already started <br />the business that would become the Blue Parrot. Jim Colacci could not be located in the 1920 <br />census. <br />In the 1920s, Mike and Mary Colacci and their sons had moved down Main Street to live by the <br />Blue Parrot, where they could tend to their growing restaurant business. In 1922, Mike Colacci's <br />brother, Jim, who was still the co-owner and who had lived in the house earlier, purchased <br />Mike's half -ownership interest. He became the full owner and made it his residence. <br />Both Colacci brothers were active bootleggers during Colorado's Prohibition, which lasted from <br />1916 until 1933. During that period, Colorado KKK members were active participants in the <br />enforcement of Prohibition laws as a way to control immigrants, particularly Catholic <br />2 <br />14 <br />