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Historic Preservation Commission Agenda and Packet 2023 11 27
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Historic Preservation Commission Agenda and Packet 2023 11 27
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11/22/2023 1:23:09 PM
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City Council Records
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11/27/2023
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Boards Commissions Committees Records
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MARSHAL NABS PAIR IN JIFFY <br />U. P. Operator Phancs kie's Being <br />-Held Up"; Pride of Loulaville <br />There in 3 Minutes. <br />BOULDF11, Colo.. Jan. 1�.—A record - <br />breaking arreet was roatie at an ear1Y <br />Itour this morning by Ma.rshal da.Ite <br />Pack of LouiBville, when he received <br />wort! from Boulder that twp men were <br />attempting to hold up the Union Pa- <br />cific operator at Louisville. The mes- <br />sage W&A flaglred over the telegraph <br />wire by Operator Frank Marman, the <br />rictlm. W110 trUTIAMitted the tact by <br />telephone, Withia three minutes of <br />their entrance Into the statl013, the <br />men were on their way to jaiL They <br />Pack was involved in an accidental shooting in 1910 while in pursuit of a burglar that ended in <br />the burglar's death. He was acquitted of the murder two days later. Pack was the primary law <br />enforcement official during the pre -Prohibition era when Louisville had thirteen saloons on <br />Front Street and at the beginning of the Long Strike (1910-1914) characterized by labor unrest <br />and conflict between the coal miners and mine owners. As Town Marshal, Pack was also <br />responsible for the Louisville water supply at the reservoir located off of South Boulder Road, as <br />well as monitoring an 8 PM curfew. It is unknown why or exactly when the Pack family left <br />Louisville, but it is surmised that it was around the time of the sale of the house at 708 Grant in <br />1913, based on a 1934 obituary for Mrs. J.W. Pack stating that the family had left Louisville <br />"more than 20 years ago." It is also possible that Pack had already left Louisville by 1913 or left <br />unexpectedly and was willing to sell the house for $325, much reduced from when he <br />purchased the house in 1909. <br />Joseph and Josephine Potestio Ownership, 1913-1917 <br />Francis Joseph Potestio (1887-1919) and Josephine Giuseppina Jacoe Potestio (1887-1959) were <br />the next owners of 708 Grant from 1913-1917. Joseph and Josephine were Italian immigrants <br />who arrived in the US in 1909 and were living in Louisville by 1910. It is notable that the <br />Potestio's traveled from Italy with Josephine's three brothers - Eliseo, Marcello, and Robert <br />Jacoe. The Jacoe brothers owned several businesses in Louisville including a saloon, pool hall, <br />and the Jacoe Store - an Italian grocery store which is currently the location of the Louisville <br />Historical Museum. Joseph found work as a coal miner and Josephine worked as a dressmaker. <br />It is unclear whether the Potestio's lived in the house during the four years of their ownership. <br />Although they are also associated with other addresses on Grant and LaFarge, there is evidence <br />that they were at this address in 1916. Joseph Potestio was a coal miner and prominent leader <br />in the United Mine Workers union during the Long Strike (1910-1914). During the years that the <br />Potestio's owned 708 Grant, Joe Potestio was arrested and even accused and tried for murder <br />due to his union activities and role in a shootout at the Hecla Mine in 1914. <br />
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