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Golden Eye Candy – Joyce Davell – Gold on the Trail – enlarge

What’s Happening in Golden Today?

6-6:55AM Cardio Lift Interval (Virtual)
8-8:55AM Tai Chi (Virtual)
8:30-9:30AM Power Training (Virtual)
9AM Golden Walks – Wednesday Morning Celebrating Life @ Golden Library
10:15-10:45AM Toddler Time @ Golden Library
10-10:55AM All Levels Yoga (Virtual)
3-5PM Hard Times Writing Workshop (Virtual)
10AM, 1PM and 4PM Wild West Short Tour
10AM Wild West Walking Tour

4-5PM Día de los Muertos Sugar Skulls @ Golden Library
5:30PM Golden High School PTA Meeting @ Golden High School
6-7PM Recharge & Renew – Meditation @ Golden Library

6-8PM Fermentation Workshop @ Jefferson County Fairgrounds
Join GoFarm and the Jefferson County Extension Office for an evening of food preservation!

Want to preserve your garden harvest or GoFarm produce? Join us for a hands-on workshop where you’ll learn about fermentation as a method of food preservation! Locally-grown produce will be provided, and you’ll get to craft and take home your own fermented vegetable creation! Register

6-7:30PM Golden Safety Academy @ Golden Fire Department Station 1 (and online)


Live Music

5-9PM Open Mic @ Cannonball Creek
6:30PM Open Jam/Mic at Over Yonder Brewing


Upcoming Events and Classes at Foothills Art Center

Ofrendas 2022: Huichol Yarn Painting Workshop
October 16 @ 12:30-2:30PM

Ofrendas 2022: Saint Candle Workshop
October 23 @ 12:30 pm – 2:30 pm

Watercolor Notecards with Janet Nunn
November 5 @ 10:00 am – 4:00 pm


Golden History Moment

Advertisement from the Colorado Transcript – October 12, 1916

106 Years Ago
The October 12, 1916 Colorado Transcript featured a large ad for a vaudeville show that would be at the Golden Opera House the following week. It promised singers, dancers, acrobats, contortionists, and “funny comedians.”

Left to Right – Golden Opera House (1879), Harrison Block (1867), Everett Block (1873) – Photo circa 1880 – Golden History Collection – Click to enlarge

The Golden Opera House occupied the second floor of 1216 Washington Avenue–now the Ace Hi Tavern. Does it seem strange to think that a small, western town like Golden would have needed an Opera House? Were we really such opera devotees? Not really. The vaudeville show was much more representative of the kind of fare we usually got than grand opera would have been.

Various Colorado Transcript advertisements for Opera House productions – Click to enlarge

Opera Houses were very popular in the half century or so after the Civil War. Big cities had them as well as small towns, but in big cities they probably had multiple entertainment buildings that specialized for theater, symphonies, and operas. In smaller towns, one structure hosted all entertainment needs. According to Ann Satterthwaite’s Local Glories: Opera Houses on Main Street – Where Art and Community Meet, Colorado built 132 opera houses in 68 towns and cities between 1860 and 1920. Golden’s was built in 1879. The first floor had stores (sometimes restaurants) and the performance area was on the second floor.

This photo of the stage curtain in the Opera House appeared in the February 13, 1947 Colorado Transcript. The photo was more than 50 years old in 1947.. Click to enlarge.

Many troupes of entertainers traveled the country and scheduled stopovers in opera houses as they went. Over the years, the Golden Opera House hosted plays, comedians, orchestras, singers, vaudeville shows, dances, church services, political meetings, dance classes, and graduations (both Golden High School and the School of Mines). Minstrel shows were very popular, and we hosted many, many productions of Uncle Tom’s Cabin. The Golden Opera House hosted Blind Boone, Henrietta Vinton Davis, and William Jennings Bryan.

Public tastes and needs changed as technology developed. When the Golden Gem theater opened in 1908, motion pictures suddenly became the most interesting thing to watch. When the Gem moved into the big, modern building at 13th and Washington, it offered a newer, nicer auditorium than the aged Opera House. Then radio came along. Then television. The Opera House was used less and less over the years, though the Fire Department still used it for dances in the 1930s.

Photo courtesy of the Ace Hi’s Facebook page

In 1956, the building incurred severe damage in a windstorm and the city condemned it. One of the first floor tenants bought the building and had it repaired. She divided the seldom-used performance space on the second floor into individual offices. The Ace-Hi Tavern was already in operation by then. In 1961, the Stillman family bought not only the bar but the entire building. It is now owned by the third generation of that family.


Thanks to the Golden History Museum for providing the online cache of historic Transcripts, and to the Golden Transcript for documenting our history since 1866!

Highlights