Honoring Our Heritage
Greenwood Village Turns Fifty
The area that is now Greenwood Village has changed
dramatically in the last 50 years, from a community that hosted the Greenwood
Village Farmers 4-H Club and was dotted with dairies and farms. Even more
changes can be seen when the clock is turned back 80 and 150 years. In 1920,
there were orchards on Orchard Road. In the mid-1800’s Arapaho Indians camped
along Little Dry Creek.
In some important ways, Greenwood Village remains the same.
Parents still want the best for their children, and neighbors come together to
celebrate important events in the life of the community. Horses can still be
seen grazing in pastures, and people of good will still step forward to lead
and plan so that quality of life can be maintained.
To commemorate the 50th anniversary of Greenwood Village, we
look back on the joys and struggles that early residents endured that are part
of the heritage of this special place. The hard work and community service
contributed by people throughout the past 100-plus years have created a legacy
that endures today.
The First Residents 1850’s
Many Native Americans passed through the area that would
become Arapahoe County. Archeologists have found artifacts at Lamb Spring, 25
miles southeast of Denver that indicate hunters occupied the area some 10,000
years ago. By 1300 A.D., there were villages along the South Platte River. In
1815, French trappers attended a large rendezvous on Bear Creek, a few miles
northwest of Greenwood Village, along with the Arapaho, Cheyenne, Kiowa and
other tribes.
By 1850, the Arapaho and Cheyenne had signed a treaty giving
them the rights to the Eastern Plains between the Platte River, near Fort
Lupton, and the Arkansas River in Southeastern Colorado. Greenwood resident
Tom Linzy remembered picking up arrowheads on his land on Long Road, growing up
in the 1920’s and 1930’s.
Natli Molloy remembered her son, Bob, and their neighbor
Bill Stanley, finding arrowheads along Little Dry Creek as recently as the
1960’s. Curtis School teacher Mrs. Frederickson took her fourth through sixth
graders on expeditions around the school. They found arrowheads and other
artifacts as the area had been an Arapaho Indian campground. The remains of a
Native American were found on the west side of Little Dry Creek when local
residents were expanding their septic system in 1995. The Colorado Historical
Museum determined that the skull they found was of a man who lived 150 years
ago.
Ute Indians primarily lived in central and western Colorado,
but would come to Arapahoe County to trade and hunt. Jane Melvin ran the
Twelve Mile House with her husband John in the late 1800’s, just south of what
is now the Cherry Creek Reservoir. “There were any number of Ute Indians in our
neighborhood, but they were always friendly to us,” she told Colorado Magazine
in a 1935 interview. “They camped just across Cherry Creek, 200 yards from our
house.” Ute Indians would come from campgrounds near the Platte River to trade
at J.D. Hill’s General Store in Littleton. The site is now the Three Chimneys
Gift Shop on South Rapp Street.
Gold Brings Changes 1860’s
The discovery of gold near present-day Englewood in 1858
brought profound changes to the area. Prospectors and settlers began coming in
large numbers, which forced the Native Americans into smaller areas. The two
groups co-existed for awhile, but the Cheyenne and Arapaho were eventually
relocated to a reservation east of Colorado Springs.
Among the early settlers was John Melvin, who came to
Colorado from Connecticut in 1859 and purchased 320 acres along Cherry Creek.
A steady stream of covered wagons made their way across the Smoky Hill Trail,
which followed the Smoky Hill River across Kansas and wound its way northwest
towards Denver.
Jane Higgins and her parents came to Colorado from Maine in
1867. The next year, at the tender age of 16, Jane married her neighbor, John
Melvin. They lived in a three-room log cabin, which was later expanded to a
hotel and restaurant known as the Twelve Mile House because it was 12 miles
from Denver. The community of Melvin grew on their land and Melvin School was
located just east of where Jordan Road turns south from Belleview Avenue.
Today’s teenagers would not want to go back to “the good old
days” of the 1870’s. “Although still a child of 17,” Jane Melvin said, “I was
cooking for large numbers, caring for my infant son, doing all the washing,
baking, cleaning, sewing and mending. We had from three to 10 men around the
station continually who helped with the milking chores or did nothing but sit
and smoke in the barroom.”
The Prairie Bloomed
Westside Growth 1870’s
Across the valley, settlers were moving into log cabins near
the Platte River. In 1864, a group of settlers met at R.S. Little’s cabin and
organized the Littleton School District, which extended north to the Denver City limits and south to the Douglas County line. The first schoolhouse was built
during the winter of 1865-66 near Brown’s Bridge, at a spot just east of the
Platte River and north of Union Avenue.
By the 1870s people were raising cattle and trying to grow
crops in an arid land. In 1874, Arapahoe County ranchers petitioned the Mayor
of Denver, asking to bring an irrigation ditch from the Platte River to
irrigate the high lands to the east. In 1879, the Northern Colorado Irrigation
Company announced plans to build a “High Line” canal, beginning with a tunnel
from Platte Canyon and winding 83 miles east across Arapahoe County and
Denver. The canal was completed in 1883, but the amount of water was not
reliable for raising crops. Many water rights were already appropriated so
that during dry years (one out of every three) there was not enough water for
the 400 farmers who subscribed to the canal.
“Potato” Clark 1880’s
One Colorado pioneer who had a major impact on this land was
Rufus Clark. When he came to Colorado in 1859, Clark bought 160 acres along
the Platte River north of Jewell Avenue, where the Overland Park Golf Course
stands today. Clark raised potatoes, and made good profits, which he
reinvested in more land. Eventually, he owned 20,000 acres, including much of
Greenwood Village east of Holly Street. He became known as the “Potato King”
of Colorado. A former sailor, Clark was known for his salty vocabulary and
fondness for alcohol. He later “got religion” and became a major benefactor.
In the mid-1880’s, Clark convinced English investors to
finance development on the 15,000 acre Clark Colony in Arapahoe County. Clark
divided the land into five and 10-acre tracts and built a series of reservoirs
and canals. Two of the reservoirs were on land now occupied by Centennial
Airport and Greenwood Plaza. Water was still scarce until the Castlewood Dam
was built near Franktown in 1890. Clark connected his water system to
Castlewood Lake, which brought a reliable water supply.
By the early 1900’s the area thrived with orchards of
cherry, apple, apricot, plum and pear trees. A group of investors bought land
from Clark and formed the Denver Suburban Homes and Water Company. The new
development, between Quebec and Peoria Streets, was marketed as Highview Park
Orchards.
In 1933, disaster struck. The Castlewood Dam burst and
floodwaters washed out three bridges. Since it was the height of the
Depression, the dam was not rebuilt, drying up the source of irrigation. Some
residents turned to dryland farming, but after the orchards died, many took
jobs in Denver. Land that had sold for $500 an acre could now be bought for as
little as $19.
Dairy farmers were still able to make a living. Frank
William Pearce, who owned land southwest of Orchard Road and Dayton Street,
expanded his grazing lands north into Orchard Hills and east as far as Havana
Street. Frank’s grandson, Robert Frank Pearce, inherited the land in 1944.
The portion between Dayton and Boston Streets is now Silo Park. The original
barn burned in 1947 but the concrete silo was saved. The current barn, now a
picnic shelter, was built in 1949.
Greenwood Ranch
While “Potato” Clark was acquiring the massive Clark Colony
east of Holly Street, another immigrant, Cyrus G. Richardson, was operating the
Greenwood Ranch. Richardson was born in Maine in 1841 and moved to St. Louis
after earning a law degree. Ill health brought him out west to recuperate. By
1872, he had resumed his law practice in Denver. Once he was established,
Richardson began buying land and farming Greenwood Ranch. The 1899 farm map
shows Greenwood Ranch with eight reservoirs stretching from Steele Street and
Stanford Avenue on the northwest to Garden Avenue and approximately Dahlia
Street on the southeast, where the High Line Canal makes a large “U”. The
northern half of the old Greenwood Ranch includes Glenmoor of Cherry Hills
Village. The southern half includes Horseshoe Park and The Preserve in
Greenwood Village.
According to Vicker’s History of Denver, Cyrus Richardson
was appointed Deputy County Superintendent of Schools for Arapahoe County in
1877 where he “filled the responsible duties in a highly creditable manner.” In
the Village’s community newspaper, The Greenwood Honker, Gail Evans reported in
1976, that Richardson was one of the leaders of the farmers unhappy with the
lack of water produced by the High Line Canal, which was referred to derisively
as the “English Ditch.”
Richardson proposed constructing two mountain storage
reservoirs to ensure a dependable source of water to the High Line. The
lawyer-turned rancher sold shares for $10 each in the Lost Park and Antero
Reservoir companies. Richardson died in 1894, which delayed plans for the
mountain lakes for several years. The reservoirs were eventually built, but
“due to engineering and design problems, Antero Reservoir had an average depth
of only five feet and Lost Park would not hold water at all,” Evans wrote.
Richardson’s influence continues today because the name “Greenwood Ranch” was
the inspiration for the name “Greenwood Village.”
From Porter to Farmer 1900’s
Among the early ranchers and farmers who settled the
Greenwood area was several African American families. William Linzy was a
porter on the Union Pacific Railroad when he moved to Denver around 1902. He
settled near Elitch Gardens, where he met his future wife, Gladys, who lived
across the street. “Dad heard that the railroad had 600 acres to sell because
it would cost too much to build across the creeks,” said Tom Linzy, who still
lives on the family’s property. William Linzy bought 32 acres at $50 an acre
west of Colorado Boulevard and north of Orchard Road. His brother, Walter,
bought 50 acres, including land now occupied by the Koebel Library.
The Linzys had a dairy operation of 12 to 15 Holstein cows
and a few Jersey cows, whose milk was very rich but not as plentiful as the
Holsteins. They also raised ducks, chickens and pigs. His grandmother made
feather pillows from the duck down while Tom spent his boyhood days in the
1930’s milking the cows twice a day, feeding the pigs and attending nearby
Curtis School. His dad raised sugar beets, corn and cucumbers, which were sold
for pickles.
One winter, a blizzard was so severe that William Linzy was
trapped when he went out to feed the hogs and could not get back home. “He
slept in the hog pen,” Tom recalled. In the early days, Curtis School had no
indoor plumbing and water was supplied by an artesian well. One popular prank
was to get a mouthful of water and squirt it into the door lock, which would
freeze tight. “The teachers would have to get a match to thaw it out,” Tom
Linzy said, smiling. “One time, they couldn’t melt the ice and sent everyone
home.”
Notable Newcomers 1930’s
One of Greenwood Village’s most famous residents was artist
Allen True, whose murals graced the walls of the Colorado, Missouri and Wyoming
State Capitol buildings and the Brown Palace Hotel. True recruited others to
help him paint backgrounds. One helper and art student was Rebecca Enos, a
mother of three who was married to successful attorney Charles Rolland Enos.
One day, while working at Allen True’s home on South Steele Street, Mrs. Enos
commented that she would love to have some land to ride their horses on the
weekends. The artist pointed out the window and said the land across Little
Dry Creek was for sale.
Rebecca Enos paid $75 for an option on the land and the family
fell in love with the area. After Sunday excursions to “the country,” the
society matron found she enjoyed helping handyman Mr. Reichen fix up the small
cottage. By 1928 the family had bought 28 acres on Alexander Lane, a small
road off of South University Boulevard. While continuing his law practice
downtown, Rolland Enos started raising chickens, pigs and cattle on the Enos
Farm.
In 1938, Gladys and William Carson bought 20 acres of dry
farmland near the southeast corner of Orchard Road and Quebec Street, where
office buildings, Carson Park and Greenwood Village City Hall stand today. The
land had been abandoned by farmers who lost their orchards when Castlewood Dam
burst. The Carsons bought the land from a realtor who had acquired it for back
taxes. When they moved in, a few cottonwoods survived in the draw but many
dead apple trees stood in testament to the loss of irrigation water. The
Carsons farmed and kept a dairy herd, and the early years were a struggle,
hauling water from a neighbor’s place and without a telephone or electricity.
“We had to put up an army blanket to take baths in the kitchen,” Gladys Carson
told The Greenwood Honker. As their fortunes improved, the Carsons acquired
additional land until they had 130 acres.
The Carson children attended Castlewood School at the corner
of Orchard and Ulster, northeast of the Orchard Road exit from Interstate 25.
Residents further east sent their children to Melvin School, where the 10
students ate free lunches in 1938, financed by the Works Progress
Administration (WPA). Later, students brought their lunches in sacks or
buckets.
Shelby Adams 1940’s
While the Linzys were farming the west side, Shelby Adams
was shopping for land on the east side of present-day Greenwood Village. Adams
had owned land in northeast Denver when the federal government bought it during
the 1940’s to create the Rocky Mountain Arsenal. With the proceeds, Adams
bought 140 acres that ran roughly from Boston to Fulton Streets and an area
north of Belleview Avenue south halfway to Orchard Road. Adams operated a
bakery in the Five Points area and would farm millet and wheat in Arapahoe
County on the weekends.
Eastside resident Francis Williams bought his land from
Shelby Adams. “I knew him from Union Baptist Church. I would run into his
bakery to get some sweet potato pie,” Williams explained. He started coming
out to help “Uncle Shelby” with the crops and the chickens. By 1953, Williams
was leasing land from Adams. He bought 20 acres in 1955 and moved to the area
in 1959.
“I came to Denver through the military,” Williams added. “I
looked at buying land east of Fitzsimons and was told, ‘This is a restricted
area. We’re not selling to blacks.’” In the early 1950’s the area west of
Cherry Creek Dam was not very desirable because the reservoir was virtually
empty. “It was a swamp...mosquito-infested,” Williams recalled. Just as bad
weather afflicted the early pioneers, the residents in the fifties had to
contend with dry years. During one bad dust storm in 1959 or 1960, “the
tumbleweeds backed up and hid the house,” Williams commented. “We had to take
rakes and clean them out.”
Francis Williams built two ranch-style homes on South Dayton
Street. When a neighbor across the street moved, he bought a shack and
converted it to a tack house where Francis and his brother, Robert, boarded
horses. Williams developed the 20 acres into Dayton Farms and donated the
remaining land to Greenwood Village which became Francis Williams Park. The
tack house and park are pictured in the October Month in this calendar. Now,
stately homes stand where crops once grew. “We’ve seen lots of changes,” said
Francis Williams. “I never would have dreamed of the kinds of homes that would
be built here. It’s the kind of neighborhood that I’ve always wanted to live
in.”
Building a Village
Forming a Town 1950’s
During the 1930’s and 40’s, the area contained a mixture of
farmers, suburbanites and people who lived in Denver, but would come south to
“country homes” for the summer. By 1950, residents began to worry that
development creeping south would threaten their pastoral lifestyle. First,
they defeated a plan to construct a drive-in movie on the site of the old
Brookridge Dairy on South Clarkson Street. They also battled the Colorado
Power Company over a proposal to put a large power line over Long Road near
University Boulevard. But the final straw was a plan by Englewood to condemn
land owned by Mrs. Thomas Savage on Belleview Avenue to construct a reservoir
for their own water supply.
A group led by Mrs. Savage took their concerns to their
neighbor, Charles “Rollie” Enos, who agreed to chair a meeting at Curtis
School. According to former Greenwood Mayor Rollin Barnard, Enos had quietly
been researching the legalities of incorporation in his Denver law office.
Enos suggested incorporating a new municipality three miles long and one mile
wide, bounded by Belleview Avenue, Holly Street, Orchard Road and South
Clarkson Street.
At the Curtis School meeting, Enos proposed a new town and
suggested it be called “Greenwood Village” after the historic Greenwood Ranch
that had been part of the area to be incorporated. Residents responded
enthusiastically to the idea. Others suggested that Cherry Hills Village annex
the area. The Mayor of Cherry Hills was present and he declined, not wanting
to antagonize Englewood. Petitions with 80 signatures favoring incorporation
were submitted to Arapahoe County Judge Henry Teller, who ordered a vote to be
held September 8, 1950 at Curtis School. Nearly the entire voting population,
138 people, turned out to vote and incorporation passed by a close margin,
74-64.
Voters felt strongly on both sides. Those in favor wanted
to control zoning, while farmers opposed incorporation for several reasons.
“All the farmers voted against incorporation,” said Tom Linzy. “My dad told
them, ‘you’re going to run a lot of the farmers away.’” One retired farmer,
Clarence Johnson, had lived in the area for 31 years. He objected to others
putting development restrictions on his land. After the election, Johnson and
others filed suit, challenging the election on the grounds that there were not
enough signatures on the petitions. The suit went all the way to the Supreme
Court. On November 13, 1951, the court ruled that Greenwood Village was in
fact legally incorporated.
For the previous 70 years, life in Arapahoe County had been
shaped by struggles with nature, including dust storms, plagues of
grasshoppers, lack of water and floods. For the next 50 years, Village life
would be characterized by legal battles – over zoning, annexations and lawsuits
– of which the Johnson case was only the first.
Village Eccentric
One of the Village’s most colorful characters was Sam
Ephraim. “He never had a bath. He didn’t have running water,” said former
Mayor John Calkins, his next door neighbor. “As a child growing up… I have
very warm memories of Sam,” said Susan Calkins Rhodes. “When we were learning
to ride horses near the house, he would watch to make sure we did not fall.
You always knew you had an adult to bail you out – whichever side of the field
you fell on. He was scary but he was nice.”
Starting to Govern
The new municipality was a statutory town with a Mayor and a
six-member Board of Trustees. Mayor Charles R. Enos presided at the first
Board of Trustees meeting October 6, 1950 at Curtis School. The trustees were:
Stewart Bales, Dr. Robert Liggett, Harry E. Jones, Thedia S. Barnes, John W.
Calkins and Charles Buchler, Mayor Pro tempore.
Money was an immediate concern. Although property taxes
would be collected by the County, such taxes are not turned over to cities
until the following year. The first trustees had to be creative about
financing their fledgling government. Thedia Barnes and Charles Enos met with Littleton
Independent editor Houston Waring about publishing ordinances. The editor
extended credit “for a few months,” according to the minutes.
On October 30, the trustees approved a property tax of five
mills. At their subsequent meeting, they discussed a possible tax on “dogs,
peddlers and various workmen.” One of the real bargains was speed limit signs
from the State Highway Department. Town Marshall Gary Marbut reported he had
bought 12 signs for 40 MPH at $2 each and three stop signs at $3 each.
On January 15, the trustees had a long discussion over
whether they should purchase two-way radios for the Town Marshall’s car. The
cost was $467, while the town’s bank account had a balance of only $450 the
previous November 30. To raise money, the residents held a community fair that
raised about $500. A calf was auctioned off. “Stewart Bales won the calf,”
John Calkins said of his fellow trustee. “He carried it off to the back seat
of his Cadillac.”
Charles Enos served the new town as Mayor from 1950 to
1952. John Calkins followed Enos as Mayor and led the Village from 1952 to
1965. Calkins said, “Finances were tight all through the 1950’s and into the
mid-1960’s until more houses were built. Money was always on our minds.”
“As a child,” added Susan Calkins Rhodes, “I remember the
driving force to form a City was zoning.” At the time, Belleview Avenue was a
dirt road and University Boulevard was paved only as far south as Belleview
Avenue. The density of homes was graduated from west to east. One home per
three acres was allowed on the western side, one home per five acres in the
center and one home per ten acres on the east side. The greatest opposition to
incorporation came from farmers west of University Boulevard.
Since there was no City Hall in those days, the Calkins
place became an informal base of operations. Their 60-year-old barn was used
as the City Maintenance Department. Harold Tousignault was Police Chief and
Director of Public Works, one of the few paid employees in those days. “When
Harold was Police Chief, he would come by our house at breakfast to check in,”
said Susan Rhodes. “I thought everyone had a policeman coming by.”
New School District
While Greenwood Village was incorporating west of Holly
Street, major changes were also occurring on the eastern end of the community.
A law passed by the Colorado Legislature in 1949 led to consolidations of
school districts across Colorado. Many schools in Arapahoe County and across
the state were one-school districts. The number of small districts raised
questions of efficiency and equity as some districts were able to provide for
students better than others.
In 1950, residents in seven Arapahoe County school districts
voted to form Cherry Creek School District No. 5. The new district had 1,253
students, including those attending Melvin, Castlewood, Cherry Creek and Cherry
Hills Elementary Schools. The Melvin School was on land condemned for the
Cherry Creek Reservoir. The school was closed and sold and the building was
remodeled and moved to Parker Road and Quincy Avenue, where it was used as a
tavern for 17 years. It is currently a schoolhouse museum on the grounds of
the Smoky Hill High School campus. The Castlewood School building was dismantled
when the Valley Highway was built, and Belleview Elementary was built in 1954
to take its place.
The Castlewood Community attempted to incorporate just
before the Greenwood Village election. That election failed and much of the
land that would have been part of the City of Castlewood became part of
Greenwood Village. However, the Castlewood name lives on. The Castlewood Fire
Protection District (South Metro Fire Rescue) was formed in 1951 to serve
Arapahoe County from Holly Street east to the Cherry Creek Reservoir and from
the Denver City limits to the Douglas County line. In recognition of the
historical significance of the Castlewood community, the Arapahoe Library
District in 1982 dedicated its new library at Arapahoe and Uinta Streets the
Castlewood Library.
Meadowlarks and Rabbits
While the Plunketts were getting settled on East Garden
Avenue, Orlando “Lindy” and Margaret Scialla were moving their family to 5120
South Ulster, which is now in the heart of the Denver Technological Center
(DTC). The Sciallas bought five acres from a Mrs. Moran, a pioneer whose
father received the land through the Homestead Act. The Sciallas paid $500 an
acre for their five acres. They began building in 1956 and moved into their
home on South Ulster Street in 1958. The site now contains a tall, red brick
office building known as 8200 East Prentice Avenue.
“We can remember when Hampden Avenue was a dirt road,” said
Margaret Scialla. “There was just one farm house between Belleview Avenue and
Hampden Avenue. We could hear meadowlarks. My daughter, Diane, and I
reminisce about her childhood. Diane picked up petrified wood and followed
rabbit trails. They’d get lizards in the field and see pheasants. Diane
called them ‘pheasinks’.”
Their oldest child, Paul, went to Belleview Elementary,
which had just opened four years earlier. There were 13 children in his class
and there was no cafeteria or kindergarten. Classmates came from as far away
as South Colorado Boulevard and Hampden Avenue. When Diane Scialla reached
school age, the boundaries had changed. Diane rode a bus from Cherry Creek
High School across the dam to Sullivan Elementary, a school at Wabash Street
south of Iliff Avenue that was named for another pioneer community.
Just as the early farmers had insufficient water for their
crops, the Sciallas found their shallow well was not adequate for their needs.
“You had to go down at least 1,000 feet to get water in the Arapahoe Sands
formation,” said Lindy Scialla. “Our well was only 127 feet deep. We sold our
land to be able to tap into Tech Center water. That was part of the deal.”
Old farm houses had cisterns that trapped the water from
rain off the roof to use for the house and yard. “Chinese elm trees surrounded
other houses,” Margaret recalled, “we couldn’t grow trees.” Their quest for
water was almost a disaster. One Christmas, Lindy used dry ice and dynamite to
try to deepen the well. “I went down to Bell Plumbing and they lent me the
plug, but forgot to tell me to let the gas from the dry ice dissipate,” Lindy
said. “I almost blew my head off. The plug blew straight up in the air. We
never found it.”
The Community Grows
Greenwood Village Farmers 1960’s
While town government was getting its start, families were
continuing to move south from Denver for the rural lifestyle. Bob and “Ming”
Plunkett bought land in 1956 in South Denver Gardens, an area bounded by Steele
Street and Belleview Avenue, South Colorado Boulevard and Long Road.
Originally given to the Union Pacific Railroad by Congress in 1862, the area
was purchased by the Platte Land Company in 1882. By 1892 the area was
subdivided as South Denver Gardens, with Robert A. Long as President. Jake
Schaetzel bought 25 acres of the land after World War I, paying $2,000 for 25
acres.
The Plunketts bought their 2 1/2 acres from Schaetzel and
moved with their four children from Denver. The land they wanted had a large
dropoff, created in the 1920’s when the Denver Water Board eliminated a large
loop from the High Line Canal. Denver Water shortened the path of the High
Line to reduce the water lost through seepage and evaporation. “Before we
bought the land,” Bob Plunkett said, “I went to the Water Board to see about
buying a 50 foot strip of land with the mound of dirt.” Earth from the new
stretch of the canal was moved onto the Plunkett’s land at the south end of the
property, eliminating the drop-off.
The Plunketts bought a quonset hut that they lived in for 10
months while they were building their house on Garden Avenue. “The kids loved
it,” said Ming Plunkett. “Marvin Bales was the building inspector. On
Sundays, he’d ride over on his Tennessee Walking Horse to say hello,” Bob
Plunkett said, smiling. “Bales came by to be friendly, but I think he was also
checking to make sure we were building a house and not planning to live
permanently in the barn.”
In that first year (1956), “we had two plagues,” said Bonnie
Plunkett Miller, who was a teenager when they moved to town. “You couldn’t
step out the door without grasshoppers just jumping all over you.”
“Everything they saw, they ate,” added Ming, Bonnie’s
mother. “We couldn’t get anything to grow. Then, army worms came through the
walls and windows of the barn. We were sweeping them up in a vacuum,” Ming
continued. “While we were emptying the bag, they would just come tearing
across the barn.”
“Greenwood Village had the largest 4-H group in Colorado,”
said Bonnie, who was a member of the Greenwood Village Farmers from 1957-61 and
President in 1961. The club had 52 members and raised animals, studied birds
and planted trees to make wind breaks. “We received 100 seedlings from CSU.
We waited and waited for our 100 trees – then it came in a package about six
inches square,” Bonnie recalled, laughing. “We planted Russian Olives, Blue
Spruce and Pines. Some of them are still around today.”
The 4-H’ers mounted a “Clean Up the Village Campaign” to
pick up trash. They painted 55-gallon oil drums white with a 4-H logo and
placed them along the High Line Canal. Once a month, they would ride on a beet
wagon behind the Plunkett’s tractor, emptying the trash from the barrels.
Many of the neighbors in South Denver Gardens had horses.
“We loved Little Britches Rodeo,” said Bonnie Miller. “We’d jump on our horses
and go down Belleview Avenue to Little Britches at the Arapahoe County
Fairgrounds. They would let girls ride bulls,” Bonnie continued. Other events
were barrel racing, wild cow milking, calf roping and racing with an egg on a
spoon!
First Office Park 1960’s
While young families were raising children, George Wallace
was building a successful business in downtown Denver. Trained as a mechanical
engineer, Wallace started his career with Babcocks and Wilcox, which made large
boilers in Ohio. Wallace came to Denver as their Western Regional Manager. In
the 1950’s, when the company wanted to transfer him, Wallace established his
own mechanical and electrical engineering consulting firm in downtown Denver.
George Wallace was very successful. “He was expanding and finally got enough
money to buy a Lincoln,” said Ray Bullock, Vice President of Operations of the
Denver Tech Center. “Somebody parked next to him and dented the side of his
car. It made him so angry, he got a real estate broker and asked him to find some
land in Arapahoe County,” Bullock continued. The broker found a 40 acre
tract. George wanted one acre, but the seller said, ‘you must buy all of the
land or nothing.’ He hired a planning firm and the idea of an office park was
the genesis of the Denver Tech Center. George ultimately got so interested in
the land development company, he quit doing engineering work.”
The original 40 acres was bounded by Interstate 25 on the
west, Valentia Street on the east and south of Prentice Avenue. Over about a
five year period, from 1961-65, he acquired up to 1,000 acres. John Crowley of
the HOH Planning Firm joined DTC. “It was George’s vision to create a place
where people could work, live and recreate in harmony,” Bullock said. “George
was considered an innovator. The Tech Center was the premier suburban office
park in the nation. Landscaping was an amenity. One of the hallmarks of the
Tech Center was that every developer had to set aside at least 30 percent of
their land for open space and provide landscaping along the streets.”
Some of the land Wallace wanted to buy was occupied by
long-time residents. The Sciallas and their neighbors were wary. “When we
lived on Ulster, every developer and his brother came out. We didn’t want to
sell because of the types of development proposed,” Lindy commented. One
developer offered $1,000 per acre for a trailer park. The family wasn’t
interested. Next, came a trucking company that used pick-up trucks. “It would
have caused a mountain of dust,” Lindy Scialla noted.
The Sciallas consistently opposed these development
schemes. Then, Margaret and Diane went to a hearing on the Denver Tech Center
at the Arapahoe County Courthouse. Margaret suggested Lindy look into it.
“George Wallace set a precedent for the area, for high class development,”
Lindy observed. “A lot of people weren’t anxious to sell. They wanted to hold
out for a higher price.” In March, 1967 the Sciallas sold George Wallace their
five acres on Ulster Street and had to move the house by 1968. They bought 10
acres on South Boston Street, where they live today.
Annexations
As farming and ranching characterized the area in the early
part of the century, annexations have defined Greenwood Village from the
mid-1960’s through the present. Beginning with the tenure of Mayor John Wood,
M.D. in 1965-67, Greenwood Village embarked on a period of annexations that
generated a significant tax base to underwrite City services. Three large
annexations – in 1967, 1970 and 1987 – brought the major commercial areas into Greenwood Village that exist today. Included in these annexations were the Denver Tech
Center, Greenwood Plaza and the retail businesses along Arapahoe Road.
Prior to 1967, Greenwood Village was predominately a
residential area, with homes and open space. Homes generate a small amount of
tax revenue, compared to the dollars needed to provide residents with road
maintenance, police protection and other services. By contrast, commercial
businesses generate tax revenues greater than the dollars needed to serve those
areas. Annexations also gave Greenwood Village the ability to control zoning
in areas near existing neighborhoods.
George Wallace approached Dr. John Wood about annexing the
Tech Center to Greenwood Village. At the time, the City’s boundaries extended
only as far east as Holly Street. Annexing the Tech Center on the east side of
Interstate 25 required that Greenwood Village have land adjacent or
“contiguous” to the area to be annexed. The City annexed property southwest of
Belleview Avenue and Holly Street that had not previously been part of
Greenwood Village. This permitted Greenwood to make subsequent annexations in
1967 of the area from Holly Street east to Dayton Street, including the Denver
Tech Center. Unfortunately, key property owner(s) north of Belleview Avenue
objected to the annexation. A lawsuit was filed that again went to the
Colorado Supreme Court. Unlike the 1950 lawsuit, this decision went against
Greenwood Village with nearly-disastrous results. But that chapter comes later
in the story.
Deal-Makers
“When I first came here,” said Ray Bullock, “George and I
were looking at a property swap with Tele-Communications Inc. (TCI) We went to
meet with Bob Magness, the one and only time I ever met the man. They both got
into this discussion, and I remember distinctly that Bob Magness’ office was
about 150 square feet with what looked like old K-Mart paneling. It was
warped, dark and had no windows. He was smoking a cigar with his feet on his
desk. It took about two minutes to do the business. For about an hour they
got into a discussion about who was going to retire first. Both of them worked
for another 10-15 years. Magness was talking about how tired he was -
traveling too much and getting too old for it. They (TCI) just exploded –
became a worldwide force in the telecommunications industry. I found that Bob
Magness and George liked each other. Both were very down-to-earth people. It
was entertaining watching them.”
Controlling Our Destiny
Merging with Cherry Hills
During the 1960’s, Greenwood Village operated on very tight
budgets because its residential and rural areas generated no income beyond
modest property taxes. Its neighbor to the north, Cherry Hills Village, was
also a residential community with no commercial tax base. The proposal was
made to merge the two cities and a vote was held August 23, 1967. Cherry Hills
voters approved the proposed merger, 368 to 276. Greenwood Villagers voted it
down, 306 to 264.
“Cherry Hills was very well-to-do, while the people of
Greenwood Village were very rural and vocal,” said McNeil Fiske, who was a
member of the Board of Trustees at voting time.
“We felt that you can’t live in a vacuum. There would be
tremendous growth and we could cope better if united.”
“The people of Greenwood Village were staunch defenders of
their rural lifestyle and weren’t like the people in Cherry Hills. They didn’t
belong to Country Clubs. The vote made Cherry Hills mad as hell,” Fiske
added. “Several years later, there was an effort to do a joint improvement
district – for water and sewer services for both cities. There were still some
on (Cherry Hills’) Council who remembered the merger vote. They weren’t about
to cooperate; they voted it down.”
Good Government 1970’s
The merger election in August of 1967 was to be followed in
November with the election of a new Mayor and Trustees. A group of citizens
were concerned about Greenwood’s image in the larger metropolitan area, due to
negative publicity over issuance of speeding tickets, the lawsuits and other
matters. The citizens formed an organization called the Good Government League
and proposed to run a slate of individuals for the town’s government.
“People felt a change was needed,” said Harold Patton, who
had moved to the area in 1964. “We needed contemporary planning and additional
guidance to fulfill the City’s promise.” The citizen’s group asked Patton to
run for the Board of Trustees and approached McNeil Fiske to run for Mayor.
Fiske had bought his home in the rural part of the Village in 1961 and was
elected to the Board in 1965.
For some, the invitation to run for office was a tough
sell. “I had been skiing when Claude Ramsey came by and said ‘You must run for
City Clerk,’” June Gunderson recalled. “None of us had the slightest bit of
interest. I had voted against the annexation of my area, of Greenwood Hills,
into greater Greenwood Village. I didn’t want any part of Greenwood Village
and here I was working for them five years later. It was kind of a shock.”
Gunderson served as City Clerk from 1968 to 1978.
“One of the best things about those times were the
opportunities,” she added. “Women today talk about a glass ceiling, being
compartmentalized. That simply wasn’t the case (for me). The Council thought
nothing of sending me to a room of 200 men as Greenwood’s representative to any
number of organizations.”
“They were all working. I was a housewife,” she continued.
“So I had all the time in the world, right? I served as a liaison to DRCOG
(Denver Regional Council of Governments) and things at the State level. I
would draft a report on the meeting. I got to do so many wonderful,
interesting things. I really feel sorry for women these days who have such a
difficult time climbing the corporate ladder. There wasn’t even a step-stool
in Greenwood Village.”
Fire House Meetings
The Trustees met at the Cherry Hills Fire Station on South
University Boulevard, which made for exciting meetings.
“It seemed there would be a fire about once a month,”
Gunderson recalled. “We got to where we could be standing up and out of the
firemen’s way in 30 seconds, before they came tearing out of the back room.”
City government was quite small in those days as tax
revenues were still quite limited in the late 1960’s and the early 1970’s.
“There was no City Hall. All the records
were in my laundry room,” she explained. “In order to wash clothes, I’d have
to move the minutes. The Police Department had two employees. Chief Jim
Coleman used
my house and milk box as a drop for paychecks, minutes... things they needed
to distribute. I had the best protected house and milk box in the City!”
Master Plan and Home Rule
One of the first projects of the new government was
development of a Master Plan to guide future growth of Greenwood Village.
“Because of the annexations, the town had changed in character and geography,”
Fiske explained. Joe Marlowe was hired to prepare the plan to outline which
areas should be residential, which commercial and rural. The Plan set height
and density restrictions throughout the City and preserved open space in Ward
2, which is now called rural Greenwood Village.
Another significant change was the decision to seek Home
Rule status for Greenwood Village. The annexation of Greenwood Hills brought
the population to 2,500 which was the threshold for a statutory City, a
precursor to Home Rule. “We had a discussion: what did we want to be called?”
Gunderson said. “I remember everyone at the table said, ‘We worked so hard to
be a City. Let’s call it a City and not a Village.’”
“A Home Rule Charter is a governing document that will
supersede all State requirements,” Gunderson explained. “It is always better
to have as much power in the municipality as opposed to allowing the State to
govern you. Zoning was always done by the County until we became a Home Rule
City. That put so much power in the hands of the City, just that one aspect of
it.”
The first step was for citizens to approve creation of a
Home Rule City. Voters approved the proposal 135 to 66 on December 19, 1967.
Next, Mayor Fiske appointed John Jameson to chair a Charter Commission. “He
was an elder statesman who could draw up compromises,” Fiske explained.
The Charter called for voters to elect City Councilmembers,
rather than Trustees. With the annexations, the larger City was divided into
four Wards. Ward 1 included all land west of University Boulevard, Ward 2
covered rural Greenwood, Ward 3 was the area from Holly to Monaco Streets and
Ward 4 was the area east of Monaco Street. Additional Councilmembers were
appointed because the Charter called for two representatives from each area.
Solving Problems 1970’s
A lively commentator who lived in Greenwood Village was
Eugene Cervi, editor of Cervi’s Journal. Cervi had a neighbor who raised
peacocks. He called Fiske and wanted to speak to Council. “I told him the
agenda was set and he would have to be last,” Fiske said. “One big item was a
rezoning by Fulenwider, a developer. There was a long and heated discussion
regarding density. After it ended, half the audience walked out. I told him,
‘you are next Mr. Cervi.’ He said, ‘When I came up here, I thought I had a
problem. After listening tonight, I don’t have a problem.’ Those rezonings went
on until the middle of the night.”
Growth and Conflict
McNeil Fiske decided not to seek re-election in 1969.
Harold Patton was elected Mayor and led the City from 1969 to 1977, a time of
great growth and challenge. “My Council was made up entirely of business
people, who were very bright,” Patton said. “They knew that homes do not pay
for themselves. The City needed a larger tax base.”
Additional land in the Tech Center and Greenwood Plaza were
targets for annexation. Even more compelling, Denver was annexing to the south
and east. Areas of Arapahoe County already had bonded indebtedness for Cherry
Creek Schools. When the City of Denver annexed, the land also became part of
Denver schools, which would leave Cherry Creek schools “standing empty with
people paying for bonds,” Patton explained.
Denver Public Schools was under a desegregation order and
students were being bused from the neighborhood schools. “There was a high
level of hysteria about many aspects of Denver schools,” Patton continued.
Greenwood Village began annexing east until the Village joined Aurora. “This
infuriated Denver because they could no longer annex in that direction. In
retaliation, Denver drew a ‘blue line,’ saying it would not provide water to
Aurora.” At that time, Denver controlled 100 percent of water supply from
Adams to Douglas counties.
The Poundstone Amendment
To address concerns caused by Denver’s annexations, future
Greenwood Village Mayor Freda Poundstone drafted an amendment to the Colorado
Constitution that bears her name. Approved by voters in 1974, the Poundstone
Amendment requires that annexations by one county of land in another county
must be voted on by all citizens in the county giving up the land. Denver quit trying to annex after the amendment passed. “The Legislature referred a
proposal for a Boundary Commission to the ballot the same time as Poundstone to
soften it,” Freda Poundstone explained. “An appointed commission would
determine whether annexations could take place. The Poundstone Amendment was
passed by a larger majority, so it took precedence over the Boundary
Commission.”
Surviving Traumatic Times
Greenwood Plaza
The 1970 annexations brought commercial sites on both sides
of Interstate 25 into Greenwood Village, making development, subject to
Greenwood’s Master Plan, and stricter zoning than was the norm in Arapahoe
County and many other areas. “It was not fun to be a developer in Greenwood
Village,” Patton observed. “We were imposing these criteria that were
unwelcome (to developers) and unusual. In the long haul (these criteria) were
to the benefit of the developers, their clients and the general community.”
John Madden, who developed much of the commercial area west
of Interstate 25, came to Denver from Omaha, where he learned to be a
contractor while in business with an uncle. In Colorado, he first bought land
near Orchard Road and Quebec Street for a Mr. Steak Restaurant. The land
eventually became part of the Triad Buildings, Greenwood Plaza North, South and
West.
Madden’s initial proposals “were not acceptable in terms of
density, parking or landscaping,” Patton said. “I told him: ‘It’s going to
take some time. You’ll end up with something you’ll be proud of. We’re going
to end up friends.’”
Madden agrees. “I got the property zoned after a rather
stiff battle. The Tech Center didn’t want the competition. If it hadn’t been
for Harold Patton, we may not have won that zoning fight. No question – if it
hadn’t been for Harold – there wouldn’t have been a Greenwood Plaza.”
Next, Madden looked for tenants and picked up a valuable tip
from a friend, Mrs John Fuller. In the Spring of 1971, executives from
Johns-Manville came to Denver. Mrs. Fuller, who worked for an airline,
recognized the executives, and called Madden. “I called Johns-Manville and
went to New York in May, 1971,” said Madden. “I came home with a 450,000
square foot lease. Dick Goodwin, CEO of Johns-Manville, said not to worry
about the short-term lease,” Madden said. It was a three-year lease with
year-to-year options. “The day the lease was signed, they bought ground for
their plant in southern Jefferson County.”
Arts Patrons 1970’s
Trademarks of the Madden buildings are the outdoor art and
use of distinctive building materials, such as travertine marble. His touch
can be seen in the stone lions on East Orchard Road and Greenwood Plaza
Boulevard and the striking marble at Carrara Place, an office building at South
Syracuse and East Caley Avenue. Madden created the Museum of Outdoor Arts, an
organization now run by his daughter Cynthia Madden Leitner, which displays
sculptures at the Triad, Harlequin Plaza and Carrara Place, among others.
Madden learned to love art growing up in Omaha, where he
worked summers at the Joslin Memorial Museum, first as a guard, then as a
docent and in construction. “From seventh grade, by osmosis, I became
acquainted with art. Then Marjorie, my wife, and I discovered Florence.”
“Marjorie would go with a marble broker to buy tiles for the
buildings,” he explained. “We had a lot of fun buying art for the buildings.
Every time we did a building, we embellished it. Through the years we learned
there is no relationship between art appreciation and money, and that
figurative art is more meaningful to general public than abstract art.”
City is Torn ‘Asunder’
The early 1970’s were good years. Development was booming
and the City formed its own Parks, Trails and Recreation Department and
acquired undeveloped land at Holly Street and Orchard Road for its first
“pocket park.” Up until 1971, recreation services were provided by South
Suburban Parks and Recreation District. The City withdrew from the District
that year because South Suburban collected four mills in taxes and had “no
plans” to build amenities in Greenwood Village, Harold Patton said. “As
hatchets were buried,” he continued, “Village residents could pay a fee for
services through South Suburban and were reimbursed by the City, a practice
that continues today.”
On September 22, 1975, residents were shocked to learn that
the Colorado Supreme Court declared that the City’s annexations of 1967 and
1970 were in error and nullified. Overnight, the City lost half of its land –
everything east of Holly Street including all the commercial areas!
“Functioning City revenue was a fraction when the Court set
asunder those annexations,” Patton remarked. More than half of the City
Councilmembers no longer lived inside City limits. Patton recruited former
Mayor “Mac” Fiske and future Mayor Rollin Barnard, among others, to serve as
interim Councilmembers. “Everybody was working 20 hours a day. It was tough
times.”
Volunteers scrambled to circulate petitions for an election
to re-annex to the City. “We had 90 days to get all the paper work done,” June
Gunderson explained. “Two days after the annexation election, we had to
certify our budget to Arapahoe County. I had a ledger-sized paper with a
calendar of dates by which every task had to be completed. ‘We need those
petitions back in a week,’ we would tell volunteers.”
With a large commercial area suddenly back in Arapahoe
County, the City and County of Denver annexed land southeast of Belleview
Avenue and Yosemite Street. The area northeast of that intersection,
immediately south of Cherry Creek High School, had already been part of
Greenwood Village before the de-annexation.
“Denver didn’t retain the annexation, but it spurred us on
to collect signatures,” said Ferol Jenkins, one of the volunteers. We had
teams of mothers, who didn’t want their kids going to East High School,
canvassing for signatures. Once the votes were counted we were amazed that
there were still people who had voted against re-annexation.
The Greenwood Honker reported that 700 landowners voted
“yes” out of a maximum possible 800 to 1,000 voters. “Of the 45 who voted no,
some had indicated through confusion, they had pulled the wrong lever.”
“John Madden turned out to be such a wonderful friend at the
time of the de-annexation,” Gunderson commented. “The large landowners had to
give permission in writing to re-annex to the City. Madden just signed and
said, ‘We will worry about the details later.’ Madden is a wonderful man – he
fought those guys (City Council) to a stand still over every inch of Greenwood
Plaza. But, when we needed him... we got his signature in one day.” Ferol
Jenkins added, “He ended up with height restrictions. It didn’t seem fair.”
While most property owners voted to rejoin Greenwood
Village, owners of 120 acres of property north of Belleview Avenue, petitioned
Denver to be annexed. On December 26, 1975, Greenwood Village officially
reannexed approximately 1,580 acres of the 1,700 acres lost through the Supreme
Court decision.
Density Issues
After de-annexation, George Wallace had a “handshake agreement”
to annex the entire Denver Tech Center to Denver, according to DTC’s Ray
Bullock. “Harold Patton and the head of Cherry Creek School District came to
George and told him ‘If you do this (annex to Denver), you will split Cherry
Creek in half and put the school district in peril.” Wallace then annexed the
north half of Tech Center land (north of Belleview Avenue) into Denver and the
south half into Greenwood Village. Planners for the firm developed “Town
Center Zoning,” which was a unique zoning for an office park.
In 1977, Sam Jenkins was elected Mayor, succeeding Harold
Patton. From 1975 to 1979, a series of agreements were negotiated with the
Denver Tech Center that called for no height restrictions. “Greenwood Village
was glad to have Wallace back in the City after the de-annexation,” explained
Ferol Jenkins, widow of the former Mayor. “The re-annexation agreement allowed
the Tech Center 22 million square feet. All the citizens had a fit, especially
those living southeast of the Tech Center.”
“Sam negotiated the agreement down to 19 million square
feet. Many residents thought it should be 11 million square feet. Sam’s
feeling was that we made this agreement in good faith; we have to live with
it,” Ferol Jenkins explained.
“The reannexation agreement was less than perfect, both in
legal and conceptual terms,” said Fred Fisher, Mayor from 1981-85. It
established a Master Plan for the Tech Center with a suggested square footage
of 12 million square feet. Other places in the agreement referred to an
overall maximum density of 22 million square feet – greater than all the
density in downtown Denver.
“The Tech Center interpreted the Master Plan as a guide that
could be changed at their discretion,” Fisher continued. “City Council
interpreted it as binding; it could only be changed by mutual agreement.
George Wallace was not a person to mince words or be conciliatory – ‘It was his
way or no way.’”
Mayor Sam Jenkins was the only candidate for Mayor and the
deadline for candidate petitions had passed. “He presented a resolution to
Council, saying we agreed with the Tech Center’s interpretation and they’re
going to give us a few concessions. I felt he was acceding to their demands.
I’m a 39 year old guy, full of competitiveness,” Fisher recalled. “I didn’t
want George Wallace pushing us around.”
Fisher recalled a majority of Council (five members) said no
to the resolution approving the agreement. “Some of us got together afterwards
and said, ‘We need to run someone for Mayor to make a point.’” Fisher
continued, “I was the logical choice – being Mayor Pro-tem. I remember going
home and telling my wife. It was 17 days until the election. We did a
write-in vote.”
“We tried to work with the Tech Center after the election,”
Fisher added. “They knew I was not going to give in. Eight to nine months
after election they filed a suit against us. We hired a lawyer. Each side won
some rulings. By the time I left office, it was kind of a toss-up in court
that was going to extend for some time.” The suit was settled out of court
after Freda Poundstone was elected Mayor.
Ray Bullock recalls the period of litigation, from 1981-85,
as “a tremendously antagonistic period with the City.” Ultimately the issue was
settled out of court and the settlement agreement is still in effect. “Other
than that tumultuous period, we have had fairly cordial relations. We both
experienced the pain and expense of the court process. We work real hard at
making things work now… My perception is that the City is fairly proud of the
Tech Center,” the Executive reflected. “We like the image of Greenwood
Village, for the most part. It has developed into more of a mutually
supportive relationship. It’s matured into that.”
Enhancing Our Environment
Parks and Open Space
“When I asked Sam what he would see as defining Greenwood
Village,” Ferol Jenkins said of her husband, “he said ‘the greenbelt and the
parks. The basis for open space.’ This foundation for open space (that
residents enjoy today) was laid in those years through the Greenwood Village
Master Plan and the fights over density.”
“In those days (the late 1960’s), the City had very little
money,” added June Gunderson. “We asked developers for land donations – either
to build a park or donate land to the City for open space.” In January of
1969, the Planning Committee proposed an ordinance requiring developers to set
aside money or land for parks and the floodplain for greenbelts.
Also in 1969, South Suburban Parks and Recreation District
reached agreement with the Denver Water Department to maintain control over the
bike paths of the High Line Canal for recreational purposes. The District
developed a plan for pedestrians, bikes and horses and Greenwood Village agreed
to provide policing.
In 1972, after Greenwood Village withdrew from the
recreation district, residents approved a $500,000 bond issue for the purchase
of open space. The City developed a greenbelt Master Plan that called for a
Spine Trail, a major trail traversing the Village that accommodates walkers,
joggers, bicyclists and horse-back riders.
West of Holly Street, the trail follows the banks of the
High Line Canal. East of Holly Street it follows a floodplain to Greenwood
Plaza, where John Madden dedicated rights-of-way along Quebec Street, Berry
Avenue and Interstate 25. The trail crosses under Interstate 25 at the Orchard
Road underpass and continues along Orchard Road to the Orchard Hills – Big
Cañon greenbelt system.
Mayor Jenkins wanted to make Belleview Avenue more of a
parkway. Islands with landscaping would absorb the pollution. Most of the
land would have been taken from Cherry Hills. People on both sides of the
border fought it, Ferol Jenkins said.
New City Hall
By 1978, Greenwood Village had 35 employees and was leasing
5,000 square feet of space in the Denver Tech Center. City Council asked
voters to approve a $900,000 general obligation bond issue to build a
two-structure complex at 6060 South Quebec Street. One building would provide
facilities for the administration, courts, police, council chambers and meeting
rooms. The second building would be a Public Works and Maintenance Facility.
“Our public works and maintenance facilities are practically
non-existent,” Mayor Sam Jenkins wrote in The Greenwood Honker. “We are
currently leasing a small structure in the backyard of a citizen’s home. This
structure lacks sufficient space to store and service the public works
equipment. Needless to say, the working conditions for public works employees
leave a lot to be desired.”
Jenkins made a convincing case that the bonds could be paid
off for about the same amount already budgeted for leases of existing
buildings. Voters agreed the facility was a good investment, approving the
bond issue 316 to 121. “The building was dedicated on my birthday, November
30, 1979,” Ferol Jenkins said. On May 3, 1980, there was a big community-wide
celebration at the municipal complex. “There were many volunteers. Highlights
of the day were art and music presentations by all the schools that the
Greenwood Village students attended.”
Harlequin Plaza 1980’s
Just east of the new City Hall complex, John Madden was
building a two-building complex with a very distinctive courtyard. “When we
were building Harlequin Plaza, we sponsored one of the foremost landscape
architects in the world, George Hargraves,” said Madden. He currently lectures
at Harvard and is doing site work for the Sydney (Australia) Olympics.
“Hargraves created the concept for the piazza on a matchbook
cover – the ‘checkerboard’ inspired by Picasso’s Clown’s diamonds. An
octogenarian sculptor, Harry Marinsky, created seven sculptures based on the
medieval ‘Comedia del Arte’ theme of hilltown musicians who go from village to
village,” Madden the developer continued.
When Madden sold the complex, the new owners tore out the
plaza. “There were faults in the construction design, not the architectural
design,” he added. “The plaza was leaking. A new landscape designer tore out
the black and white diamond plaza. It was so distinctive – there are photos of
it in the Museum of Modern Art in New York and in an architectural book, Plazas
of the 20th Century. People used to take family pictures on the plaza. It was
a phenomenal thing Hargraves had done on a matchbook cover. To me, it was like
someone had taken the Gettysburg Address and thrown it out the window.”
Carson Farm
The City Hall Complex, Harlequin Plaza and William McKinley
Carson Park all occupy land that was originally part of the Carson Farm.
“Gladys Carson is a dear woman,” Madden recalled warmly. “She enticed me with
a cherry pie to pay her asking price for the land. There was no broker, no
real estate person. Gladys paid $339 for all their land. I paid Gladys $3
million. My lenders in New York thought I should name the Harlequin Building
the 339 building.”
After some of the land was developed, Gladys was still
living in her house. The remaining land that had not sold contained the
wetlands and a piece not in the floodplain. Gladys said, “Why don’t you buy
this and give it to the City for a park?” “She was a hell of a business
woman,” Madden related.
Village Greens
Another large park, Village Greens, became part of Greenwood
Village because of a proposed shopping center that was never built. Developer
Bill Walters was in discussion with the Cherry Creek School District over land
for a large shopping center near Interstate 225. “We told Walters he had to
buy 20 to 30 acres from Cherry Creek School District for a city park,” said
Fred Fisher. “Walters defaulted on the land north of Interstate 225. We (Greenwood Village) got something for nothing… the park from a development that was not
completed.”
One accomplishment for which Fisher is particularly proud is
recruitment of the first Administrator professionally trained in City
Management. “We recruited Jim Mullen from Wyoming. He is now the City Manager
of Colorado Springs. The City had problems with personnel and fraud. We set
the stage (for future progress) with good administration.”
Traffic and Noise Walls
By the early 1980’s, traffic was the number one issue in
Greenwood Village. Before becoming Mayor, Fisher had been Vice-Chair of the
Denver Regional Council of Governments. “We put widening of Belleview Avenue
and Yosemite Street to four lanes in the regional plan and got Federal and
State funding. Belleview Avenue was four lanes over to University Boulevard,
then two lanes to Quebec Street. It was a nightmare sometimes. We knew it
would get worse,” he explained.
“I know some residents were opposed to wider streets. We
were trying to be responsible about highways for the region. Because of the
increased traffic, City Council agreed to help pay for noise walls while Fisher
was Mayor.
“I remember discussing the philosophy: If local residents
would tax themselves for half the cost, the City would pay the other half,” he
explained. The neighborhood south of Belleview Avenue and west of University Boulevard agreed to tax themselves. It added value to their homes. “After one
or two years, the Council decided the City had enough money to pay for all of
it. Greenwood Village was getting enough traffic because of the roads we were
building and agreeing to.”
DTC Settlement
When Freda Poundstone became Mayor, her first priority was
settling the lawsuit with the Denver Tech Center. Ray Bullock served on a
Water Board with Poundstone as President. “Our attorneys told City Council we
could win. One week later we lost the suit,” Poundstone said drily. “The
judge made it clear that the ruling would stick.”
An April Fool’s edition of The Villager newspaper said each
resident would have to pay a huge amount for the suit’s damages. “We sat down
for a period of time with Council,” Poundstone continued. “Some members were
very opposed to the Tech Center and wanted to appeal the decision. A majority
of Council felt we should sit down and negotiate. With our insurance, it was
questionable whether we could pay any more legal fees.
“Our annual City budget was very small, $5 to 6 million. It
was future annexations that made us solvent,” she explained. “We found, to our
chagrin, we could not work it out through the attorneys. I sat down with Bill
Pauls, President of the DTC North, owner of the undeveloped land, and said
‘these are things I can’t give up.’ Pauls had other non-negotiable items.” They
finally hammered out an agreement that was signed in September, 1986.
The City agreed to honor all provisions of the 1975
annexation agreement from 1986-90, after which time the City would have a right
to rezone the Tech Center under applicable law. For that five years, the Tech Center could operate its Master Development Plan that prescribed a maximum gross floor
area of 22 million square feet. Height limits were imposed between DTC
Boulevard and Yosemite Street.
In exchange, DTC North dismissed damage claims and a suit
challenging the City’s sales tax on building materials. They also agreed to
pay for a circulator bus and mass transit services when vehicle trips reached
7,500 per day, which occurred in the late 1990’s.
The corporation also agreed to install a trail system
according to the Village’s Master Plan, a landscaped berm on the east side of
Yosemite Street and agreed to support the Village’s position opposing roads
across Cherry Creek Reservoir that would align with Belleview Avenue or Orchard
Road, also referred to as the Cherry Creek Crossing.
A Time for Healing
Annexations
The other major accomplishment during Mayor Poundstone’s
term was the 1987 Arapahoe Road annexations. “It has paid off,” the former
Mayor said. “It’s still the major tax base.” The annexation was precipitated
by activities by the City of Aurora, which was trying to draw a boundary with
Greenwood Village. Aurora wanted to annex Arapahoe Road commercial properties,
but not the residential areas.
“Aurora was able to annex down Parker Road for its
commercial tax base,” Poundstone said. “Under State Law, a City can cross a
body of water (Cherry Creek Reservoir) to annex. Aurora City Manager Jim
Grisemer met with me and made agreements. The Aurora City Council did not
adopt the agreements.”
Poundstone appointed a committee of the City’s Mayor Pro-tem
and Councilmembers, who solicited Arapahoe Road commercial owners to annex to
Greenwood Village. The merchants preferred annexing to Greenwood Village over
Aurora, she explained.
“The money that came in was a godsend to the City,”
Poundstone commented. “Office buildings pay property taxes, but retail
properties (with their sales tax revenue) are really your slot machine. For
every dollar received from residential property taxes, a City spends $1.80 on
services. With retail, for every dollar spent, you get $14 back. We had
bridges that needed repair for years. During my term, we began replacing
bridges.”
The Preserve
Zoning a key parcel of land in rural Greenwood Village was a
long-standing, thorny issue that was resolved during Poundstone’s tenure. For
many years, the Koebel family had tried to rezone and develop their land, now
known as The Preserve. “A group in District 2, determined to keep the area
rural, wanted a measure on the ballot to bar development of the land between
Holly Street and Colorado Boulevard north of Orchard Road,” Poundstone stated.
“We would have had a lawsuit, bar none,” she continued.
“The Koebels had owned that land for 30 years.” The City Council placed a
counter-proposal on the ballot to develop The Preserve. “It has become a
centerpiece of good development. I worked with Ferol Jenkins and walked the
whole City to get that item passed.”
A lot of cities have boards and commissions that are hard to
fill. Boards have been important to Greenwood Village. “We’re such a
close-knit community. We are “pro” our citizens. We have money to build
fabulous parks – Silo Park at Dayton and Orchard is incredible. It has
flowers, corn and vegetables.”
“Plus the people care. Old timers have a major impact when
they speak. Greenwood Village has all the advantages of Cherry Hills with the
tax base. It’s a City that is touchable,” she concluded. “I hope I’ve played
a small part in all of that. I wouldn’t trade it for any City I know.”
A Calmer Time
While the Poundstone era featured growth and tumult, the
Rollin Barnard era was characterized by a quest for calm and civility. Barnard
had played a key role in the late 1960’s as Chairman of the Planning and Zoning
Commission when annexations and development of commercial areas were starting
to accelerate. He served as an interim Councilmember in 1975 when the City
lost half of its land and elected representatives during de-annexation. In
1989, he was not serving in office when a group of citizens approached him
about running for Mayor.
“It was an interesting time,” Barnard mused. “For several
years before, there were problems. City Councilmembers had trouble getting
along with each other. There was a general sense of disarray in upper levels
of City Government.” Citizens asked Barnard to run for Mayor to “lead the
Village into quieter, more understanding times,” he explained. “I asked
candidates for Council if they agreed with me about bringing down the
flamboyance that had generated criticism in Denver newspapers. There was no
formal agreement to put forward a ticket (slate of candidates), but they did
agree to work with each other. We cohosted community meetings during the
campaign.”
Council-Manager Governance
One key first step in the new administration was a retreat
of the Mayor and City Council at Keystone Resort. Marshall Kaplan, a professor
at the University of Colorado at Denver renowned for forging consensus among
groups, was invited to facilitate the discussion. Key outcomes of the retreat
were agreement on a Code of Ethics for City Council and a plan to revise the
City Charter. The Code of Ethics “disallowed loud and unpleasant criticism of
each other,” Barnard explained. “We felt it was time for an end to public
confrontations.”
The proposed Charter revision would change the City’s
government from a strong Mayor to a Council-Manager form of government. “The
greatest weakness of the original Charter was that there was no clear
definition of who was running the City,” Barnard explained. Since the City had
grown, the day-to-day operations of the City had become more complex. The new
structure created the Office of City Manager, a paid employee who had greater
authority to administer the City’s business than was given to previous City
Administrators. Once the Charter changed, it was clear that City Council’s
role was to set overall policy, while the City Manager was responsible for the
day-to-day decisions of running the City. “This change has made a big
difference in the success of day-to-day operations,” Barnard said.
Marshall Kaplan contacted the editors of The Denver Post and
Rocky Mountain News. Barnard and others met with their editorial boards to
describe the new direction the Village was taking. Both papers gave strong
endorsements to the Charter changes.
Mending Fences
Mayor Barnard then turned his attention to Arapahoe County.
“I was concerned that relations with the County had deteriorated over a number
of years. Fortunately, I knew two of the three Commissioners. We had a frank
discussion about what needed to be ‘cleaned up’ on both sides. There were some
staff problems between the County and the City. As soon as I brought the
problems to the attention of the Commissioners, things improved.” As a member
of the Council of Mayors of Arapahoe County, Barnard talked about
intergovernmental relations and efforts to “bring down the level of tempers.”
These warmer relations proved important when Mayor Barnard
lobbied the Arapahoe Library District Board of Directors to place the Koebel
Library adjacent to Greenwood Village at the southwest corner of Holly Street
and Orchard Road. Barnard attended hearings and pointed out that the site was
a central location for patrons. “When the chips were down on the location, I
pledged to the people responsible for the decision that Greenwood Village would
support them in every way possible to make it a fine facility.”
Barnard was pleased the library was named Koebel, because
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Koebel donated “a substantial amount of money to help the
library get off the ground. Their donation, after the site was selected,
singularly made the financing possible,” he explained.
Good relations with the news media was another goal. “The
big Denver newspapers were constantly on the track of what’s gone wrong,” he
related. “We tried to be open and free with the media. We tried not to air
our disagreements in public.”
Postal Address
Both Freda Poundstone and Rollin Barnard tried to get the
U.S. Post Office to give Greenwood Village its own Post Office during their
terms as Mayor. Each brought considerable clout to the task, as Poundstone had
served in Washington during the Reagan administration and Barnard was Assistant
Postmaster General during the Eisenhower Administration. While Poundstone was
Mayor, the Post Office agreed that residents with an Englewood zip code could
write “Greenwood Village” with their current zip code. Barnard revisited the
issue when he was Mayor. “There was a major tax audit that found a tremendous
percentage of our sales taxes were not being sent to Greenwood Village,”
Barnard explained, due to confusion of businesses about which jurisdiction was
owed the tax. Barnard was also unsuccessful in getting an actual Greenwood
Village Post Office, but those with Littleton zip codes in Greenwood Village
could now also use the Greenwood Village designation. “I encourage everyone who
lives or has a business here to proudly say they’re in Greenwood Village,”
Barnard added. The City acquired land for a new maintenance facility during
Barnard’s term as Mayor.
Annexation Policies 1990’s
During Barnard’s administration, an ordinance passed that
citizens must vote on an annexation of commercial properties. It set a
requirement that any commercial property would be offset by residential. “We
would not continue the reputation of annexing only income-producing property.
This was a good checkpoint on future annexations,” Barnard explained.
“A great deal of land was annexed before my administration
that was largely commercial property, not matched with residential. They need
to be paired,” he said. “In earlier years, the City could take acres of commercial
property. This was part of the feud with the newspapers. We seemed to be
gobbling up land. There was a reputation the City gained about being piggish –
trying to fatten City coffers. These things were not pleasant. Our Council
felt strongly we wanted to have better control of the annexation process. The
public does not vote specifically on commercial annexations. But they have a
way to kill such annexations by not voting in favor of residential
annexations.”
“In the twilight hours of my administration, Council
surprised me with a resolution to change the name of Horseman’s Park at Orchard
Road and Big Dry Creek to Rollin D. Barnard Equestrian Park,” Barnard said of a
meeting in late 1993. “My family was always interested in horses. My children
loved to ride the trails. My wife and I still ride the trails. Naming the
park was a very meaningful thing to me.” Barnard also received the prestigious Citizen
of the West Award in 1994 from the National Western Stock Show.
Protecting Quality of Life
Urban Noise 1990’s
Throughout the history of the Village, residents have been
concerned with preserving peace and quiet. From the very first months as a
municipality in the 1950s, Greenwood Village Trustees heard residents complain
about traffic noise and dust on South University Boulevard. Traffic and noise
on Greenwood Village streets has remained a continuing concern over the
decades. With the 1990’s came a new threat to the quality of the peaceful life
treasured by Village residents – commercial airline flights into Centennial
Airport.
Soon after Mayor David Hull took office in November, 1993,
the City budgeted $250,000 “to defend the City against commercial flights at
Centennial Airport,” Hull said. The City’s lobbying efforts led to a new law
passed by US Congress that permitted Centennial Airport the ability to refuse
to accept commercial flights. Today, the battle continues, because the Federal
Aviation Administration refused to recognize the will of the US Congress and
stopped funding Centennial Airport in 1999.
The Centennial Airport defense was one of three major goals
Mayor Hull set during the first three months of his term. The others were to
repair all City streets within five years and to buy additional parkland for
the City. Six years later, nearly all the repavings are complete. The City
purchased land for Westlands Park, purchased and developed Silo Park, and
finished Carson Park. Greenwood Village also secured approximately 2000 acre
feet per year of water rights in order to irrigate City parks.
During Hull’s three year term, an expanded beautification
program allowed the planting of more and bigger trees in parks and medians.
“We planted between 1,000 - 2,000 trees a year, which made an impact. The City
is only eight square miles in area,” Hull explained. Greenwood Village has
deservedly earned the Tree City USA Award every year for the past several
years.
Besides trees, more flowers were also planted in City
rights-of-way, including street medians and City parks. “I think it has made
Greenwood Village a nicer place to live,” Hull commented. City trails were
expanded through the purchase of land required to connect the Village’s trails
to the Cherry Creek Reservoir trail system. Cyclists, rollerbladers, walkers and
joggers can now take the Cherry Creek Dam trail (located at the base of the
dam) which provides a safer alternative than traveling on the Dam Road.
Circulator Bus
By Mayor David Hull’s term, vehicle trips into the Denver
Tech Center had reached the level to trigger the Circulator Bus service
negotiated in the 1986 Settlement Agreement. The City initiated a
transportation study, which led to The Link, a free bus service for the
business community, that began in 1999 during Mayor David Phifer’s term. The
Council voted to set aside its commercial real estate tax revenues, $1.2
million a year. Funding was also provided by the metropolitan districts.
The impetus for the bus service originated, Hull said,
because Tech Center hotels had trouble hiring people who couldn’t get there to
work. Some 2,000 buses serve downtown Denver, while only 200 buses serve the
Denver Tech Center. The concept was to pick up passengers from RTD’s two major
stops, a Park and Ride at Yosemite Street and Arapahoe Road and the Hyatt
Hotel. The theory was that once more people were coming in, RTD would expand
its regional service to the area.
Improving City Services
Hiring a new City Manager and expanding maintenance staff
are two accomplishments former Mayer David Hull is proud of. “We hired a new City Manager, and a Public Works Director, who’s management expertise improved City
services. I think we have the best staff in the metro area,” Hull said.
The construction of a City Maintenance Facility south of
Arapahoe Road and upgraded equipment have enabled Greenwood Village to clean
all City streets each week, instead of periodically, and to remove sand and
grit within 24 hours after snowfalls. We expanded City Hall to house City
Staff and provide better service to our visitors.
The Council restarted reimbursement for noise walls which
originated during Mayor Fred Fisher’s term. The GV Newsletter to residents and
businesses was increased from quarterly to monthly publication. Under Mayor
Hull, Symphony in the Parks became an annual event and Greenwood Village Day
was expanded with additional activities for the entire family. A Recreation
Coordinator was hired to organize events for the community.
Open Space
A survey was taken asking citizens about their priorities
for open space and parks. People expressed support for expanding open space
“We tried two things – neither of which worked,” Hull lamented. The City tried
to purchase vacant land to expand the backstage area and the park. One goal
was to have Fiddler’s Green be the summer home of the Colorado Symphony
Orchestra. “The procedure to investigate this opportunity became controversial
and we were unable to pursue it.”
Another open space effort was a bond issue proposed to buy
land throughout the City in each Council District. “We wanted to buy 50
percent of the available land in DTC. It would have taken 10 million square
feet of constructable land out of the market,” the Mayor explained. “The goal
was to identify land in each Council District and determine what it would cost
and go to voters for a bond issue. The support for the concept collapsed on
Council because the support of the citizens did not seem to be apparent. The
City was in a unique position; we had a good income stream. The bond issue
would have cost the City $1 million a year.
“Now, most of land has been built on; the opportunity was
lost,” Hull commented. “It was frustrating to have a program and not be able
to sell it. Real estate prices were somewhat depressed. We could have
purchased open space land for $1 to $2 per square foot that now would probably
cost $5 to $10. It was inexpensive enough that the City could afford to buy
land for open space. The goal was to create open space and reduce future
traffic load.”
Transportation
A major concern throughout the 1990’s has been the volume of
traffic within and near to Greenwood Village. Over the years, the number of
cars on Interstate 25 has increased significantly, causing major backups,
especially during bad weather and accidents. Such situations drive more cars
onto crosstown streets. One major effort to address transportation in the
south metropolitan area has been the negotiation of the Four Corners agreement,
which commits four organizations to resolve traffic issues within four major
interchanges: Interstate 225 and Interstate 25; Arapahoe Road and Interstate
25; Arapahoe Road and Parker Road; and Parker Road and Interstate 225.
In 1997, Mayor David Phifer signed a Mediated Transportation
Agreement involving Greenwood Village, the City of Aurora, Arapahoe County, and
Joint Southeast Public Improvement Association, an organization of south metro
businesses. The agreement called for $500 million in transportation
improvements in the Four Corners area. Projects include construction of the
Serpentine Road to relieve traffic off of Arapahoe Road by providing direct
access into DTC. Also, two parallel roads will be built on the north and south
sides of Arapahoe Road west of Parker Road, allowing drivers to take parallel
roads at 40 miles per hour.
The agreement also calls for closing Jordan Road, either
upon completion of the flyover at Interstate 225 and Parker Road (under
construction in 1999) or within five years, whichever comes first. “We agreed
to fund much of these improvements, along with Aurora and Arapahoe County,”
Phifer noted. “Much of this area is in the proposed City of Centennial. If
the Centennial incorporation is successful; it will be up to them to pay for
improvements in their area.”
Other “road-calming” improvements are intended to keep “cut
through traffic’ from going through residential areas, Phifer continued. “The
City is funding a slip ramp off of Interstate 225 at DTC Boulevard that allows
ingress and egress onto arterial streets. Now, cars have to exit at Yosemite
Street to enter the Tech Center.
“The slip ramp will be located in the City of Denver.
Greenwood Village will pay for that because of the benefit to residential and
commercial areas. On Monaco Street, the City installed traffic circles to slow
and deter traffic from
cutting through residential areas to commercial areas,” Phifer explained.
Envisioning Our Future
Focus on Youth
Mayor Phifer has devoted much energy to involving young
people in the Village. He started a Youth Commission involving volunteers of
middle school and high school age. The Mayor also recruited young people to
help design the Skate Park Facility. “I want children to feel a part of the
City – to feel important,” Phifer said. “The best way is to get them involved
when they’re young.”
“My goal is to put together a Community Center so all kids
have a place to go. We berate them for ‘hanging out.’ We need to provide a
place for them,” Phifer explained. “I’d love to see plans for a Community
Center approved during my term – that would be built sometime in the future.”
The City’s support for young people can also be seen in the
award-winning Greenwood Village Kids, Ink! newsletter, started in 1998, that
features activities and information on local government for children.
Additionally, we hosted the first Village Maintenance Day. Children from a
local elementary school received the opportunity to participate in activities
and see ‘firsthand’ the types of services essential in maintaining a City.
“The Fishing Derby for kids and expanded Greenwood Village Days were the
biggest ever this year (1999),” Phifer commented. “The holiday function gets
bigger and better each year. At Halloween, the City sponsors an outdoor event
with rides. As a City, we do a lot for our citizens.”
A major new service started during Mayor Phifer’s term is
trash collection. Funded with residential property taxes, the City contracts
to have weekly trash collection and large-item pickup. Greenwood Village also
expanded City Hall, with an airy lobby and a customer-service oriented design.
Another new service is the Mayor’s Show, a half-hour program aired four to five
times a day on GVTV Channel 8. Mayor Phifer hosts guests on “quality of life”
topics, such as transportation issues and taxes.
As annexation has occupied the attention of City Council
members from the 1950’s to the present, the late 1990’s has seen a new
annexation challenge: the proposed incorporation of the City of Centennial on
land in Greenwood Village’s Master Planning area. For years, Greenwood Village
has had on file with Arapahoe County a plan for expansion of boundaries.
“Once Greenwood Village and the other entities signed the
Mediated Transportation Agreement on Four Corners, we had committed to larger
expenditures for road improvements. At that point, we elected to annex
adjacent residential and commercial areas to allow additional revenue,” Phifer
explained. “A group set out to incorporate the City of Centennial. The State
Legislature passed a law that gives preference to incorporation over
annexation. We’re now waiting for this to be heard by the Colorado Supreme
Court.”
Sharing Leadership
As Village Government has become more complex, professional
City Management has taken on more of the day-to-day responsibilities of running
the City. With Greenwood Village’s commercial areas and strategic location,
the City’s elected officials still find they are in demand to attend key local
and regional meetings. Modern Mayors have enlisted the help of their fellow
City Councilmembers to monitor specific issues.
“I try to involve Councilmembers so that they can get a
flavor and have some responsibility on issues that impact the Village as a
whole,” Phifer said of his leadership style. “There’s no way, as a part-time
Mayor, that I can go to all the meetings. I delegate (specific projects) and
get a better quality of work back.
“These Council people have bought into this approach (being
responsible for a specific issue.) “It’s a big deal. They work really hard.
Councilmember Clark Upton is almost full-time on the Centennial Airport issue.
“It’s frustrating (being Mayor), but it’s a lot of fun,”
Phifer added. “The City conducted a survey of our citizens. We found 65%
supported the Council and Mayor’s efforts for annexation, while only 12% were
opposed. Additionally, 97% of citizens were satisfied with their quality of
life. They are reaping a lot of benefits, such as services provided by our top
notch Police Department; City Manager’s Office; Community Development;
Administrative Services; Finance Department; Public Works; and Parks, Trails
and Recreation. Back in the 1980’s, the Village had financial trouble. Now we
have a good tax base. We have to manage it well.”
Summing Up
The land that is now Greenwood Village has changed greatly
over the past 50 and more years. Where once there were dust storms and
tumbleweeds, residents now enjoy parks, trails, and landscaped streets.
Although the town Rolland Enos helped found is certainly less rural than it was
in 1950, the commercial tax base provides many high-quality services the
residents and business community can enjoy.
As Villagers prepare to celebrate the Greenwood Village’s
Golden Anniversary, certain timeless themes emerge. Leaders with vision step
forward to protect the quality of life for residents. In the 1880’s, the
concern was sufficient water. In the 1980’s and 1990’s, the priority has been
to mitigate the effects of transportation, noise and pollution.
Where zoning and annexation battles in the past concerned
protecting the Cherry Creek schools, today’s annexation battles are fought to
make sure funding is available to ensure good cross-town transportation routes
and to prevent commercial flights into Centennial Airport.
Another constant has been a pride in the community. While
the pioneers gathered at Castlewood and Curtis Schools for potlucks and
celebrations, Village residents today gather at Village Greens Park for
Greenwood Village Day and Tommy Davis Park for the Fishing Derby.
While many things have changed, the important traits endure
– pride in community, concern for neighbors and children, and activism to
preserve the Village’s unique quality of life.