People

Collection for person entities.


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Charles "Charlie" Lumley
He was an early Mesa County Sheriff who was known for being good to children, especially troubled youth. During his time as sheriff, he arrested George Abshier (aka Bill Messick), a local bootlegger and member of the Fleagle Gang that robbed the First National Bank of Lamar and murdered four people. According to oral history interviewee Josephine Dickey, He would notify a member of the Handy Chapel if an African American came into his town and needed assistance. In the early Twentieth century, he owned a stable on the south side of Ute Avenue near the intersection with 5th Street, adjacent to the Free Corral, where cowboys, horse racers and others stabled their horses. According to Clarence Prinster, his brother Leo Prinster would donate anonymously to Lumley's political campaigns. Here is author Ruth G. Moss’s description of Lumley: “One of the most respected sheriffs ever to hold office in Mesa County took over in the late 1920’s. Charles Lumley was in his seventh term as sheriff when he died in 1941, probably the longest reign of any sheriff. One thing which made Lumley the widely-known, beloved sheriff that he was, lay in his handling of juveniles. Lumley’s philosophy was to keep youngsters out of jail if possible. Even today many of Grand Junction’s solid citizens can respectfully remember hearing the calm voice of Sheriff Lumley straightening out their thinking and actions” (Mesa County Historical Society newsletter, May-June 1983).
Charles "Charlie" Paterson
Charles Paterson was born Karl Schanzer in Vienna, Austria. After Hitler’s 1938 annexation of Austria, Charles’ family fled to Czechoslovakia. After Hitler invaded Prague, Charlie and his sister were forced to escape again, through France to Brisbane, Australia, where they were adopted by the Paterson family. After WWII, the children rejoined their father in NYC where Charlie finished high school and began engineering studies at CCNY. While in New York, Charlie’s early ski memories from the Alps called him back to the slopes. He headed to Aspen in 1949 where he fell in love with the town and its residents and decided to stay. He soon built an 8’ x 16’ cabin, the beginnings of the Boomerang Lodge. In the 1950s, Charlie served two years in the US Army’s Mountain & Cold Weather Training and added three hotel lodge units to his log cabin. In 1958 Frank Lloyd Wright accepted Charlie as an apprentice at Taliesin East in Wisconsin, whereupon Charlie returned to Aspen from Wisconsin the next three winters to run the lodge and teach skiing. He continues as a board member of Taliesin Fellows and an underwriter of the Taliesin School of Architecture revitalization effort. Fonda Dehne was born in Mason City, Iowa to an itinerant minister and a teacher. Fonda’s social activism began in high school with a citizen's challenge to unenforced state liquor laws and two years service as a Page in the Iowa legislature. A year after graduating from the University of Iowa, Fonda married Charlie in 1969 and joined him in Aspen, where they raised their two daughters Charlie designed and remodeled a handful of houses in the Aspen area but running the Boomerang kept him from pursuing more of a career in architecture. Following his retirement, Charlie co-authored his memoir with his daughter Carrie “ESCAPE HOME, Rebuilding a Life After the Anschluss.” Charlie served on the boards of the Aspen Chamber and Visitor’s Bureau, the Aspen Music Festival & School and the Rocky Mountain Ski Instructors Association. In 2011, the City of Aspen named him Volunteer of the Year in recognition of his 40 years serving on the Board of Adjustment - the longest serving citizen volunteer in Aspen history! He has also been recognized by the Historic Preservation Commission for his contributions to Aspen architecture. Fonda has also left her mark on the Aspen community, volunteering at the Aspen Thrift Shop, and serving in leadership positions with the Aspen Music Festival & School, the Aspen Valley Medical Foundation, the Aspen Country Day School, and Aspen Community Church, where she spearheaded the remodeling of the Aspen and Snowmass parsonages, as well as the church’s exterior restoration. Fonda also advocated for the creation of Triangle Park, worked on a ballot initiative to support the acquisition of open space and trails, worked to protect the Midland Trail right of way, and served on the Board of Trustees for Aspen Center for Environmental Studies.--Aspen Hall of Fame bio
Charles "Chuck" V. Lundy
A resident of Glade Park, Colorado with a knowledge of local history and archaeological finds.
Charles "Frank" Moore
Longtime Mesa County resident. He was a cowboy for ranching outfits, a U.S. Government surveyor working for the U.S. General Land Office, and the Regional Grazier for the U.S. Grazing Service after the passage of the Taylor Grazing Act of 1934, retiring from that position in 1945.
Charles A. Melien
One of the key players in the origin of the Salida-Aspen Concert Series.
Charles A. Smelzer
During his oral history interview, Charles Smelzer reports being born in Sentinel, Missouri. U.S. Census records show him born in Indiana. His father, Robert Anderson Smelzer, was born near Indianapolis. Charles came to Gunnison, Colorado on July 5, 1905 to work on a dairy farm. He was 18 years old at the time. When he was 19, he went to Indiana, where he met his mother, possibly Centrilla Laughner, for the first time, and took a job doing sheet metal work with relatives. In 1908, he moved to Iowa, lived with his Uncle John, and took a job in an ice house. He then returned to Gunnison, where he worked for a cattle ranching operation until he was drafted by the army in World War I. He worked as a cowboy in charge of 6000 head of cattle.

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