Collection for person entities.
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Chester Elias Jaynes
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Early 20th century Mesa County carpenter. Uncle of Velma E. (Borschell) Budin. Brother of Edith Jaynes and son of Ezra Jaynes.
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Chester Fred "Chet" Crowley
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He was born to Chester F. Crowley Sr. and Gladys K. (Haynes) Crowley in Birmingham, Alabama. The family moved to Western Colorado in 1936, when he was about seven years old. The 1940 US Census shows Chet, his younger sister and brother living alone with their mother in De Beque. She later remarried. He attended the Palisade School and later obtained his US Army GED.
He served in the US Army from May 19th, 1948 until 1968. He enlisted in Denver, Colorado. He attained a rank of SFC (E7) and served at duty stations around the world including California, Panama, Korea, and Vietnam.
He served in the Korean War. He served as an intelligence analyst, 1st Sergeant, in the 1st Infantry Division during the Vietnam War, from June 20, 1966 to June 12, 1967. He was shot in action and served in rear detachment duty for the remainder of his tour. He was awarded a Bronze Star.
He obtained a Bachelor’s in sociology, and in travel & recreation from Mesa State College in 1974. He married Imell Lee Finkenbinder on July 5th, 1952 in Grand Junction, Colorado. She was a cook. They had four children.
Aside from Army service, he worked as a peach harvest hand, a security guard, an employee for the Colorado Highway Department, and a restaurant manager. He lived in Grand Junction, Palisade, Fruita, DeBeque, Rifle, Meeker, Mt. Harris, Bear River, and Gunnison. He was a member of the DAV. He died in Rifle at the age of eighty-nine and is buried in Grand Junction’s Memorial Gardens cemetery.
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Chester K. "Chet" Enstrom
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He was born in Woodhall, Illinois and moved to Iowa when he was young. There, he attended a one-room schoolhouse in the country before the family returned to Illinois. His father worked for the Galeville Separator Company, for which he relocated several times. When his father developed tuberculosis, which happened when Chet Enstrom turned twelve, the family moved to Colorado Springs, Colorado. To support the family, Chet's mother worked as a house cleaner in a bakery and did other odd jobs. Meanwhile, Chet had to take time off from school so that he could work as a newspaper delivery boy and in an ice-cream plant. He left high school shortly before graduation, and did not earn his diploma until 1970 when he also gave a commencement address. While working for the ice-cream manufacturer he also helped out in Bartell's Confectionary, a candy shop, cleaning and helping with candy making.
In 1929, he came to Grand Junction in order to join Harry Jones as a partner in an existing ice-cream company called the Velvet Ice Cream Company. Chet Enstrom brought extensive knowledge of ice-cream making from Colorado Springs and from extension courses at Iowa State University, and they succeeded in making a good product. Jones retired early, and when Enstrom's new partner put lesser ingredients in the ice-cream, he decided to sell the business to Clymer's Diary. Enstrom then began making the almond toffee for which he is now locally famous, using a recipe that he developed himself.
He went into business under the name Enstrom Candies in 1965.
When he ran and was elected to the Colorado State Senate, he sold Enstrom Candies to his son so that he could concentrate more fully on his political career. In the State Senate, he was appointed chairman of the Committee of Natural Resources without ever having attended a committee meeting. He was later appointed chairman of the Education Committee. Enstrom also served as a Grand Junction City Councilman in the 1930's, and as a Colorado State College board member. Also, he was active as a volunteer in the Grand Junction Lion's Club, the Arthritis Foundation, and other organizations.
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