hatch on the corner

On the Corner, 3rd Quarter 2023

On the Corner, 3rd Quarter 2023

Bluebell Avenue resident had unusual past,

By Silvia Pettem

In last month’s “On the Corner,” I wrote that early real estate developer David Dobbins built four almost-identical brick bungalows, one on each of the southeast corners of Bluebell Avenue and 15th, 16th, 17th, and 19th streets.  

The house at 1604 Bluebell was owned by Miriam Rieder who lived there from the late 1930s to her death in 1957. Rieder was an assistant professor of Romance Languages at the University of Colorado. She also was considered an eccentric, and she had an unusual past.  

At the time, acres of undeveloped property surrounded Rieder’s home. She bought the land and preferred it wild and unkempt with native plants and flowers providing a sanctuary for ground-nesting birds. After one neighbor complained of her “weeds,” she wrote a scathing letter to the editor of the “Daily Camera.”

“What is the matter with people who are so blind that they see beauty, and utility, only in their own little clipped lawn?” Rieder asked. “How can people go to church and sit in pews and worship God, and then devote their weekdays to trying to destroy what He has generously given us to enjoy?”

Rieder regularly patrolled her property and carried a pistol to scare off intruders. Parents of neighborhood children complained that she chased and shot at them. In 1950, the then-61-year old woman pleaded guilty in court to “threatening the lives of young people,” but she claimed she only did it to frighten them off of her land.

  The public was unaware during her lifetime that Rieder was the daughter of former German professor Mary Rippon.  At CU’s recent May Commencement, the highly acclaimed Rippon received a long-overdue posthumous honorary doctoral degree. But in 1889, she had secretly married one of her adult students, and they had a child. That child was Miriam Rieder.

Rippon conveniently took a year’s sabbatical to Germany where Rieder was born in 1889. Then Rippon returned to CU and continued to teach. The little girl was left in orphanages and passed around an extended family of aunts and uncles for the first few years of her life. Rippon (who would have lost her job if her marriage had been known) never lived with her husband. Eventually he remarried and was able to raise their daughter.

When Rieder lived at 16th and Bluebell, she was separated from her husband Rudolph. Their son Wilfred is now deceased, but he spent most of his adult life on the East Coast. Think of Rieder, her birds, and her unusual background, as you drive by her former home.

Cutline: Miriam Rieder’s former home at 1604 Bluebell Avenue was one of four (initially!) almost-identical brick bungalows built by real estate developer David Dobbins.

 

Silvia Pettem is the author of “Separate Lives: The Story of Mary Rippon,” available in local bookstores and at www.thebooklode.com.

On the Corner, 2nd Quarter 2023

On the Corner, 2nd Quarter 2023

Chautauqua a win-win for Boulder

by Silvia Pettem

Ever since 1898, Boulder residents and visitors have participated in events at Boulder's Chautauqua, now in its 125th year. But the national, cultural, and educational movement is not unique to Boulder. It grew out of nineteenth-century camp meetings in New York state and provided classes, oratory, music, and entertainment to isolated communities.

In its early days, there were at least 150 of these gatherings all over the country. So, how did Chautauqua, initially a summer resort, find its way to Boulder? A longtime Chautauqua secretary once stated that the Boulder location was chosen after a committee of leading Texas educators "set out like knights of old in the search for the Holy Grail." They thought Boulder was "the loveliest little city in America." Also, its summers were cooler than at home.

Boulder voters quickly approved a bond issue to buy seventy-five acres of land, then leased the land to what at first was called the Texas-Colorado Chautauqua. Contractors then scrambled to build the dining hall and auditorium, as opening day was scheduled for July 4, 1898. Carpenters finished the auditorium's framing on June 22.

Then, with only twelve days to go, 75 men worked around the clock to complete the walls, roof, towers, stage, and benches. A reporter called the construction "the fastest work ever known in Boulder." On opening day, flags waved and bands played.

Many of the guests came by train and stayed all summer. That first year, they slept in tents. In the evenings, a lively pace of orators, entertainers, and musicians performed on stage. These performers "rode the circuit," traveling by train to gatherings in other parts of the country. In the daytime, families were kept busy with burro rides, railroad excursions, and hikes in the mountains.

Boulder's location is unique, but the Chautauqua name is not. The Iroquois word has multiple meanings, including “a bag tied in the middle” or “two moccasins tied together." It describes the shape of Chautauqua Lake, in southwest New York, at the site of the movement's first (and ongoing) location.

In 125 years, the Chautauqua Auditorium has seen an array of speakers, magicians and animal shows, colorful dancers, persuasive actors, and nearly every kind of singer and musician imaginable. Classical music has come back in style, and the films that started the first year have never stopped. The site was a win-win situation for everyone, even the Texans.

Silvia Pettem can be reached at silviapettem.com

On the Corner 4th Quarter/Year End 2022

On the Corner 4th Quarter/Year End 2022

Boulder's first films were shown at Chautauqua, by Silvia Pettem

In 1898, when the Chautauqua cultural and educational movement opened in Boulder, its summer visitors were treated to speakers, entertainers, and musicians in its newly built auditorium. Boulder residents attended, as well. The Chautauqua Association also brought in motion pictures –– the first ever shown in Boulder.

At the time, the public was caught up in the fervor of the Spanish-American War, creating a demand for patriotic newsreels. The first shown at Chautauqua was the Battle of Santiago Bay, leading viewers to believe it was filmed in Cuba. The film, however, featured cardboard models of ships that were partially disguised with cigar smoke.  

FROM THE TRAIL #48, EQUANIMITY!

FROM THE TRAIL #48, EQUANIMITY!

WELCOME TO #48! IT'S JUST A THANK YOU! THANK YOU SO MUCH. AND THE WORD FOR 2022 FOR ME IS... EQUANIMITY!

Hatch Sells Lower Chautauqua!

Dear neighbors and friends, this year marks the 15th anniversary of the very first edition of your On the Corner newsletter. I began publishing OtC in the early days of my real estate career as a way to bridge my professional photojournalism career and my real estate career. It’s kept me very engaged in this neighborhood, which has so many stories to tell. This spring also marks my 15th year in the real estate business. It’s awesome to have grown such a successful business. I’ve worked really hard to make it this far and I definitely recognize that a lot of my business comes from right here in the neighborhood. On the opposite of this big card you’ll see homes that I sold here in 2021. Each of them are so different and they all have such interesting histories. Like many homes here, they also have been through different transformation over the years. The homes built in the LC have just as interesting stories to tell as the residents that call Lower Chautauqua home. “If these walls could talk,” right? Such rich history here, and that’s why I appreciate it so much. And I appreciate you. You’ve entrusted me to market and sell your homes and you’ve trusted me to help you buy the house here that you now call home. The many homes I’ve sold here dot the neighborhood from Bellevue Heights to Interurban Park and from the Cul-de-sacs off King Avenue to Baseline Road. Many of you have referred business to me over the years and for that I am grateful and truly appreciate your business and your referrals! I’d like to continue to earn your trust. Please contact me anytime to discuss selling or buying real estate. I’m happy to offer a market analysis of your home anytime, with no strings attached! Sincerely, HATCH

FROM THE TRAIL #47, DADS

FROM THE TRAIL #47, DADS

While I just published this video today, I shot the frames for it a couple of weeks ago while my son Ethan and his friend fished a special lake together. Since that day on the water my Aunt JoAnne passed away and just last weekend my dad-in-law Corky also passed away. What a year of grief and sadness and while their deaths were not covid related, they compounded what has been a sad year for my family. But we rise above and keep the beautiful memories atop our minds and that lifts our frowns to smiles. Welcome to #47 From the Trail. It stinks to lose people close in your life. Those who raised you. Those who shaped you. Those who loved you. And those who took you fishing. For this I'm grateful for my Dad, my Aunt JoAnne and my dad-in-law Corky. Too much loss but so many good memories, of being free....

On the Corner Vol. 14 Issue 2, 2020 Year in Review

On the Corner Vol. 14 Issue 2, 2020 Year in Review

Holubars put Boulder on the map for outdoor gear

By Carol Taylor

Imagine a time when outdoor recreation equipment was difficult to find in

Boulder. That changed in the 1940s, thanks to Roy and Alice Holubar.

The couple made significant contributions to the outdoor gear industry

and their success encouraged a legacy of Boulder outdoor entrepreneurs.

LeRoy Holubar met his future wife and business partner Alice

Freudenberg at the State Preparatory School, now Boulder High. LeRoy,

known as Roy, grew up in the mountains of Boulder. Alice was from a

German immigrant family. Both took full advantage of their education

and graduated at the top of their class. They earned scholarships to the

University of Colorado. After college graduation, Roy accepted a job

teaching mathematics at CU and the couple married in 1937.

They became passionate about mountain climbing early in their marriage.

Both were active in the Colorado Mountain Club, though at the time there

were few technical climbers in the group. Roy was involved with starting

the first climbing school in Boulder as well as the Rocky Mountain

Rescue Group, formed in 1947.

Finding suitable gear for their adventures was difficult for the Holubars

and their mountain climbing friends. So they tapped into a network of

Alice’s relatives in the Alps for recommendations. Soon the Holubars

were importing the best hiking boots, ski boots, ice axes, tents and other

gear from Europe to Boulder…

Boulder County Buzz - December 2020

Boulder County Buzz - December 2020

It’s December? Holy Schnikes! And despite the grip of Covid-19 on our country I have to say, it feels nice to welcome the winter transition here in Boulder County. One of the greatest gifts this Christmas season will be to say buh-bye to 2020 so we can begin to get back to normal with vaccines coming into view. The year 2020 has been full of strangeness, uncertainty, wonder, sadness and joy, but hello 2021!

What are your plans for 2021? Maybe a change in your real estate landscape? It's never too early to start planning for the busy spring season and if real estate is on your horizon, I’ll be happy to help you with your goals and to share my perspective on the current housing market in your 'hood. It’s not too early to get started.

Expert predictions on the 2021 housing market are very positive. Will pent up consumers be ready to spend? 2020 was a very strong year for real estate — how will 2021 compare? I can’t wait to see.

Please visit my featured Boulder property this month; 11264 Uptown Avenuelocated in Broomfield, CO. This ridiculously awesome townhome at Venue at Arista in Urban Transit Village is totally custom and comfortable. Please contact me today for more information and yes, share with your friends!

Take a minute to tune in to my YouTube Channel and watch From the Trail #46. Who are you grateful for? I’m grateful for the many things my dad showed me all through his life, to make me a better person. Thank you dad!

And this month I’m featuring non-profit program The National Multiple Sclerosis Society. Please see how important this program is and consider giving today!

Thank you all for asking me to help with your real estate adventures in 2020 and for referring friends and family to me. I appreciate it so much.

Happy holidays to you and yours, and see you in 2021!
HATCH

Boulder County Buzz - September 2020

Boulder County Buzz - September 2020

"What's new is old,
what's old is gone
You're pushed up to the edge
So put your wingsuit on.”


-Anastasio/Fishman/Gordon/McConnell

As you know, last week we had 100 degree temps and then within hours, falling ash from Colorado wildfires was replaced by a falling snow. The wet and heavy snow stuck to still full green leaves and large branches snapped and fell to the ground. The crash waking us from our slumber was rather unsettling. It’s not the first time this year we’ve been jostled and made uneasy. We’re reminded how quickly things can change. How things can break. How things can go in a different direction than we want. How do we handle this? Can we pick ourselves up and dust ourselves off? How do we do that? Nature has provided us a wonderful escape this summer with camping in the woods more than ever before. Getting into nature and tuning out has a been valuable reset tool and I trust you’ve been able to find yours.

We're just a few days away from the Autumnal Equinox. This too feels like a good time to recalibrate. I look forward again to my favorite trout hunting season. It’s usually a quiet time of the year to slow down and reflect on all that we have to be grateful for. Many have lost something or someone this year but I hope you’re reminded of what you do have. I’m very grateful for such a good community Kristin and I have and we appreciate your friendship. May you find solace this fall. And please go out and VOTE!

In good vibes,
HATCH

Boulder County Buzz - July 2020

Boulder County Buzz - July 2020

What a difference another month makes. Or does it? It’s been four months since things were turned topsy-turvy. We were almost sort of in the clear and then we weren’t. Now we’re here, wherever here is. So much is wrong and yet so much is right. There are lessons everywhere if you look at it right I suppose. It’s easy to feel bummed out and discouraged. However, I urge you still to rise up and be better than the news you watch and especially to give to those who have lost. Go outside and sing a song. Or like my dad does with his trumpet, play your instrument for your neighbors to hear and give them a reason to smile. And wear a damn mask and wash your damn hands, a lot. And conserve water too, while you’re at it. And be grateful!

In February and early March, my business was taking off. CV19 took it off the tracks, but only for a couple weeks. The past few months, my business has been off the hook awesome. While we are practicing safe showings and clean operating procedures, I am as busy as ever. I’m marketing and closing deals left and right. I have some really smart and especially fun buyers and sellers right now. It’s a much different landscape right now and it feels really good to be able to help so many of you. And so much goes back to you all - I thank you for looking out for me and referring your friends and family to me. I’m so grateful!

We’re still craving live music and summer nights in air conditioned movie theaters but we’re making the best of it with camping, back yard patio evenings with tasty food. We've also managed to get out on the river to fool the trout and also run our amazing trails here in Boulder County. I’m so grateful!

Please visit my new featured Boulder properties this month; one is at 2132 Bluebell Avenue in coveted Lower Chautauqua and the other 324 Granite Drive, coming in August, is just a short drive up from Mapleton Hill in close-in Sunshine Canyon. Two amazing homes to retreat to. Please share with your friends! I also have a cool modern one bedroom condo in North Boulder coming soon. Please check in later for more details.

Finally, please tune in to From The Trail, #44 and let's hang out with my friend and Blues Legend Otis Taylor as he takes you through his past few months and shreds the banjo for you in his backyard in Boulder, Colorado. You’re going to love this one. Otis, for your time, I am grateful!

In the meantime, remember to thank the essential workers in your life and find ways to support local businesses that are feeling the burn of being closed or dealing with limited service.

Be well and thank you,
HATCH

Boulder County Buzz - June 2020

Boulder County Buzz - June 2020

"From high above we're all the same down here
Without a map the lines all disappear
We're so tired of our senseless fight
The one thing we can all do right
Is come together, come together, come together.”


-Anastasio/Nicholson/Greenberg


It's clear that emotions are running high right now. We have been completely shaken by the impact of this pandemic. We’ve lost jobs and loved ones. There is deep political discord. It feels like we are now more divided than ever. Racial tensions are elevated. And so it’s easy to feel discouraged, to harbor anger and fear and to be discouraged. But change is on the way and I say stop watching the news and go out and take a hike and breathe the air and touch the trees or the grass out there. Be the change by being happy and alive. Do what you love. Find something, or better yet, find someone to celebrate. Consider holding those who have lost something. It’s time for us to rise up and come together!

And what better way to rise up, than to get down; like with our friends in the Acoustic Ambush band who played live at Chautauqua Park. What a celebration!

For me and my real estate business, I couldn't be busier today. The market is returning to some normal behavior after weeks of the covid19 chaos. It’s not all the way normal but it is more vibrant than we maybe expected. Thank you as always for finding me and for referring business. Pease stay tuned for a new featured listing in the Lower Chautauqua neighborhood in Boulder coming later this week. This home at 2132 Bluebell Avenue is a 2-story, 4bd/4ba, 4,300sqft Craftsman-style home with a double lot in the best neighborhood in Boulder below Chautauqua Park. A deep lot on this lush and wooded property designed by nature especially for your tree-climbing adventurer. Priced at $1,985,000. You will want to check back in on this one soon for gorgeous virtual tours!

Thank you all for being you and for staying positive!

HATCH

Boulder County Buzz - May 2020

Boulder County Buzz - May 2020

Hello and howdy! I trust this note finds you happy, healthy and dialed into silver linings during this disruptive time in our world. We rise up and see the world before us and try to accept the imperfections and trouble and to be grateful for the gifts we do have.

My family is healthy and happy and making the best of this strange spring semester. Our son Ethan graduates from Boulder High School this spring and we are so proud him. We just participated in a radical car parade downtown to celebrate the 2020 seniors. We are all stoked for his next adventure in the Pacific Northwest. Phoebe has been making beautiful art and is helping Kristin plant flowers and plants in our backyard oasis. These kids are not bored.

My business during this mess has fared well, thank goodness. The Boulder County real estate market is cruising, now that we can show properties again and with safe measures in place. It will take some time to fully come to normal but this market is so resilient and is showing signs of strength and resiliency. In most markets, prices will stay stable through this. Check the stats here for more on the numbers but know that as time passes we will see more about COVID impacted the market. I’m as busy as ever for this time of year and grateful for your support, as always.

We hope to be with you all soon but in the meantime, please come fly with me for FTT#42 and listen to our friends the Good Kind band as they played live all around Boulder on a recent weekend afternoon. We are grateful for their talent and that for a moment in the day, they take our minds away from the reality that is and make us smile.

Love to you all and thank you,

HATCH

HATCH FROM THE TRAIL #42, WITH THE GOOD KIND AND FRIENDS

HATCH FROM THE TRAIL #42, WITH THE GOOD KIND AND FRIENDS

“Information is not knowledge. Knowledge is not wisdom. Wisdom is not truth. Truth is not beauty. Beauty is not love. Love is not music. Music is THE BEST.” ― Frank Zappa

Boulder County Buzz - April 2020

Boulder County Buzz - April 2020

What a difference a month makes! As I’m sure you do, I look back fondly at the simple things I did with family and friends whenever we wanted, however we wanted. I wouldn't say I took it all for granted, but maybe kind of? Oh to dine out. Oh to stroll along the bustling Pearl Street Mall. Oh to see live music at the Boulder Theater. Oh to have a haircut. Oh to see a movie in the theater. Oh to have acupressure massage at the Relaxing Station. Oh to fly somewhere warm. Oh to be free. We will get our “stuff" back soon, but in the meantime let's take care of ourselves and our loved ones.

Real estate has been listed an essential service so I’m mostly grinding the same. In fact today I’m negotiating an offer on a listing. However, we are on lockdown till month’s end with no showings or open houses permitted by the powers that be. Properties under contract may be inspected and appraised. Business distancing is also required so we’re closing deals in the parking lots adjacent to title companies. It’s definitely not business as usual but it’s still business. And visit my new featured property listing this month at 2850 Vassar Drive - an amazing architectural home in South Boulder with great views of the Foothills and Flatirons. This is going to be a wonderful home for someone soon!

I haven't been to the RE/MAX office for over a month since we’ve isolated at home. While I continue to work closely with buyers and sellers, I’m also working on marketing and areas of the business that I can make better. But still, my favorite part of the day is writing letters and reaching out to you by phone. If you haven't heard from me yet, you will.

I’m enjoying house and yard projects that had been on eternal delay till now. Trail running continues to keep me sane. The trails are becoming inundated with humans. I love that people are getting out there. Please tune in to From The Trail #41 and learn about my wife Kristin's and my experience with the illness.

In the meantime, remember to thank the essential workers in your life and find ways to support your local businesses that are feeling the burn of being closed. We've got this, friends. I’ll see you on the other side where life will be grand,

HATCH

HATCH FROM THE TRAIL #41, WE WILL GET BY, WE DID SURVIVE!

HATCH FROM THE TRAIL #41, WE WILL GET BY, WE DID SURVIVE!

Hi friends, I wanted to tell you our story of dealing with the CV19 and that we survived and made it through a nasty bout with so many awful symptoms for almost 2 weeks and that Kristin and I are on the other side and feel 100%. And out kids never got sick thankfully. Please call us if you have questions or concerns or if you need anything at all. And remember to please thank your health care provider and local restaurants and retailers and check in with your parents obviously and make sure they're tucked in and safe. Love to all, HATCH

HATCH FROM THE TRAIL #40, THE VIRUS

HATCH FROM THE TRAIL #40, THE VIRUS

This message went viral in Italy last week... let's follow suit? “We come to understand that this is a struggle against our habits and not against a virus. This is an opportunity to turn an emergency into an opportunity of solidarity and unity. Let's change the way we see and think. I will no longer say "I'm afraid of this contagion" or "I don't care about this contagion", but it is I who will sacrifice for you. I worry about you. I keep a distance for you. I wash my hands for you. I give up that trip for you. I'm not going to the concert for you. I'm not going to the mall for you. For you! For you who are inside an ICU room. For you who are old and frail, but whose life has value as much as mine. For you who are struggling with cancer and can't fight this too. Please, let's rise to this challenge! Come together...nothing else matters.”

On the Corner Vol. 13 Issue 4

On the Corner Vol. 13 Issue 4

Racing uphill to his to his family’s home at 16th and Mariposa, with a beat up, second-hand banjo under his arm, Chuck Ogsbury was beaming with joy. Out of breath, he rolled open the garage door, laid the banjo down on a workbench and with eyes wide open he brushed his open hand over its broken strings. He smiled.