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WHEAT RIDGE GRANGE
#155
ONE HUNDRED YEARS
1907-2007
Wheat Ridge Grange was organized on March 29, 1907 with 144
members. It was the largest grange organized in the state up to that date. It
was not the first grange to be organized in Wheat Ridge however. Ceres Grange #1 was
organized in Wheat Ridge Tin 1873 with 17 charter members before Colorado became a
state. Ceres Grange was very active for
at least 20 years, however the year it ceased to be has not been
determined. There were those who
remembered Ceres grange and wanted to renew grange activity in the Wheat Ridge area. The Grange met in a class room of the Wheat Ridge High School. Until 1913 the class room
didn’t even have electricity.
A building fund was started but in 1919 the Grange decided
to donate the entire amount of $239 to the school board so that chairs could be
purchased for the auditorium.
In February 1936 the Grange moved to the Berkeley Annex
School, later know as the Mountain View School. The rent was $2.50 a meeting.
World War Two took a heavy toll. Fourteen Members were
called into the armed services. Two,
Cecil Augustine and John Kiplinger did not return. During the war, the Grange kept in close
contact with the boys in service and purchased and promoted War Bonds. Many members donated blood.
In July 1947, the grange was finally able to purchase the
building site north of W. 38th
Ave. and High
Ct. across the street and east of the Wheat Ridge High School. In September 1949 the work on the building
was started with the foundation of the building.
During the summer of 1948, the major construction was
started. Some of the Grangers tried
their hands at brick laying on weekends.
Their families brought potluck for Sunday dinner. The cornerstone was laid in September 1950 ,
when the brickwork, except for the entry had reached the upper floor
level. A loan was procured and the
balance of the brickwork was hired.
Members continued to work, doing electrical, carpentry and plumbing
jobs.
The hall quickly became a real community center. For three years the hall was even used for
classroom space as the school district tried to catch up with growth in Wheat Ridge. Several churches were in the process of
organizing. They congregated in the hall
while they were recently celebrated their 50th anniversary.
The local Lions, Kiwanis, the Wheat Ridge Service Club,
Eastern Star and Masons used the hall for their meetings. The Wheat Ridge Library was located in the
hall for seven years. A Junior Grange
was organized n 1953 and many of these have graduated into Subordinate Grange
work. A red letter day occurred in 1961 when the mortgage was burned, much
earlier than anticipated.
The Grange contributed to the Lutheran Hospital
when it was converted to a hospital.
They paid for the furnishing of one room and members spent weekends
canvassing the community for donations to furnish other rooms. The Grange also raffeled off a television set
to earn money for the “Save the Soddy” campaign. This led to the preservation
of an old sod house and museum.
In 1989 Wheat Ridge Mayor Dan Wilde heard that the Grange
was looking for a new community service project. He had been contacted by the Catholic
Community Services looking for and organization to be a host site for a new
organization to be know as SHARE Colorado. It was to be similar to a cooperative that
would be able to distribute food once a month at approximate cost distribution
cost would be by volunteers. April 1989
would be the first food distribution.
The Grange took on this project and participated in this first
distribution. That Christmas time Jeffco
Action center announced that their organization would not be able to supply
Christmas food packages this year. Jefferson County social Services made arrangements
to send to send a letter with the monthly food stamp distribution. This letter invited the food stamp recipients
to request a food package. Social
Services also made arrangement with SHARE Colorado to purchase a Christmas Food Basket
from SHARE with these arrangements complete, solicitation of funds to pay for
the food was begun county wide. Wheat
Ridge Grange as a nonprofit organization was asked to be the treasurer of the
project. Christmas Food Baskets were
distributed through the Host Sites in Jefferson County. A few years later, Social Services went to
electronic debit cads rather than food stamps and Wheat Ridge grange was
notified that Christmas Baskets could no longer be made available because they
could no longer contact recipients by mail.
So many of those contributing money for Christmas baskets
felt that it was such a good project and wondered if we could start a project
in Wheat Ridge. We started by contacting
the social workers at elementary schools in Wheat Ridge.
The social workers agreed to send notes home to the parents who had
children on free school lunch program inviting them to apply for a Christmas
Food Basket. The response was beyond our
expectation. The Grange has been contributing
to the fund and soliciting from those outside of the Grange every year since. We have cooperated with the Wheat Ridge
Optimist Club for several years now. The
Opitimists have been buying clothes and Christmas presents for the students and
have been delivering the food baskets at the same time for the Grange. The Grange has also given food to others,
including some of the residents of subsidized housing apartments. The last two Christmas seasons we have been
able to give 88 to 90 baskets as well as helping other organizations by getting
the food through SARE Colorado and assembling the baskets. Christmas of 2006 we purchased over $6,500
worth of food and was the 6th largest order from SHARE Colorado in their
territory of seven states.
Much of this History was
from the “History of Pioneer Wheat Ridge” Published in 1971 and from
“Colorado State Grange History-1874-1975” Published by The Colorado State
Grange, in 1975.
This brief history was prepared by Elwyn Kiplinger. He was a member of the Historical Committee
that published the “The History of Pioneer Wheat Ridge” and also a member of
the History Committee that researched and assembled the “Colorado Grange
History-1874-1975.
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