Famed Roadside Attraction Bishop Castle Gets a Happy Ending

Jim Bishop will soon be king of his castle again. More than forty years ago, Bishop started building a stone castle in Wetmore, just outside of the San Isabel National Forest, adding rooms, features and height — always height. The castle, which now stands over 160 feet tall, has become…

Joe Shoemaker School Dedicated Today on Former Open-Space Site

Think the wheels of justice turn slowly? Today Denver Public Schools will dedicate the Joe Shoemaker School, an elementary school that opened last month as the Hampden Heights Expeditionary School at 3333 South Havana Street, at the edge of southeast Denver. Meanwhile, a request to return nine acres of land…

Pueblo Chiles Get Their Day at the Colorado State Fair

Forget Hatch chiles. It’s time to celebrate the Pueblo chile — and this is the weekend to do it, since September 5 is Pueblo Chile Day, a new event at the Colorado State Fair. “The Pueblo Chile has been a centerpiece of popular fair foods at the Colorado State Fair, making…

History Colorado Changes Reflect Some Revisionist History

On August 1, thousands of people followed the urging of the banner outside the History Colorado Center to “step into the story” and went inside for a celebration of Colorado Day complete with cowboy tricks, rare artifact displays from the museum’s usually off-limits treasure trove, and cake. But the revelers,…

Rocky Flats Cold War Museum Drops a Bombshell

Plutonium has a very long half-life — so it shouldn’t be surprising that plans for a Rocky Flats Cold War Museum have been going very slowly. It’s also not surprising that proponents of the museum, which would tell the history of the former nuclear weapons plant sixteen miles northwest of…

Calhoun Columns Take First Place in National Sigma Delta Chi Awards

Westword editor Patricia Calhoun has won first place for General Column Writing in the Society of Professional Journalists Sigma Delta Chi Awards (daily circulation 1-100,000/non-daily publication) with a collection of columns that included two pices on the Sand Creek Massacre (including Governor John Hickenlooper’s apology to descendants) to a pioneering…

Sassafras Could Soon Bring Brunch Cocktails to Jefferson Park

When Sassafras opened in an old Victorian bungalow listed on the National Register of Historic Places three years ago, co-owner Julia Grother brought considerable experience in the restaurant business to the Jefferson Park neighborhood – and a lot of Southern comfort. One thing was missing, though: a liquor license. Even…

Denver’s Boom Is Giving This City an Edifice Complex

Now that development of the historic Stapleton Airport control tower is about to take off — come spring 2016, it will hold the city’s second Punch Bowl Social — only a few iconic buildings in this city still sit empty. In RiNo, once-decrepit warehouses are being turned around daily. An…

Reader: No Sauces Need Apply for a Quality Steak!

Gretchen Kurtz recently visited Butcher’s Bistro, where a butcher’s counter up-front displays the cut of the day you may later see on your plate. But without any sauce, she writes in her review of Butcher’s Bistro, that cut looked pretty lonely. Fortunately, the restaurant has since added sauces that are…