This March 1973 photo shows a row of shops and businesses on the west side of Broadway between Canyon Boulevard and Walnut Street. Courtesy of the Carnegie Library, Schoolland Collection

Much has been written about changes in downtown Boulder, especially on Pearl Street. Some of those changes may show up in upcoming stories. Today’s story, though, takes us back to the late 1960s and early 1970s on Broadway between Canyon Boulevard and Pearl Street — a part of Boulder that has gotten little attention from historians.

In 1965, the Public Service Company of Colorado (now a subsidiary of Xcel Energy) built a then-contemporary office building on the northwest corner of Broadway and Canyon. Between the Public Service building (out of view in the above photo) and Walnut Street was a colorfully painted string of small frame buildings that, by 1973, included Octopus Waterbeds, Raven Book Store, The Letterhead (specializing in silk-screened T-shirts), Folk Arts Music and Leather Supply (providing banjo lessons), Carl’s Hobby Shop, Carnival Café, the Orangutang (selling handcrafted children’s toys) and a tailor shop on the former site of Eads News.

“Life is a Carnival,” proclaimed a banner in the Carnival Café. A group of friends had opened the vegetarian co-op in 1972, and it quickly became the center of Boulder’s alternative community. A newspaper reporter at the time noted that the owners shared expenses and kept their prices low. Meals included generous amounts of grains and vegetables, with fresh-squeezed carrot juice. No one was out to make a profit, and all dinners were under $2.

A frequent turnover of tenants moved in and out of the aging buildings that likely dated from 1913, after similar buildings were destroyed in a major fire. Included, before the fire, were grocery, shoe and piano stores, as well as the Boulder Electric and Power Company, where the fire was thought to have started.

The 1913 buildings remained essentially unchanged until 1976, when the small buildings were demolished and replaced by the Randolph Center (a commercial/office complex that includes a parking garage). Not everyone liked it.

“Whose stroke of genius was it to put the beautiful parking structure on the corner of Broadway and Walnut?” wrote a disgruntled Boulder resident in a letter to the editor of the Daily Camera in 1977. “Carl’s Hobby Shop and the Carnival Café were definite improvements over this progressive piece of junk. Since this concrete puzzle has been under construction, the whole town’s face has changed.”

The Public Service building also received its fair share of criticism. In 1991, it was purchased by a partnership led by the W.W. Reynolds Companies. The new owners replaced the 1960s-era building with modern residential condos and commercial office space.

This July 1966 view looks north on Broadway from Walnut Street. Courtesy of the Carnegie Library, Schoolland Collection
The 1900 block of Broadway, from Walnut Street to the Pearl Street Mall (built in 1977), as it appears today. Credit: Silvia Pettem

Continuing north from Walnut Street on Broadway’s west side was the Firestone Tire store. At the time, four tires sold for $85. Farther north was the Boulder Sporting Goods store, as well as Portraits by Hans (a photography studio), the Home Savings and Loan Association, and Valentine’s Hardware (in the Boettcher Building that faces Pearl Street).

The most familiar-looking building on the block is the Broadway Building, on the southeast corner of Broadway and Pearl Street. Built in 1921 as the First National Bank building (facing Pearl), it has retail space on the first floor with offices above. As shown in the 1966 photo, Worth Mart (the new name, at the time, for F.W. Woolworth Co. stores) occupied the first floor.

F.W. Woolworth (formerly next door at 1206 Pearl Street) had expanded into the bank building in 1957, when the First National Bank moved to its new building on the northeast corner of Broadway and Canyon.

History is a continuum and is constantly evolving. Next time you’re stuck in traffic, look around and reflect on the past. It may just change again.

Above is the First National Bank at its new Broadway and Canyon location in 1972. Its former location, in the Broadway Building, is visible on the far left. Courtesy Carnegie Library, Schoolland collection
The same view today, showing the east side of Broadway between Canyon Boulevard and the Pearl Street Mall. The small shops between the Broadway Building and Walnut Street were demolished to make way for a parking lot. Credit: Silvia Pettem

Silvia Pettem has spent decades researching and writing about Boulder County history. She's also the author of more than 20 books, including Separate Lives: Uncovering the Hidden Family of Victorian Professor Mary Rippon; In Search of the Blonde Tigress: The Untold Story of Eleanor Jarman; and Someone's Daughter: In Search of Justice for Jane Doe, Updated Edition. Silvia's goal for her history column is to offer readers new perspectives on Boulder and the world around them and leave them with an appreciation of the past. She welcomes reader comments and questions and can be reached at silviapettem@gmail.com.

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42 Comments

  1. Moved to Boulder in the fall of 1975 to go to graduate school. I actually remember some of those buildings now that I see the photos. Thanks.

  2. My family moved here in 1960 and loved Pearl street’s shops, especially the “covered wagon” interior of the restaurant on the south side of Pearl just east of Broadway. My mother worked at J C Penney for many years before moving to Crossroads. Also on Broadway just north of the 1st Natl bank was Jolly Rancher candy store. Excided to read more on Pearl Street before the “Mall”, Wonderful stories to be told. Thank you

      1. Wow, blast from the past! My mama also worked at JC Penney on Pearl, and later at the crossroads mall. My sisters worked at Tyler’s, and I later worked at the original Gondolier on Broadway…

        1. When I was a student at CU and living in Sewall Hall, Sundays were the cooks’ night off. So, every Sunday, my friends and I would walk down to the Gondolier for dinner. Maybe we have met….

  3. I moved here in 2012 so these are new to me but I love seeing the history! My Mom went to CU in the 70’s so I’ll have to pass this article on to her. Keep it up!

    1. Great, thanks…. Let your mom know that on the BRL home page, there’s a pull-down menu for “Local History.”

  4. I got here in 1969 as a freshman at CU. I would get my kite supplies at Carls. Had everything I needed.

    1. Saspeaking of Carl’s, I was there one day and a hippie chick came in and bought a case of model glue, and I thought, wow, she is building a bunch of models!

  5. I was born in 1952 at Community Hospital when was in North Boulder. One of my earlest memories is when I llived by 17th and Pearl, there was a drug store o the corner. Rexall or something. On the side of the store there was a painted thermometer that showed the population of Boulder
    My earliest memory seemed like either 17,000 or 27,000. (Long tme ago, maybe it was more, but I thought it was cool) That corner was I think the starting point of the parade every year. Little Britches Rodeo parade?

    1. Interesting that several readers of this column remember that drug store. As to the population of Boulder, the federal census in 1950 counted 19,999 residents. By 1960, it had almost doubled. You might be thinking of the Pow Wow Rodeo parade.

  6. I’m also remembering the SE side of Walnut and Broadway and the wide stairs up to Eads News where people sat to read their just-purchased newspapers and magazines.
    A comment refers to the covered wagon sign at Tyler’s Downtowner, which I believe was run by Chuck Tyler (cook and artist) who also operated other breakfast joints
    ( Village,North Boulder). He might be a good subject for afuture article.
    Thanks

    1. Yes, Eads News was a popular place. According to city directories, at one time it was on the west side of Broadway, and then the shop moved across the street to the east side. Tyler’s Downtowner (with Bruce Tyler as owner) was at 1234 Pearl. Thanks for the suggestion for future articles.

      1. When Eads was on the east side, I would transfer from the bus coming from north Broadway to the bus that ran out east!

  7. Thanks for your reply concerning the “covered wagon” decor restaurant, they had the best fried chicken dinner that we always ordered. Almost as good as Mom’s but close.

  8. Ah ~ One of my favorite memories of Boulder was spending time at Rocky Mountain Records and Tapes. A great place operated by John Netter and his Team. A place to “Chill” when vinyl was King ->

    1. Keep the stories coming in… We’ll get to Rocky Mountain Records and Tapes in a Pearl Street article. Not sure when that will be, but I have a feeling there will be more than one.

    2. Didn’t they have a large talking bird in RMT&R? I can still see the layout—lots of room to flip through the records in their categories. My sister Gretchen worked there for years.

  9. I was Born in Boulder in 1950. My father & my dentist both had offices in the First National Bank building with windows that faced across Broadway to the East side of Valentine’s Hardware (in the Boettcher Building). There was a large map of Boulder County on the East wall of Valentine’s Hardware. In the early fifties it also had a sign showing the population of Boulder was 19,999. My father always told me that I raised the population to 20,000.

    1. Thanks for mentioning the map and population info. That was before my time in Boulder, but much of the wall of the Boettcher Building –– from the 1920s to the 1950s — was covered with (painted with) the map and also “Interesting Facts.” I’ll do a story on that, too.

  10. Do you remember a small little restaurant called the little kitchen that was owned by my grandmother, Mae Myer?

    1. I do remember “The Little Kitchen”, I think it was originally near the National Bank Building, but latter moved over to the N side of Spruce, just west of the Boulderado Hotel in the late ’50s or early 60’s.

    2. Interesting….. I looked this up in a couple of Boulder City Directories from the 1960s, and it was at 1843 Broadway –– on the site of the Carnival Cafe. It was in that same storefront …. all since replaced by the Randolph Center. More research at Carnegie Library (in city directories and phone books) is needed to see if it moved somewhere else afterwards.

  11. I was born at Boulder Community Hospital in 1955. I remember many of the businesses in the photos. My dad worked for NBS and my parents banked at First National Bank.

  12. The east side of Broadway between Walnut and Pearl had the Jolly Rancher candy story on the corner of Broadway and Walnut. It was in the gray building in 1972 photo, although the candy store was gone by the 1970s. Next door was a a stationary story owned by the Brassels (not spelled correctly).

    1. Thanks for this new information. I did find the “Boulder Jolly Rancher,” in 1956, at 1900 Broadway — southeast corner of Broadway and Walnut, as noted. By 1963 it was called the “Candy Box.”

  13. I would buy my cigarettes at Eads News and Buff Smoke Shop on the east side of Broadway. They let me have an open account at the age of 16! That’s also where you could buy a Sunday New York Times. I also bought used records at Duck Soup also on the east side of Broadway. Thanks for the vintage photos. BHS class of ‘71.

    1. I’d have to look up the date, but I believe the first manager of Tico’s was Victor Warren Fabrizio.

  14. Thank you…. That is not the name I was thinking and then again, I am not sure if the man I was thinking of was the manager. Thank you for your time and don’t waste any more for me …. I was just curious. This is a fun place… THANKS

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