|
About Broomfield
QUICK FACTS:
The city of Broomfield is located 17 miles
northwest of Denver.
The population according to the 2000 U.S.
Census was 38,272.
Broomfield is a rapidly growing city as its
population increased 53.3% over a 10-year period from 1990 to 2000.
It covers nearly 37 square miles.
|
MAP
OF BROOMFIELD

CLICK MAP TO INCREASE SIZE |
The City and
County of Broomfield is an exceptionally prized home to her residents
who take pride in the hometown values and atmosphere they have worked to
create. Born in the latter quarter of the Nineteenth Century, Broomfield
began as an agrarian community, with hard-working, community-oriented
families who located here on the heels of those adventurous gold-seekers
seeking their fortunes and hoping to strike gold in Colorado’s
wilderness.
Dryland
farms dotted the landscape in the late 1800s, and in 1885 when Adolph
Zang bought the area in the vicinity of 120th and Olde Wadsworth, the
train stop there became known as Zang’s Spur, memorializing the spur off
of the main railroad line where locally grown grains would be loaded
into railroad cars for delivery to the Zang Brewing Co. in Denver.
Ultimately, Zang bought 4,000 acres of land in the area for his Elmwood
Stock Farm where he bred Percheron horses, and tended fruit orchards.
Tenant farmers worked half the land in dryland crops and half in
irrigated farming, and there are reports of a large turkey operation on
the southwest portion of the property. Zang’s land of yesteryear is
today’s Broomfield.
At the turn of the century, Broomfield
itself was a little town in the area around 120th Ave. and Wadsworth.
Grain elevators, a grocery, hotel, bank and other thriving businesses
drew the farmers in the area together. Their sense of community resulted
in the organization of the Crescent Grange in 1898. This organization
brought area residents together for diverse activities including a
petition for postal service, arrangements to buy clothing at reduced
prices, insurance, programs and social activities. Today’s Broomfield
looks forward to expanding retail operations, multiple social and
cultural activities and a solid economic base in the high-tech industry
locating in new and beautiful business parks.
Ever a master-planned community,
today’s Broomfield has developed beyond Zang’s 4,000 acres. In the 1950s
Broomfield began during a growth boom when developers decided to build
the state’s first dream community. The city’s forefathers consciously
planned the city’s growth. That tradition has continued, and the
Broomfield of 1999 is governed by a Master Plan that projects its
population at build-out to be 65,000. Beautiful, close-knit
neighborhoods mark a true sense of community among the residents of
Broomfield. Residents, city government, schools and businesses work
together constantly to keep our city a place where people can live, work
and play.
Broomfield is a real community -- the
way it’s supposed to be.
’Way Back When . . .
Thousands of years ago from the molten
rock of a new planet, the area around Broomfield knew the upheavals that
created the Rocky Mountains to the west. Ancient animals roamed the
area, becoming the fossils that draw paleontologists to the vicinity
today. Down through the centuries, glaciers and floods carved the area
into the plains that produced rolling pastures that became drawing cards
for deer, elk and bison. These game animals drew Native Americans to the
area: Apaches, Cheyenne and Arapaho, nomads who foraged and hunted as
they followed the migrating game.
"Modern" history brought the area
around Broomfield into the United States in 1803 as part of the
Louisiana Purchase. The area was successively recognized as part of the
Missouri Territory, Nebraska and Kansas until 1861 when the Colorado
Territory was created. In 1876, the Broomfield area officially joined
the union when Colorado became a state.
Pike’s Peak to the south, Mount Evans
to the west, Long’s Peak to the northwest and the vast plains on the
east bound the area which has become known as Broomfield. In the
territorial days, trappers and traders survived on the hides of beaver
and the meat and hides of the bison. They were followed by people who
succumbed to "Gold Fever" after the 1849 discovery of gold in
California, the 1850 discovery in Ralston Creek south of Broomfield in
what is now Arvada, and the 1859 discovery in Boulder Creek. The
westward migration was on in earnest. Railroad companies gobbled up the
West through the beneficence of the U.S. government and Broomfield’s
destiny was begun.
In 1873 the Colorado Central Railroad
brought a line north from Golden. This line ran approximately where the
south frontage road of U.S. 36 runs, and swerved south toward Golden
east of Wadsworth Blvd. On the north, it connected with the Union
Pacific in Cheyenne, Wyo. The Denver, Utah and Pacific Railroad first
laid down rails in 1881 in the area now in the vicinity of 120th Ave.
and Wadsworth. The company completed a line to Lyons, northwest of
Boulder, by absorbing the Colorado Northern Railroad line between Erie
and Canfield, a small town west of Erie. When the Burlington and
Missouri River Railroad began backing the Denver, Utah and Pacific in
1889, the railroad was converted to a standard gauge rail.
After years of mergers, acquisitions,
name changes and changes in control, two railroad companies, the Union
Pacific and the Colorado and Southern, emerged. In 1901, the Colorado
and Southern added a third rail from Denver to Boulder to allow narrow
gauge trains to operate over the existing tracks.
In 1904, the Colorado and Southern
formed the Denver and Interuban Railway, and by 1908, the big cars were
serving Broomfield on a regular basis, taking passengers to Denver,
Westminster, Marshall, Boulder, Superior, Valmont and Louisville on its
Main Line. By 1909, Broomfield had 19 passengers per day coming through
town, prompting construction of a new depot which stood at the corner of
present-day 120th Ave. and Old Wadsworth. In 1909, it was possible to
board in Broomfield for almost any point in the U.S., Canada or Mexico.
But Broomfield’s foray into international travel was short-lived. In
1919, the third rail to Boulder was removed. In 1926, the Interurban
ceased operation, and the era of the "horseless carriage" began.
Soon, Broomfield had a garage, then
two, and a "filling station." They joined the Grange Hall, a hotel and
general store, flour mill, cheese factory, bank, creamery, grain
elevator, restaurants, lumber yard and a barbershop. In the 1920s, the
area also boasted a sugar beet dump, a pickle factory and about a dozen
residences. From 1900 to 1957, about 100 people lived on farmland in the
area.
In 1950, construction began on the
Boulder Turnpike, a toll road, and one of the first paved roads in the
area. It stretched between Wadsworth and Boulder, with a tollbooth in
Broomfield. The road’s cost was paid by the tolls. In 1955, the new
Broomfield began. Turnpike Land Co. had purchased land in the area, and
today’s Broomfield was conceived as a master planned community billed as
a model city.
The rest, as they say, is history.
The first filing -- that area north of
120th between Main St. and U.S. 287 -- was built, elementary school
classes were held in "cottage schools" built by the developers, and a
shopping center sprouted where a lake had once stood in the area which
is now home to Target.
By 1961 when the city incorporated, the
population had grown to 6,000. Emerald School was up and running, as was
Kohl School. In 1962, a school serving junior and senior high school
students opened, and a gym was added in 1964. The high school was begun
in 1963, and classes started in the fall of 1964. These schools still
stand, and after several remodels, they were combined into the current
Broomfield High School in use today. Birch School was built in 1971 and
opened in the fall of that year. Broomfield Heights Middle School opened
in 1982.
In 1974, the city passed its charter
and became a home-rule city adopting the Council-Manager form of
government, with an elected mayor and city council, and a professional
city manager.
Broomfield continued its growth,
annexing south into Jefferson County in1969, east of Main St. in 1969,
Greenway Park in 1970, into a small portion of Adams County in 1971 and
the Westlake Village subdivision in 1972. In 1988 and 1989, the city
annexed north into Weld County, thus spanning portions of four counties.
Schools in the Broomfield portions of
those counties are served by several school districts. In the Adams
County portion, new schools opened in the mid-1970s: Centennial
Elementary and Westlake Village Middle School . Mountain View Elementary
opened in the early 1980s. High school students in the Adams County
portion of Broomfield currently attend Northglenn or Horizon high
schools.
Portions of what is now Interlocken
joined the city in 1983 and 1986, and Broomfield’s premier employment
center began. Access to the area improved with 1995 annexations along
96th St., and the completion of the 96th St. interchange in 1996, built
with public and private funds. The promise of a bright future continued
with the 1996 announcement that high-tech giant SUN Microsystems was
coming to Broomfield, followed by notice of Level 3’s intentions in the
spring of 1998. The 1998 groundbreaking of Flatiron Crossing, an upscale
shopping area, assured Broomfield of a long-anticipated retail sales tax
base. More business opportunities for the city expanded when properties
near the mall site and the new interchange annexed for mixed-use
commercial development in 1998.
In the late 1990s, Broomfield made
history. To help alleviate the problems and confusion in accessing
services with the City of Broomfield being the only city in the state to
lie in portions of four counties, residents sought relief in a
constitutional amendment creating a City and County of Broomfield. The
amendment passed on November 3, 1998, giving the city a three-year
transition period in which to organize to become Colorado’s 64th county.
The state’s newest county -- The City and County of Broomfield --
officially took effect on November 15, 2001.
The Broomfield City and County Building
sits at an elevation of 5,344 feet, more than a mile above sea level!
INFORMATION COURTESY OF THE CITY AND
COUNTY OF BROOMFIELD |