On April 29th, 2018, Eagle Valley Library District and the Eagle County Historical Society will host its 17th Annual Nimon-Walker Award. The Nimon-Walker Award was created in 2001 to honor those who have made extraordinary efforts to preserve the history of Eagle County. Past honorees vary in topic and size, from family photographs, to rebuilding historic waterwheels. Enjoy this collection looking back through the Nimon-Walker Award's previous winners, and most importantly, this year's honoree: long-time local rancher, Verne Albertson.
This year's honoree is Verne Albertson, long-time local and new author. Albertson compiled stories of his childhood growing up in rural Burns, Colorado, in the 1940s. Albertson's book, entitled "Beanies, Stick Horses, Marbles, & Mean Chickens: Growing Up in Burns, Colorado in the 1940s" captures a moment in time that many have forgotten or many in the valley never knew was here. It may be difficult to picture now, but Burns was once a bustling ranching area, with its own stockyard and schools. To read the history of Burns and the Albertsons is to read a list of names and places that have become enshrined in valley history: Nottinghams, Gates, railroads, stockyards, homesteading, and sets a dramatic scene for a transformation of our valley that was just around the bend.
Verne isn't the first author in his family: his uncle, Orris, wrote down his memories of Burns and a history of homesteads in the area in the 1990s. Joe Albertson, Verne's father, also wrote down his own story which he entitled "The Making of A Cattleman”. Verne donated this to the library around the same time he figured out that it was his turn to try this ‘author’ gig. All three books are available at the Eagle library and online!, This is a temporary collection created for the 2018 Nimon-Walker Award event.
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Historical Perspective: Eagle County
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This piece originally appeared in the Eagle Valley Enterprise as two articles, one published in November of 1980 and the other in January 1981. Roberta Depp has written several pieces of the early history of Eagle and Eagle County and was the recipient of the Nimon-Walker Award presented by EVLD and Eagle County Historical Society.
Depp provides another voice into the businesses, people, and beginnings of the town of Eagle. Street maps and clippings from early editions of the Eagle Valley Enterprise are used to illustrate important events and names as they were described at the time.
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History of Early Homesteads in Burns
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Orris Albertson, born and raised in the Eagle Valley and Burns area, describes a history of early homesteaders in this northern area of Eagle County. Albertson traces ranches and families as they grow, trade, and develop including his own family members.
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Nottingham Clan
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The Nottingham clan after the Nimon-Walker Award ceremony 2014 at the Eagle Public Library. The family was acknowledged for the many years of effort by generations of Nottinghams that have preserved local history in Avon and Eagle County.
Bottom row, left to right: Allan and C.C. Nottingham, Millie Nottingham (wife of Arnold), Mauri and Nancy Nottingham (in maroon vest).
Second row: Jan Attoma and husband Tere Nottingham (plaid shirt, Allan's son), Pat Nottingham (in dark suit, Allan and Cece's son), Keller Woodworth and Aiden Woodworth (in white shirts, sons of Shelly Nottingham, grandsons of Mauri and Nancy).
Third row: April Nottingham (Allan's daughter), Connie Lundgren Morgan (blue shirt, black sweater) and her sister, Beverly Lundgren McGee (standing slightly behind, in blue jacket; both daughters of Claire Nottingham Lundgren), Kathy Doll (daughter of Imogene Nottingham Doll and Frank Doll, peeking from behind Morgan), and Morgan Underwood (daughter of Tamra Nottingham Underwood and granddaughter of Mauri and Nancy).
Fourth row: Kim Nottingham (Mauri and Nancy's daughter), Brian Nottingham (Allan's son) and wife Karen, Shelly Nottingham Woodworth (checked jacket, Mauri and Nancy's daughter), and Sharon Doll (daughter of Imogene Nottingham Doll and Frank Doll).
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