People

Collection for person entities.


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Andrew Watson
Member of the band Freeway Donna.
Andy Bartlett
A Potato grower near Montrose, Colorado in the early Twentieth century.
Andy Daly
Andrew Patrick “Andy” Daly was born 10 June 1946 in Andover, Essex County, Massachusetts to Rowana Bell and Joseph Leo Daly. In 1968, he earned a B.S. from the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia. After moving to Colorado in 1969, Daly was a member of the ski patrol and trail crew at Aspen Highlands. In 1972, Daly worked on the Copper Mountain ski patrol, and by 1982, he was the ski resort’s President and Chief Executive Officer (CEO). In 1980, Daly earned an M.B.A. from the University of Denver. Between 1992 and 1996, Andy Daly was President and CEO of Vail Associates and subsequently captained Vail Resorts until 2002. The year 1998 marked the Two Elk fires atop Vail Mountain. According to members of The Family, a spin-off group of the Earth Liberation Front, the arson-determined fires protested the U.S. Forest Service allowance of Vail’s expansion into critical Canadian lynx habitat in Blue Sky Basin. Daly was credited with rallying the community and VR employees during the tragic destruction of the Two Elk holdings. Over the years, Andy Daly also held ski area leadership positions with Beaver Creek, Lake Eldora, Ski Broadmoor and Powderhorn. In 2000, Daly was inducted into the Colorado Ski Hall of Fame at the Colorado Snowsports Museum as a Sport Builder. He has served on numerous boards including the Vail Valley Foundation, Jimmie Heuga Foundation, Ski Club Vail, American Ski Federation, US Ski and Snowboard Association and National Ski Areas Association. Daly also served on the Vail Town Council and two terms as Mayor: 2007 to 2009 and 2011 to 2015.
Andy J. Gallegos
He was born in Southern Colorado in 1893. He married Anna (Garcia) Gallegos in 1913. Together they moved to Gunnison and then to Paonia in 1920. He sheered sheep, worked in the coal mines at Somerset, worked for the Denver & Rio Grande Railroad and broke wild horses. In her interview, his wife Anna Gallegos describes him as macho, and says he suffered broken bones while working with horses because he was always willing to take a dare.
Andy Mill
A product of the Aspen Ski Club of the 1960s, Andy Mill worked his way onto the U.S Ski Team, becoming one of the most decorated Alpine ski racers to come out of Aspen. Born in Fort Collins, Colorado, Mill came from humble beginnings. His father managed a lumber yard in Laramie and Andy and his siblings were exposed to skiing in Wyoming’s Medicine Bow mountains. It wasn’t until his father was relocated to Aspen in the 1960s that Andy found himself in the heart of ski racing, the site of the 1950 World Championships, home of the Roch Cup and one of the most notorious downhill race courses in the world. Mill was an accomplished junior racer and made the U.S. Ski Team in 1971, and in 1974, Mill competed at the World Championships in St. Moritz, Switzerland. For the next seven years he was America’s top downhill racer. In the mid-1970s, Mill was nicknamed “Wilde Hund” (wild dog) by Europeans for his gritty style and long hair and beard. In Aspen the kids called him the “Downhill Jesus” because of his signature beard and long hair. Mill’s finest hour in skiing was at the 1976 Winter Olympics in Innsbruck, Austria, where he placed sixth in the downhill at Patscherkofel, a race that was dramatically won by Austria’s Franz Klammer. Mill’s finish was the best by an American in the men’s downhill in 24 years. Mill narrowly missed medaling while skiing on a severely injured leg and ankle. In fact, his lower right leg was so badly bruised from a training injury that he could not stand without pain the day before the race. In order to compete, he froze his leg in the snow minutes before entering the starting gate. As a result he was honored with the “Olympic Spirit Award.” After his retirement from ski racing he continued to support world class ski racing in Aspen. He has worked to raise money for the Aspen Ski Club’s scholarship fund and has been inducted into the Colorado Ski Hall of Fame and the Aspen Valley Ski Club Hall of Fame. Mill enjoyed a 20-year broadcasting career, covering two Olympics and hundreds of network specials. He also produced a how-to skiing series called “Skiing With Andy Mill” and he was often seen at starting gates and finish lines cheerleading and helping to provide color commentary about his fellow teammates and their competitors from all over the world. As if becoming the best in skiing wasn’t enough, Mill’s passion turned to tarpon fly fishing after his retirement from decades on the snow. Fly fishing had always been on Andy’s radar. Even as a young boy in Aspen he worked as a guide at a local fly fishing shop and took every opportunity he could to fish the Roaring Fork and Frying Pan rivers near Aspen. He often took a rod and reel with him as he traveled with the U.S. Ski Team. He has won more Tarpon Gold Cups, the Superbowl of tarpon fishing, than anyone in the world. He has hosted an outdoor fishing show on the OLN network, is a trustee of the International Game Fish Association and has also written an award-winning book entitled “A Passion for Tarpon.” So whether it’s looking down the sheer ice face of the Hahnenkamm or into the eyes of a fighting tarpon, Andy Mill has made the community of Aspen proud to call him one of us. -- Aspen Hall of Fame bio.
Andy Ranson
Contributor to "Being Here: A Gunnison Valley Journal," born in Gunnison, CO, graduate of Gunnison High School, went on to become an opera singer (source: Being Here: A Gunnison Valley Journal)

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