History of Longmont
Indigenous peoples have traveled through and lived in the area where Longmont is today for uncounted thousands of years. Perhaps the best-known early group, the Clovis people, lived in northern Colorado at least 14,000 years ago. A succession of other peoples moved through Colorado, including the Folsom people around 13,000 years ago, and the Plano people about 11,000 years ago. The dry climate, however, made continuous habitation difficult, and archaeological evidence indicates the northern plains were unoccupied for centuries.The Cheyenne, Lakota, Arapaho, Kiowa, and Comanche all followed huge buffalo herds across the American Plains, spending time in Colorado each year. European explorers began encountering these tribes in what is now Colorado in the 1500s.
One of the first American explorers to reach the Longmont area was Major Stephen H. Long. The most prominent mountain in northern Colorado, Longs Peak, was named for Major Long, who reached the edge of the St. Vrain valley in 1820.
Although the Cheyenne and Arapaho had signed treaties with the U.S. government guaranteeing their right to the land, the discovery of gold in Colorado in 1858 led to a rush of miners and speculators. The miners disregarded treaty rights and set off a conflict that ended in 1868 with the military removal of Cheyenne and Arapaho peoples to reservations in Wyoming and Oklahoma.
The railroad arrived in Denver in 1870, cutting weeks off the journey from cities in the east. This led to the formation of Longmont, which began in an unusual way. In 1870, a group of prominent men in Chicago decided to start a new town in Colorado. They sold memberships in this new town, called the “Chicago-Colorado Colony.” The money raised paid for thousands of acres of land for a town site and nearby farms. They planned the town, and brought the people, lumber and building materials to the barren site. By the summer of 1871 they had built a small town and named it “Longmont,” in honor of Longs Peak, the tallest nearby mountain.
The Colony planners designed Longmont to look like many other towns in America. The original one-square-mile plan had stores along Main Street, homes arranged in a grid spreading out from Main Street and three parks in different areas of town.
While the climate of Longmont is dry, the soil is rich, and will produce excellent crops if water is brought to it. Irrigation canals, built by local farmers and later by larger organizations, ensured a steady supply of water for the fields. As the town grew, large-scale agricultural industries arrived, first flour mills in 1872, then the Empson vegetable cannery in 1889. The construction of a sugar factory in 1903 on the east edge of town provided another key industry, soon called the Great Western Sugar Co. With enough labor to tend them, sugar beets grew well in northeastern Colorado because of the availability of irrigation water.
The need for labor in the sugar beet fields attracted many people. People came from Sweden, Norway, and Denmark and settled northwest of Longmont. Russian-Germans arrived in the early 1900s. Latinos arrived from New Mexico, Texas, and Mexico. People came from Japan and moved from sugar beets to vegetable farming. All these groups continue to be an important part of Longmont’s heritage, and their descendants still live in and around Longmont.
By 1910, the population of Longmont had doubled just about every ten years since its founding. It now had 4,256 residents. Growth slowed after this, with 5,848 people recorded in the 1920 census. World War I took its toll on Longmont ‘s young men, and the names of those who died in service are recorded on a flagpole which stands today in Roosevelt Park.
In 1925, the Ku Klux Klan gained control of Longmont ‘s City Council in an election. They began construction of a large pork-barrel project, Chimney Rock Dam, above Lyons and marched up and down Main Street in their costumes. In the 1927 election they were voted out of office, and their influence soon declined. Work on Chimney Rock Dam was abandoned as unfeasible, although its foundations are still visible in the St. Vrain River.
The Great Depression from 1929 to 1939 affected the whole world, including Longmont. Prolonged drought during the 1930s dried out the soil of the Great Plains. Windstorms picked up huge quantities of dust, and black dust clouds towered over Longmont. The drought eased by the late 1930s, and the economy improved. Only the United States’ entry into World War II in 1941 finally ended the Great Depression in this country.
More than 2,000 people from Longmont fought in World War II. Women worked in factories and offices in place of men who were overseas fighting. The sugar beet harvest was considered crucial to the war effort, and Japanese-Americans who had been imprisoned on the West Coast came to Colorado to work in the sugar beet fields. After the war ended, many stayed in Colorado. Prisoners of war from Germany and Italy also worked in the beet fields.
In 1950, the population of Longmont was about 8,000, and the economy was based primarily on agriculture. During the 1950s, the economy of the Colorado Front Range began to shift to high technology, and those changes soon impacted Longmont. Mayor Ralph Price, foreseeing a need for more water for a thirsty town, spearheaded the construction of Button Rock Dam in 1969, built seven miles upstream from Lyons on the North St. Vrain river. It paid for itself almost immediately, holding what could have been a disastrous flood in check, and filling the reservoir in a few days rather than the years it was projected to take.
In 1962, the U.S. government built an air traffic control center in Longmont. Three years later, IBM built a large facility seven miles from town. Longmont, which had grown only slightly beyond its original square mile plan since 1871, doubled in size between 1960 and 1970, and again between 1970 and 1980.
Events in the 1970s and 1980s forced Longmont residents to re-examine their community. Two of Longmont ‘s long-time employers, the Kuner-Empson vegetable cannery and the Great Western Sugar factory, closed in the 1970s, leaving fewer links with Longmont ‘s agricultural heritage. On August 14, 1980, a Longmont police officer shot and killed two Latino residents, Juan Louis Garcia and Jeff Cordova, during an altercation that followed a traffic stop. This tragedy forced the Latino and Anglo communities to work together to prevent further violence. It led to massive changes in police training and the founding of El Comite, an organization devoted to improving relations.
Recessions and cutbacks at IBM and StorageTek, a computer storage company founded by several ex-IBM employees, slowed growth during the 1980s. Rapid growth resumed in the 1990s. The 2000 census measured Longmont ‘s population at 71,093, a jump of nearly 20,000 since 1990. Growth in high-technology businesses continued throughout the 2000s.
In September 2013, a major flood struck Colorado’s Front Range, with serious impact to Longmont. Both the St. Vrain River and Left Hand Creek overflowed into neighborhoods and business districts. Rebuilding and restoration began immediately. The ongoing Resilient St. Vrain Project is designed to protect Longmont from future floods and improve the river corridor in the community.
Longmont developed a municipal broadband internet service called NextLight between 2014 and 2016, which is consistently ranked as one of the fastest in the nation. The 2020 census recorded Longmont’s population as 98,885, with the town passing 100,000 residents shortly afterward. In 2021, Longmont honored its 150th anniversary and reconnected with an important part of its heritage by signing an historic Sister City agreement with the Northern Arapaho, the first such agreement between a city and a sovereign nation.
Timeline
1800 –Â Arapaho Indians move into the area from further north, often hunting and camping in the St. Vrain Valley.
1820 –Â Major Stephen H. Long leads an expedition for the U. S. Topographical Engineers along the South Platte, draws first maps of region.
1838 –Â Bent, St. Vrain & Co. build a trading fort near where a creek or small river flows into the South Platte. Trappers begin to call it St. Vrain’s creek.
1860 –Â Alonzo N. Allen moves his partially completed cabin from east of Boulder to the St. Vrain valley, near the confluence of St. Vrain and Left Hand creeks.
1861-70Â Town of Burlington grows up around the Burlington Stage stop, where the Overland Stage crosses the St. Vrain. (Overland Stage route is modern U. S. 287, Main Street in Longmont).
1870 –Â The Denver Pacific and the Kansas Pacific railroads reach Denver, making travel to Colorado much easier.
1871 –Â The Chicago-Colorado Colony chooses a location, plats the original square mile and settles their new town, naming it Longmont. Residents of Burlington move themselves and most of the buildings to Longmont, about a quarter mile north.
1873 –Â The Colorado Central Railroad begins service from Golden to Longmont.
1876 –Â Colorado becomes a state.
1879 –Â Fire destroys the east side of the 300 block of Main Street in Longmont. The downtown is rebuilt in brick.
1889 –Â John H. Empson opens the J. H. Empson Cannery in Longmont, canning peas and other vegetables.
1898 –Â J. C. Penney opens a meat market on Main Street. After failing in this business, he worked for T. M. Callahan’s Golden Rule Store in Longmont. Ultimately, Penney would set up a Golden Rule Store in Kemmerer, Wyoming that would be the beginning of his retail empire.
1899 –Â The first official Pumpkin Pie Day for which Longmont became famous, baking 10,000 pies for people coming from all across the Front Range. The original Pumpkin Pie Days were held from 1899-1915.
1900 –Â Theodore Roosevelt makes a campaign stop in Longmont.
1903 –Â The Longmont Sugar Factory built. Soon renamed the Great Western Sugar factory, it played a vital role in farming and the development of Longmont.
1905 –Â Masonic Temple on Main Street burns down, but the Dickens Opera House next door is saved. The Masonic Temple would be rebuilt.
1908 –Â Longmont High School “Beetdiggers” became the “World Champion Interscholastic Football Team” beating Chicago’s Englewood High in a Christmas Day game in Denver.
1912 –Â Longmont builds a hydropower plant on the North St. Vrain river, providing reliable electric power to its residents.
1913 –Â The Carnegie library in Longmont opens at 4th Ave. and Kimbark St. Also, the greatest snow in the history of the area occurs.
1918 –Â Great influenza epidemic forces City Council to ban public gatherings, but many Longmont residents die in spite of precautions.
1923 – During one of the uglier times in Colorado history, the Ku Klux Klan takes power across much of the state. Local voters elect a Klan-aligned majority in the Longmont City Council. The Council begins ousting longtime City officials and replacing them with Klan members.
We acknowledge this period in Longmont, when some community leaders openly discriminated against and intimidated Catholics, Jews, Blacks, Latinos, and immigrants, in the aim of naming and bringing to light painful parts of our community’s past. Our hope is that by doing so we can prevent this type of hatred from returning in the future.
1926 – City Council, controlled by the Klan, votes to build Chimney Rock Dam, a combination water storage and hydropower project, located just above the existing Longmont Dam on the North St. Vrain. Cost estimates rise from $85,000 to $350,000.
1927 – All Klan-aligned candidates for City Council are defeated in the April election, and construction is halted on Chimney Rock Dam.
1930s –Â Many area farms go bankrupt during the Great Depression.
1941-1945Â Longmont citizens serve around the world during World War II. In Longmont, the Great Western Sugar dormitory at 3rd Ave. and Kimbark St. is converted to house Italian and German POWs who then worked on area farms.
1946 –Â Gibson Manufacturing Co. opens a tractor factory in Longmont, the first new heavy industry to locate in Longmont in over forty years. Production of Gibson tractors ceases, however, in 1952.
1950 –Â Longmont’s population is 8,099.
1955 –Â A United Airlines DC-6B airplane crashes eight miles northeast of Longmont, killing all 44 aboard. Subsequent investigations showed that it was brought down by a bomb in a suitcase.
1960 –Â Longmont’s population is 11,489.
1961 –Â City Charter adopted and Longmont becomes a home-rule city.
1962 –Â The Federal Aviation Administration opens an air traffic control center in northwest Longmont.
1965 –Â IBM announces construction of a large plant between Boulder and Longmont, accelerating the pace of growth and the shift of the economic base from agriculture to high technology.
1970 –Â Longmont’s population is 23,209, double that of ten years earlier. The Kuner-Empson cannery closes.
1972-5Â “Project 75” complex at 3rd Ave and Kimbark Street opens, including a new library, Civic Center and police station.
1975 –Â Longmont native Vance Brand flies on the Apollo-Soyuz mission which linked Soviet and American spacecraft.
1977 –Â Closing of the Great Western Sugar Factory in Longmont.
1980 –Â Longmont’s population is 42,942, almost double that of ten years earlier. On August 14, Longmont police officer Glenn Herner shoots and kills two men, Juan Garcia and Jeff Cordova, during an altercation after a traffic stop. Herner was later acquitted of manslaughter charges. The aftermath of this tragedy led to massive changes in police training and to the founding of El Comite, an organization focused on building connections in the community.
1986 –Â Twin Peaks Mall opens.
1990 –Â Longmont’s population is 51,524.
1993 –Â Construction of a new Library and a new Safety & Justice Center.
2000 –Â Longmont’s population is 71,093.
2002 –Â Construction of a new Recreation Center, a Museum & Cultural Center, and improvements to Roosevelt Park completed.
2010Â – Longmont’s population is 86,270
2011Â – Closing of the Butterball turkey processing plant, the last major agricultural industry in Longmont.
2013 –Â A major flood damages homes, businesses, and roads in Longmont and across the Front Range.
2015 – Village at the Peaks dining and shopping area opens, replacing Twin Peaks Mall.
2020 – COVID-19 pandemic forces stay-at-home orders and a lengthy global shutdown.