"A Look Back"

    The Stories presented here are about people and events during the early days when this corner of Colorado was first settled.

    Other stories in the "A Look Back" series:

  • "Bad Man" Bob Meldrum
  • 509 Yampa – Standing the test of time
  • 595 Colorado Street
  • Al Martinez – a man of faith and leadership
  • Architect turned homesteader – L. A. Heard
  • Attractive New Filling Station Nearly Finished
  • Augusta Wallihan
  • Bringing a touch of class to Northwest Colorado
  • Byron Cooper – A man of integrity
  • Charles and Effie Osborn
  • Christian Church of Craig – up from the ashes
  • Christina Murray – last and first
  • Cosgriff Hotel
  • Craig airport an important part of city’s history
  • Craig Armory building an important part of history
  • Craig Becomes An Official Town
  • Craig Bottling Works
  • Craig drugstores
  • Craig Motel
  • Craig, Colorado The First Twenty Years
  • Craig’s Early Gas Stations
  • Craig’s early Motels
  • Craig’s oldest continuous retail business still going strong
  • D. W. Diamond, Photographer
  • D.W. Diamond
  • Doc Montgomery Early Craig Cobbler
  • Drawing the lines of a new territory
  • Duffy Tunnel
  • Elsie Wingo
  • Ersel Deakins – A man of Craig
  • George and Julia Welch – part of Craig’s founding tapestry
  • Gregory Cash Grocery
  • Hamilton Hamlet Home to Hundreds
  • Historical Church Changes With Time
  • Historical Movers and Shakers
  • I.P. Beckett – born to lead
  • J.J. Stanton – One of Craig’s early movers
  • John and Fern Sherman
  • Joseph S. Collom, Pioneer Axial Basin Rancher
  • Joseph S. Collom, Pioneer Axial Basin Rancher
  • Julia Carpenter – Craig’s grand Lady
  • L.S. “Ted” McCandless – caring for Craig
  • Ladore Canyon Dam Project
  • Lawrence couple strong supporters of Craig
  • Lay, Colorado
  • Lewis M. Hellebust, photographer
  • Loyd DeuPree III
  • Martin Lukas – Bohemian homesteader
  • Mary Wiley Humphrey
  • Maurice Flynn heads for Hollywood…and back…and back
  • Mining something
  • Moblile Economy Run
  • Moffat County High School – history repeats itself
  • Moffat County homesteader goes to State
  • Moffat County’s railroad legacy
  • One Boy's Life
  • P. F. Kremer, Artist and Homesteader
  • Piecing together a good life
  • R.V. Bryan Helped To Lay The Foundations of Craig
  • Rangewars - Sheep Massacre on the Yampa
  • Red Wash Jones
  • Rev. J. N. Bridges
  • Rosetta Webb-McKinney – an early Craig dynamo
  • Russell Coles – Keeping the books for Moffat County
  • Sawtooth Range Riders
  • Sheep industry/Winder
  • Stoddards recorded the history of Craig as they lived it
  • Teacher brings Europe to Craig
  • The Bilsing Family
  • The Crosthwaites – providing a legacy of excellence
  • The Fuss family – Bringing the staff of life to Craig
  • The Future of Craig
  • The last of the bad good guys
  • The last passenger train to Craig
  • The Legacy of Tracy & Lant
  • The lost Freeman grave
  • The Osborn clan grows up and out
  • Tragedy at Wadge Mine Part 1
  • Tragedy At Wadge Mine Part 2
  • Tragedy At Wadge Mine Part 3
  • Tragedy At Wadge Mine Part 4
  • Tragedy At Wadge Mine Part 5
  • Tragedy At Wadge Mine Part 6
  • Victory Highway
  • W.P. Irwin – Pharmacist and friend of Craig
  • Wantland – hope or speculation?
  • Washington Held – a friend of Craig
  • William Penn Finley – Supporter of Craig and her people
  • William Terrill – keeping the peace
  • Yampa Canyon


  • Persinger sisters showed true style
    By Shannan Koucherik for the Museum of NW Colo

    TThere are many people who dream about operating their own business. Some follow through on that dream and open the doors of a business only to discover that it is a lot more work than they imagined with many challenges and demands.

    A large percentage of small businesses don’t survive two years before closing their doors. It isn’t always the biggest and showiest businesses that make the cut and survive the ups and downs of economy. Sometimes the best ones are small and modest.

    Edith Persinger was born on November 28, 1878 in Central City, Neb. She grew up watching her father manage a dry goods store and those observations would shape her entrepreneur spirit for the rest of her long life.

    She came to Craig in 1915 and took up a half section homestead in Great Divide. At first she supported herself by working in a Mt. Harris store, but within two years she struck out on her own and opened the first ladies’ ready-made clothing store in Craig. She began with modest stock, but was careful to listen to her customers’ needs and requests and the business flourished.

    As the shop grew in popularity, Edith decided that owning was better than renting and she purchased a building on Yampa Ave.

    Her sister Leafy joined her in Craig in 1924 and the two formed a partnership that would last nearly half a century to the end of their lives.

    On the 12th anniversary of the business, The Craig Empire Courier paid tribute to their determination and business acumen:

    “After twelve years of careful management The Persinger Shop is today regarded as one of Craig’s finest stores. From the beginning the store has carried only goods of high quality and has been given over exclusively to women’s and children’s wearing apparel. From all parts of Northwestern Colorado people are accustomed to come to Persinger’s to shop.

    “Far different is the store today from what it was twelve years ago when Miss Edith Persinger opened her shop in a corner of the Cowgill building…At that time it took foresight and faith in a new and undeveloped country to venture upon an enterprise which would appeal exclusively to women and children. But Miss Persinger foresaw a growth and development that she believed would justify the undertaking.” (Craig Empire Courier, February 5, 1930)

    The sisters held an attitude that can be an inspiration to small business owners today when taxes and inflation are draining away profits. The anniversary applause continued:

    “It would be wrong to assume that Miss Persinger’s business was all roses and easy successes. There were times when Miss Persinger wondered, along with other merchants of the town, whether the turn of events would make it possible to stay in business. There were years of depression when there was little money in the country, when work was scarce, when farmers were becoming discouraged, when there was talk of abandoning the Moffat road and ‘giving the country back to the Indians.’

    “It was a case where sublime faith in Moffat County’s natural resources kept things going. A few loyal people who had this faith made the necessary sacrifices, paid the taxes somehow, and weathered the hardships until gradually there dawned a new day for the Moffat country.” (ibid)

    In 1926, the Persinger sisters decided to take on a new challenge. They purchased a home west of Craig and began raising silver foxes for the burgeoning fur trade. Leafy took on the management of the animals while Edith and their younger sister Holly ran the shop.

    Holly married Victor Smith of Dixon in 1929. He was interested in aviation and went to Denver for flight school. Holly sold the shop to Lloyd Failing in April 1930 and went to join her husband. The Failings ran the shop under the same name until they sold it to Marj Marr in 1939.

    The sisters remained a team even when they shut down the fox enterprise and moved into Craig for a relative life of leisure. They took delight in entertaining their neighbors at their home on School St. and remained active in the community. Leafy was a staunch Democrat and Edith a dedicated Republican, but they both knew that blood was thicker than party lines.

    In 1966, Edith and Leafy moved to Grand Junction for the warmer climate. They shared an apartment until 1969 when both entered a nursing home.

    Leafy Persinger died on March 25, 1972 and her sister Edith joined her in death on July 5, 1972. The sisters who spent most of their lives as partners left the same way. They were buried next to each other and the rest of their family in Nebraska.

    They were pioneers in their own right and left valuable lessons for today’s small business owners if we will but listen and learn.


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    Museum of Northwest Colorado
    590 Yampa Avenue
    Craig, Colorado 81625
    970-824-6360
    Fax: 970-824-1098
    e-mail:
    musnwco@moffatcounty.net

    Open year round - Monday thru Friday 9:00-5:00 Saturday 10:00 - 4:00
    Admission Free - Donations Gladly Accepted
    Museum is wheelchair accessible