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"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
Persinger sisters showed true style
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
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
W.P. Irwin – Pharmacist and friend of Craig
By Shannan Koucherick for the Museum of NW CO
As the town of Craig grew up, her residents enjoyed more of the finer things in life. Things that are taken for granted in the 21st century were major improvements in the early years of the last century.
One of those improvements was the addition of a pharmacy to supply Craigites with medications and sundries that had not formerly been available. By 1920, the partnership of Whiteman and Whittaker was doing a business and the men decided to bring in another pharmacist. The man they chose would become one of Craig’s greatest supporters in the decades to come.
William Pitt (Bill) Irwin was born on September 3, 1885 in Storn Lake, Iowa to Charles Allison Irwin, Esq. and his wife Margaret. As a boy, W.P. loved two things – dime novels featuring western characters, and drug stores. The first love met with strong disfavor from his lawyer father who only believed in reading the classics. The second would become his life’s work.
By the time he was 12, Irwin made himself a job at the neighborhood drug store. He ran errands and did odd jobs around the store, all the while soaking up the atmosphere and knowledge he would need later in life.
In his late teens, Irwin left Iowa for the more arid west in the hope of curing a chronic bronchial ailment. His move allowed him to see the real west that would become his home. He worked in drugstores in El Paso, Texas and Alamagordo, New Mexico before landing in Salida, Colo.
While he was working in Salida, he met a milliner named Louise Sebree and the couple was united in marriage on July 5, 1909. The year after they were married, their only child Willa Bernice was born in Salida.
About six months after the birth of their daughter, the Irwins moved to Denver where Irwin became a partner in a drugstore on the corner of 12th and Madison St. The couple stayed in Denver until the fall of 1914 when they migrated to a homestead in Moffat County.
“The first winter was spent on the Bennett place in Sand Springs, in a sturdy stone house. When spring came a two-room frame cabin was build on the Irwin claim.” (Biographical Sketch of Bill and Louise Irwin; written by Willa Irwin for the Museum of NWCO 1982)
Despite their hard work, the Irwins soon saw that their homestead would not be able to support their family so Bill looked for another income while they continued to work on proving up the homestead. They spent most winters in Steamboat Springs and Denver where he could work in drugstores. They returned to the homestead during the warmer months, building fence and outbuildings and working the arid land. Bill rode a borrowed horse to and from Craig where he worked at the drug store while Louise and Willa stayed at the homestead.
In 1918 the Irwins bought the Martin Earley home 611 Breeze St. and moved to town permanently. They called that house home until they retired and left Craig decades later.
By 1924, Bill Irwin had purchased the drugstore business from his former bosses. Within a few years, he moved the drugstore to 520 Yampa Ave. where it remained until his retirement.
The Irwins threw themselves into the Craig community right from the beginning. Bill served several terms on the Craig town council and was a member of Company A, 157th Infantry, of the Colorado National Guard. He was also a Mason.
Louise was active as a Sunday School teacher for many years. She was also a member of Anita Chapter No. 41, Order of Eastern Star, in which she served as treasurer for about 20 years. She was also a member of one of the first Craig library boards and found time to sew for the Red Cross.
One of Bill Irwin’s passions was the development of an effective drainage system for the town he had chosen as home. “It was largely due to his efforts that so much curb and gutter was installed in Craig …with federal aid and WPA (Works Projects Administration) work.” (Empire Courier February 15, 1939)
He eventually became the chairman of the Street and Alley committee, which oversaw the street improvements throughout town.
The Irwins sold the Craig Drug Store in 1946 and moved to Denver. Bill died on November 25, 1954 and Louise died June 9, 1978.
##image4##The couple worked quietly behind the scenes to help Craig grow and prosper. Their homesteading spirit and work ethic made long-lasting impacts on our modern community.
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