Blank Record of Minutes book

Name/Title

Blank Record of Minutes book

Entry/Object ID

2012.7.5

Scope and Content

A blank minutes book, circa 1960. The book is 8.75" x 14.25", with a black hardcover and two screws for binding. The book was made by Ace-Kauffman Rubber Stamp & Seal Co. in Denver, Colorado. The front page is lined notebook paper, with the remaining 100 leaves blank. Each page has the wording "Record of Proceedings" printed at the top. The minutes book originally belonged to Bob Ide, an employee of Transamerica Development Company in the 1960s and 1970s. Ide sold many of the company's land assets throughout Broomfield after it bought out The Broomfield Company in 1964.

Collection

Permanent Collection

Lexicon

Nomenclature 4.0

Nomenclature Primary Object Term

Minutes

Nomenclature Sub-Class

Administrative Records

Nomenclature Class

Documentary Objects

Nomenclature Category

Category 08: Communication Objects

LOC Thesaurus for Graphic Materials

Books, Records (Information)

Archive Details

Date(s) of Creation

1958 - 1968

Archive Size/Extent

One book of three stored in an archival banker box

Archive Notes

Date(s) Created: circa 1960 Date(s): 1960 circa Copy/Orig/Other: Original

Relationships

Related Entries

Notes

2012.7.1a, 2012.7.1b, 2012.7.2, 2012.7.3, 2012.7.4a, 2012.7.4b, 2012.7.6, 2012.7.7, 2012.7.8a-b, 2012.7.9 All related records and artifacts are part of the same collection pertaining to Broomfield Reservoir and Ditch Company, The Broomfield Company, Turnpike Land Company, and Transamerica Development Company. The assets and/or operations of the former two companies came under the ownership of Turnpike Land Company in 1955. Turnpike dissolved in 1964, with its assets going to Transamerica.

Provenance

Notes

Custodial History: This book and its contents are part of a larger group of records originally owned by Bob Ide, who donated them to the Broomfield Depot Museum in 2012 (see accession 2012.7). He obtained the records from his employer, Transamerica Development Company, in the 1970s after he worked selling many of their assets in the Broomfield area.