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William Whitsell, first African American male born in Colorado, honored during ceremony

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William Whitsell, first African American male born in Colorado, honored during ceremony


DENVER — The first African-American male born in Colorado was posthumously inducted into the 2024 Blacks in Colorado Hall of Fame on Saturday.

Few pictures of William Whitsell remain today, but his impact lives on throughout the Centennial State.

“It lets me understand and just know that I’m standing on the shoulders of a great, great man,” said Damon Jones, Whitsell’s great-great grandson.

According to the Denver Public Library, Whitsell was the first African-American male born in Colorado.

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“It probably didn’t even hit him like that … even to know that he was the first Black male born in Colorado,” said Jones.

Whitsell was born in the area now known as Central City, back when Colorado was a U.S. territory.

Jones says his parents traveled to Colorado for the opportunity.

“For them to move to Colorado, and to take refuge up into the mountains up into Gilpin County, where a lot of the work was at that time, it was a lot of mining and a lot of building,” said Jones. “It’s very impactful when you sit and think about it, and sit and think what he had to possibly go through— what they went through to even get here.”

Historians say Whitsell’s parents were likely former slaves who had been freed, and came West to help build the railroad. The family eventually relocated to Denver and lived where Union Station stands today.

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Saturday, Whitsell was posthumously inducted into the 2024 Blacks in Colorado Hall of Fame, presented at the Blair-Caldwell African-American Research Library.

Cedric Buchanon of the Library Commission says there were many reasons why the commission chose to induct Whitsell into the 2024 Blacks in Colorado Hall of Fame.

“It’s the adventure of being that first individual born in Colorado— but then being here, growing up here, settling his roots, the family that has gone from generation to generation,” said Buchanon.

As an adult, Whitsell worked as a brick molder and brick mason.

“Some of the oldest buildings that we would know as like the clock tower and different things,” said Jones. “He was very instrumental in that as far as helping to actually construct some buildings.”

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Jones says Whitsell was a member of an Elks Lodge.

Whitsell was also known for serving his church and community. He passed away at the age of 77.

Jones says Whitsell not only made a last impact on his family but on the entire state of Colorado.

“We just carry his name,” said Jones. “We carry his legacy, close to heart. We love to share it with each and every person who would like to hear about it. He was just a great man.”

2024 Juanita Gray Nominees include:

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  • Sandra Douglas
  • Joshalynn Green-Tuner
  • Granville Lee
  • Jawana Norris
  • Dr. Ronald D. Reeves
  • Stephanie Tavares-Rance
  • Chandra Thomas Whitfield
  • Anita West-Berry

2024 Blacks in Colorado Hall of Fame Inductees:

  • Adrian Miller
  • Retired Division Chief Charles Thomas Smith
  • William H. Whitsell (posthumous award)

To learn more about nominees, inductees, and winners, click here.


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Colorado ski resort ranks among the best in country

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Colorado ski resort ranks among the best in country


As more snow begins to fall across the country, ski resorts across the U.S. are preparing for the peak winter season. USA Today’s 10Best recently released the top picks for best ski resort in the U.S., and the winners included resorts that offer “serious snowfall, varied terrain, lots of lift access, and so much more.” […]



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Durango family detained by ICE in southwestern Colorado seeks return to Colombia

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Durango family detained by ICE in southwestern Colorado seeks return to Colombia


A father and his children detained by Immigration and Customs Enforcement in Durango last month say they want to return to their home country of Colombia.

Immigration officials admitted during a federal court hearing that Fernando Jaramillo Solano was not their intended target during the enforcement action in Durango on Oct. 27.  Jaramillo Solano was driving his children, ages 12 and 15, to school when they were detained.

Fernando Jaramillo Solano is seen as he was being detained by ICE, in photo provided by Compañeros Four Corners Immigrant Resource Center

The arrests prompted protests and a physical conflict between agents and demonstrators that the Colorado Bureau of Investigation and U.S. Customs & Border Protection are now investigating.

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durango-pd-meet-with-protester-city-of-durango.jpg

Durango Police Chief Brice Current, right, and Deputy Chief Chris Gonzalez meet with a protester outside an ICE facility in Durango, Colorado, on Tuesday, Oct. 28, 2025.

City of Durango


“Fernando the father, is exhausted after being held in detention for almost a month. His decision to stop fighting from inside detention isn’t about giving up, it’s about getting his children out of jail, where no child should ever have to languish,” said Matt Karkut, Executive Director of Compañeros Four Corners Immigrant Resource Center.

He said the detention and separation from the children’s mother, Estela Patiño, who remains in Durango, is devastating.

“This case is not an isolated incident but rather a trend, a worrying one of families across the country that are being pushed to abandon their legal rights because detention is so traumatizing, especially for children,” said Karkut.

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Department of Homeland Security Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin provided a statement addressing allegations of mistreatment of the family during their initial detention in Durango before being transferred to a family facility in Texas, and an update about their imminent return to Colombia:

“This is disgusting and wrong. Members of the media should really stop and ask themselves why these people ran directly to the press and activists to make such heinous allegations, rather than report it to any law enforcement authorities. The facts are that on October 27, ICE arrested Fernando Jaramillo Solano, an illegal alien from Colombia, during a targeted immigration enforcement operation in Durango, Colorado. 

Jaramillo illegally entered the country on June 24, 2024, near San Diego, California, and was RELEASED into this country [by] the Biden administration. He and his two children did not utilize the CBP Home program and are therefore do not qualify for its incentives. They were granted a voluntary departure by the immigration judge and ICE will facilitate their return.

 Additionally, no one was denied adequate food. It’s disgusting the  [Associated Press] is peddling these lies about law enforcement. This type of garbage is contributing to our officers facing a 1000% increase in assaults and a 8000% increase in death threats

ICE does not separate families. Parents are asked if they want to be removed with their children or ICE will place the children with a safe person the parent designates. This is consistent with past administration’s immigration enforcement. Parents can take control of their departure with the CBP Home app and reserve the chance to come back the right legal way.”

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Karkut said advocates will continue to work for the family’s release.

“This isn’t a family without a case by the way. Estela, the mother, is the primary asylum applicant and her claim is very strong. Members of her family have been killed by violence in Colombia that would threaten Estela if she returns. So she has a very legitimate reason to fear going back. And our asylum laws exist precisely for people in exactly her situation.” 

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Coloradans have gloomy outlook on economy, elected leaders — and fear rise in political violence, poll finds

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Coloradans have gloomy outlook on economy, elected leaders — and fear rise in political violence, poll finds


Colorado voters hold a dim view of national politics, with nearly 3 in 4 characterizing the political situation as “in crisis.” And further, nearly two-thirds of respondents to a new poll fear political violence will worsen over the next few years.

Overall, the results from the Colorado Polling Institute, with the results released in phases on Thursday and Friday, show a dour outlook dominating the Centennial State 10 months into President Donald Trump’s second term. The poll also was conducted a month into the recently concluded — and record-long — federal government shutdown, and less than two months since the assassination on a college campus of conservative political activist Charlie Kirk.

Outside politics, 46% of Colorado voters said they think the economy will only get worse, while another 43% think it’ll only stay about the same — leaving a sliver of voters, just 12%, with a rosy outlook.

“I think it’s a general sense that there’s so many different issues that are weighing on them — they’re concerned about the economy, they’re even concerned about jobs today, it’s not just cost of living anymore. That just combines to be a real downer,” said pollster Lori Weigel, principal of New Bridge Strategy, the Republican half of the bipartisan team behind the poll.

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Add in fears of political violence and an overall crisis of governance, Weigel said, and “how can you be sort of positive when you feel like that’s happening?”

Colorado voters are also reeling from the down economy more than the rest of the country, the pollsters found: 61% of respondents said they had cut spending on nonessential items compared to last year, versus 42% of the nation writ large, and 28% of Coloradans said their habits had remained about the same, compared to 43% of the nation.

The poll was in the field Nov. 1-5. The pollsters conducted online interviews with 622 registered voters that featured an over-sample of Hispanic voters to gauge that demographic’s views on certain questions. The survey has a margin of error of plus or minus 3.9 percentage points.

Hits to politicians’ favorability ratings

Coloradans’ souring feelings on politics as a whole have bled over to state leaders, though the changes were often within the margin of error. Gov. Jared Polis, a Democrat, is now slightly underwater with voters in favorable feelings, at 45% favorable to 46% unfavorable, according to the poll.

It’s a noticeable slip from March, when a bare majority, 51%, of voters held a favorable opinion of the term-limited governor and 40% had an unfavorable view. More voters also hold a very unfavorable view of him now, at 33%, than earlier this year, when it was 26%.

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U.S. Sen. John Hickenlooper, a Democrat who is up for reelection next year, saw a similar slip, going from 49% favorable to 43% between March and this month. His unfavorable rating was 36% in March and 38% this month.



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