Category Archives: Businesses

Ginny Paul and the Country Store

Ginny Paul standing next to the Morrison Country Store sign in 2009, with graphic logo designed by Rolf Paul.
Ginny Paul standing next to the Morrison Country Store sign in 2009, with graphic logo designed by Rolf Paul.

Virginia Paul and her husband Rolf came to Morrison in 1969, where he set up a small printing business in their home. In 1984, she launched her own small business, the Morrison Country Store,* which would become one of the town’s lasting enterprises, drawing customers from across the metro area and beyond. I visited Ginny and documented her charming shop in these photographs in 2009.

Where Rolf was, Ginny writes, “an activist & a mover & a shaker” who served on the Town Board and even as Mayor for a time, she preferred to “stay out of all the controversy… and just be a good citizen.” And a very successful businesswoman, as evidenced by the longevity of the Morrison Country Store, a gift and décor oriented shop with a loyal clientele much like that once drawn by Thee Deacon’s Bench and the town’s many antique stores. The shop was closed in 2018, just two years before Ginny’s death in 2020.

Ginny at the Morrison Country Store in 2009. One of the plaques above her has a Helen Keller quote: "Your success and happiness lie in you."
Ginny at the Morrison Country Store in 2009. One of the plaques above her has a Helen Keller quote: “Your success and happiness lie in you.”

Despite Ginny’s reticence, she did end up serving on the Town Board for several years after Rolf’s death, where she was “an advocate and voice for local businesses.”

Ginny Paul standing with some of the displays at the Country Store, 2009.
Ginny Paul standing with some of the displays at the Country Store.

Rolf and Ginny supported cultural events and organizations in Morrison and beyond, including the Jefferson Symphony and the Morrison Natural History Museum.

Ginny considered the museum “a great addition to the Town” and a “gift of culture to the metropolitan area.”

Ginny Paul and her Morrison Country Store are well remembered by Morrison residents and long-time visitors. Today the Morrison Mercantile carries on some of Ginny’s legacy, in another form.

Quotes above are from Ginny’s letter to the Town Board in February 2002, shortly after Rolf’s death, when she was drawn into ‘controversy and turmoil’ and spoke her mind in response to an edition of Lew’s News.


Remembering Virginia (Ginny) Paul
(Morrison Hogback newsletter, October 2020)

We would like to remember the life of long-time resident, Ginny Paul. She was the definition of “Keep Morrison, Morrison” from her care and dedication to the Town, to her radiating entrepreneurial spirit and fruitful local business, Morrison Country Store. Ginny served her community well. She selfishly [sic] volunteered her time to the Planning Commission and Board of Trustees throughout her years. During Ginny’s time on the Board and Planning Commission, she was an advocate and voice for local businesses, an integral part in the Rooney Valley Development discussions and Town Comprehensive Plan update in 2008. Her insight as a resident and business owner allowed for a unique perspective that was appreciated and valued in the Boards’ policy making. Ginny will be greatly missed, and we send our sympathy to her friends and family. Morrison will not be the same without her.


* Actually, even before Ginny began her business, the location was known as the Morrison Country Store, run for many years by Tom and Bonnie Hicks, who specialized in antiques and collectibles.

Businesses Old and New

Some of Morrison’s historic downtown buildings have hosted businesses for more than a hundred years. Here’s a quick walk through several historic enterprises, and a handful of newer ones. Click any image to enlarge and/or view as slideshow.


Morrison promotional graphic "Experience Morrison" with town logo and slogan "The nearest faraway place."

In the 1980s-2000s, Morrison promoted itself as a destination for the metro area. Mayor Rolf Paul (1980-84), a graphic artist, contributed a town logo, and Mayor Mary Poe (1992-98) adopted “the nearest faraway place” as a slogan.

Some of the later 20th-century businesses cycled through so quickly they were soon forgotten; others endured for decades. Here are a few to test or refresh your memory.

Horton House Fire Update

Friends and neighbors gathered at the Horton House yesterday afternoon to board up the historic home after the destructive fire. Lumber was donated by Home Depot.

Workers at the Horton House after fire, October 1, 2015.

Workers at the Horton House after fire, October 1, 2015.

Boarding up the sunroom at the back of the Horton House.

Boarding up the sunroom at the back of the Horton House.

The Town of Morrison sent out this report:


The Horton House Bed & Breakfast in Morrison, Colorado, was built in the 1870s. The house was owned and lived in by Lila Horton. Many guests have stayed there while visiting Morrison and have had the chance to experience the historic building in all its beauty.

This morning the historic and popular bed and breakfast caught fire–while everyone did get out okay, the house was considered a total loss.

Lila does not have insurance and has created an account to help with the losses–everything from historic items dating back over 100 years to numerous personal keepsakes.

Please help Lila to rebuild! Go to: GoFundMe if you can help.


In the late 1800s, this was the dwelling of James and Amy Abbo; James ran Abbo’s Livery nearby on the property. The house was later occupied by Dr. Frank Luce and his family; he was Morrison’s “horse-and-buggy” doctor in the first half of the 20th century. From 1945 to 1973 the house was a Mexican Restaurant, El Gallo Tuerto, one of the first in the Denver area. Additions have been made over the years.

The photos below were captured by Kenny Noble Cortes, of KLOV Radio, during the fire.

Fighting the Horton House fire, October 1, 2015. Photo courtesy Kenny Noble Cortes.

Fighting the Horton House fire, October 1, 2015. Photo courtesy Kenny Noble Cortes.

Fighting the Horton House fire, October 1, 2015. Photo courtesy Kenny Noble Cortes.

Fighting the Horton House fire, October 1, 2015. Photo courtesy Kenny Noble Cortes.

Let’s Go Antiquing!

The longest-running business in Morrison today is El Mercado, an antique store owned and operated by Linnie Curran since 1968. On March 16th, members of the MHS presented Linnie with a certificate and a complimentary copy of the Morrison calendar created by the Society. A photo of the store’s front porch, courtesy of Mary Jordan, appears in the calendar for the month of October. (Photo: Jamee and Gus Chambers with Linnie, center.)

YourHub reporter Karen Groves was on hand for the presentation, and the moment was captured in the print edition on March 25th, as well as an online version. Linnie shows Karen a few of her wares in photo, right.

Once El Mercado shared Morrison’s main street with several other stores of the antique and vintage persuasion. Even the Morrison Inn once housed an antique emporium. Today El Mercado is one-of-a-kind, harking back to a time in the far-away days of the 1960s-80s, when ladies came to Morrison to shop for treasures and have an elegant luncheon at the Deacon’s Bench Tea Room.

On Friday, January 7, 1966, when the Deacon’s Bench was featured prominently in the Rocky Mountain News, the reporter had this to say:

Mention the town of Morrison and women’s faces brighten. The tiny atmospheric town has come to be known as an antiquary’s browsing spot, with several shops offering a wide range of collectors’ trivia (and not so trivia). … Morrison is attracting other interesting businesses—art studios, special effects designers and, most recently, Thee Deacon’s Bench.

In actuality, there was but one art studio (Art Gore Photography) and one special effects designer (Special Effects Co., profiled in Empire magazine in 1964); perhaps it seemed like more. In those days, a visit to “tiny atmospheric” Morrison apparently provided a sure antidote for a slow news day downtown.

Later, on August 27th, 1972, the Denver Post’s Empire Magazine brought models to Morrison and the Deacon’s Bench for a photo shoot. One young lady was even gracefully posed on the remains of Morrison’s old hanging tree! That article featured a hand-drawn map of Morrison’s antique stores, including El Mercado (of course!), Little Bits of Yesterday and Today, Lila’s, Western Trail Antiques, and Around the Corner to Yesterday. All now forgotten except El Mercado.

Speaking of models, that role also appears on Linnie’s extensive resumé, along with clown and bartender, among a host of others. She’s a woman of many stories, great to visit with, and now, celebrated for her long dedication to doing business in Morrison. Thanks, Linnie, and congratulations on 42 years!

Gateway Stables: Hebrew Family Enterprise

Sam Hebrew (1857-1932) and Nora Smith (1876-1947) started a long-term business serving tourists at the Gateway Stables, leading donkey trains into the scenic Garden of the Angels, known today as Red Rocks Park. Nora was the daughter of Jeremiah and Margaret (Healy) Smith, one of the original Morrison families.

Bertha Marie and Bonnie Hebrew, about 1908.

The Gateway Stables, founded by Sam and Nora Hebrew, provided access to Red Rocks Park via burro. Daughters Bertha Marie and Bonnie grew up on donkeys. Bertha lived in Morrison her whole life, taking over the family business and continuing to serve Morrison tourists. She married a Morrison boy, Curt LaGrow, and cooked homestyle meals for tourists and boarders.