Judd family
Biography
The Judd Family papers trace the involvement of the Judd family in the construction industry which began with Abraham Judelowitz who arrived in Denver in the 1880s and was instrumental in the building of the first Beth haMedrosh (BMH) Synagogue. His son, Samuel Judd was born in Denver in 1892 and began as an architect and engineer at the Bureau of Reclamation in 1918. He selected sites and designed many large dams, including Hoover dam. He was the city planner for Boulder City, Nevada and Page, Arizona. Samuel Judd was head of Architectural and Structural Design Section of the United States Bureau of Reclamation from 1935 until retiring in 1962 and was Denver's Building Inspector in 1963. Samuel Judd directed the design and construction of the first Hebrew Educational Alliance Building and the Gaylord Street BMH building. The Judd Construction Company founded in 1949 by E. James Judd and the collection primarily centers on the Judd Construction Company job files on major building projects in Denver from 1950 through 1991.
Found in 12 Collections and/or Records:
Box 2, 1890-2010
Photographs of Judd and Winograd families
Box 4, 1957-1967
(23) File folders #76-99: all job files.
Box 15, 1961-1989
(26) File folders #319-345 include: correspondence, financial, legal, print material, photographs.
Box 17, 1918-1930s
(1) Scrapbook of Simon Judd Family.
Judd Family, circa 1926
Henri Judd holding baby Arleen sits on a boulder with Simon Judd standing behind her.
Judd Family Papers
Judd's at Estes Park, 1925 May
Five members of the Judd family stand beside a car in front of a log lodge in Estes Park. Left to right are Henri holding baby Arleen, Mary, Zelda, and their mother.
Judd's at Estes Park, 1925 May
Henri Judd holding baby Arleen sits on the running board of a car with her mother standing beside her during a trip to Estes Park.
Judd's at Estes Park, 1925 May
Henri Judd holding baby Arleen sits on the running board of a car with her mother standing beside her during a trip to Estes Park.
Materials from Family Reunion, 1905 - 1999
The folder has copies of postcards, letters, and the Judelovitz family. It also has a family tree prepared by E. James Judd in 1999.