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  2. Charles Boettcher (1852–1948) was an entrepreneur and philanthropist best known for founding the Great Western Sugar Company and the Boettcher Foundation, an organization that made the Boettcher name synonymous with generosity in Colorado.

  3. Overview and timeline Charles Boettcher, the Boettcher family, and the creation of the Boettcher Foundation, incorporated in 1937.

  4. Born in Kolleda, Germany in 1852, Charles left his native land in 1869 to join his older brother, Herman, in Cheyenne, Wyoming, where he was working at a hardware store. After Herman landed him a job in the store, Charles quickly carved a niche for himself by learning the tinner's trade.

  5. BOETTCHERS MOVE TO THE “QUEEN CITY”. By 1890, the Boettcher family was well established, Claude was away at Harvard, and Charles’ growing business interests in Denver led to a move to Denver, the “Queen City” of the plains. The family’s new home was built at 1201 Grant Street, in the chic Capitol Hill area.

  6. Mar 18, 1997 · When Charles Boettcher died in 1948, he presided over a Rocky Mountain business empire: railroads, ranches, mines, meatpacking plants, cement factories, sugar mills, a life insurance company...

  7. Charles, who had researched the lucrative sugar beet industry while visiting Germany, enlisted investors and formed the Great Western Sugar Company in Colorado. While Charles' investments helped ensure Colorado's economic stability throughout the 20th Century, they also included philanthropic work.

  8. The Great Western Sugar Company was co-founded by Charles Boettcher in 1900 after he observed the hardy, profitable sugar beet crop while vacationing in Europe. In Colorado, the sugar beet industry he helped launch proved a boon to the state and local communities for nearly eighty years.

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