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OCN

Volunteers reporting on community issues in Monument, Palmer Lake, and the surrounding Tri-Lakes area

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Perspectives on Our Community

  • Remembering Jim Maguire (06/07/2025)
  • A Perspective on Our Community – Flying Horse North change of plans (06/07/2025)

Remembering Jim Maguire

By Michael Weinfeld

To call Jim Maguire a collector would be an understatement.

A collector might fill a curio cabinet with a few dozen figurines. Maguire, who died last month at age 96, filled two barns covering 8,400 square feet with antiques he’d collected since the ‘80s. They include a couple of tuberculosis quarantine huts, a school outhouse, a hearse, a creepy talking prospector, and a sign that says, “Good Stuff.” Various antique farm equipment is also sprinkled about his 25-acre property.

He dubbed the barns Maguireville. He and Donna, his wife of 68 years who died in 2021, were the co-mayors. Asked in a 2019 interview which mayor made the decisions, Maguire told me, “depends on if it’s before supper or after.”

Maguire used to boast that Maguireville was crime-free thanks to the hangman’s noose and a working guillotine that are prominently displayed.

Maguire often teased about annexing the town of Monument into Maguireville, which he admitted made people “a little upset.”

Maguire’s passion for collecting didn’t start when he was a boy. His mother died when he was 5 and Maguire was raised by an aunt and uncle on a farm in northern Illinois where he became familiar with the farm equipment he would eventually display on his land in Monument (anyone driving east on 105 at Knollwood Road can spot some of the antiques).

Donna was the collector initially. When they were first married, living in Syracuse, N.Y. where he worked for the Overhead Door company, Maguire said there were “antiques coming out of your ears out there. We’d go for a ride on a Sunday, and she’d go ‘Oh, there’s an antique shop’ and I’d speed up. Over the years, I started to soften up.”

The first piece he bought was a 1901 wagon jack that was used to lift a wagon so the wheels could be greased. His collection now numbers in the thousands. How many items are there exactly? No one knows. There’s no accurate list of what’s in Maguireville. The Palmer Lake Historical Society spent five years cataloguing the inventory, but that project ended in 2009.

The piece of memorabilia he was most proud of is a money changing gadget that he says was used in department stores in the 1800s. He explained that a store would usually have only one cashier, so when customers would make a purchase, they’d give their money to a clerk who’d put it in a cup and pull a cord that would “shoot it up to the cashier” who’d catch the container, take out the money, and send any change back for the customer.

A lot of the memorabilia came from Waverly, Iowa. He said the town would have sales of farm-related antiques twice a year. He and Donna bought stuff there five or six times. Also, people would pass along their own possessions. They’d tell him, “I’ve got something downstairs in the basement nobody ever sees. It belonged to Uncle Charlie. Would you like that? And he’d say, “Yeah!”

Asked if there were any holes in his collection, Maguire said people would ask, “What are you looking for?” and he would tell them, “We won’t know ‘till we see it.”

Jim and Donna first arrived in Colorado Springs in 1969 to acquire the local Overhead Door distributorship. Maguire was former national sales manager for the Overhead Door Corp. headquartered in Dallas. He and his son, Kevin, became well known for their humorous TV ads.

In 1982, the Maguires moved to Monument. Their property was originally homesteaded for 160 acres in 1875. It was one of three original homesteads in the Monument area in the 1800s and came with the original certificate signed by Ulysses S. Grant. Kevin Maguire says preserving that piece of local history remains important to the family.

The land is populated with willow trees from Iowa, including a huge one in back of the house that came with a paper certifying it as a “Crack Willow.” “Nothing to do with marijuana,” Jim Maguire joked.

The Overhead Door truck became a staple in Monument’s Fourth of July parade. Maguire’s friend Joe Bohler would play the piano on the back of the truck. Maguire said he was able to convince Bohler to play in the hot sun because, “I had enough on him, so he had to say yes.”

As for the satisfaction he gets from collecting, Maguire said, “The thrill is when people come here and say, ‘Oh, my God, we didn’t know that this was out here!” Or “Oh, gosh! Look at that! I remember that at grandpa’s!” Or “We used one of these when I was a kid!”

Finally, I asked Maguire what would happen to his collection after he was gone. Maguire replied, “That’s a problem. We hope that this can be kept together and continue on.” It’s a problem yet to be solved. Kevin Maguire says it’s the “64-million-dollar question.” They have “several options,” including preserving “what we can.”

Michael Weinfeld can be contacted at michaelweinfeld@ocn.me.

Other Perspectives on Our Community

  • Remembering Jim Maguire (6/7/2025)
  • A Perspective on Our Community – Flying Horse North change of plans (6/7/2025)

A Perspective on Our Community – Flying Horse North change of plans

By Terry Stokka

Reprinted by permission of the New Falcon Herald

It isn’t often that a developer spends a lot of money designing a residential development that is approved and then completely changes his mind and spends a lot more money designing a totally different development that is also approved and then changes his mind once again, going back to the original plan. The whole process and all it entails is expensive and mind boggling.

The owner of this complicated story is Classic Homes and the development is Flying Horse North. The original plan was for 283 lots 2.5 acres or larger. The lots covered only half of the parcel, so the remaining acreage was an 18-hole golf course and park space. The total area was 1,410 acres with a density of 5 acres per lot. The Black Forest Land Use Committee accepted the plan despite wishing the open space could be undeveloped trees and wildlife habitat, but the developer desired the “open space” to be the golf course and the county commissioners approved it.

Filing 1 for the development was for 81 lots and the golf course. Those lots are almost completely built-out with large, beautiful homes. Filing 2 was for just one lot under a special circumstance. For many months no further filings were submitted. Then a totally new sketch plan was submitted that changed the remaining 201 lots into 846 city-size lots plus a luxury 275-room hotel. The Land Use Committee was shocked at this change. The new plan would build a small town in the middle of Black Forest.

The negative consequences would be a five-fold increase in traffic through Filing 1 with the attendant congestion, light pollution, drainage problems, and a few other issues. The new plan would require a central water and wastewater system encompassing several deep wells, piping, water treatment, and massive expenditures for the infrastructure. As expected, the county commissioners approved the new sketch plan with the startling statement that they believed the new plan “generally conformed” to the old plan.

The new plan required many additional months of planning, dealing with water and wastewater issues and fleshing out the details. They then submitted Filing 3 under the old, approved plan since the new plan had not yet been fully approved. Now we are working under two plans at the same time. Filing 3 had lots of 2.5 acres surrounding the golf course.

Several months later, Filing 4 was submitted with lots 2.5 acres or larger. Soon after that, Filing 5 was submitted with lots 2.5 acres or larger. This was all in the area where the second plan had envisioned about 400 city-size lots.

In March 2025, Classic submitted Filings 6 and 7 for the remainder of the property composed of all 2.5-acre lots or larger, so that completes the story of the return to the original plan. The area where the hotel had been envisioned was labeled “golf course.” Classic Homes has gone back to the original plan of lots 2.5 acres or larger.

We are breathing a collective sigh of relief to not have the town of Flying Horse North in the middle of Black Forest with associated streetlights, traffic, green lawns, and congestion. We will be able to be proud of Flying Horse North and its beautiful homes on large lots. We say thank you to Classic Homes for going back to the original plan. Who knew that this development would jump through so many hoops and spend so much money on two different plans, only to return to the original plan.

Terry Stokka may be reached at contact@friendsofblackforest.org.

Note: OCN uses A Perspective on Our Community to run opinion pieces that are too long to run as Letters to Our Community, which are limited to 300 words.

Other Perspective on Our Community articles

  • Remembering Jim Maguire (6/7/2025)
  • A Perspective on Our Community – Flying Horse North change of plans (6/7/2025)

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