The Denver Post

Former golf course is source of historical hubbub

- By Justin Wingerter

A former Arapaho tribal campground that was later a homesteade­r’s ranch and then a golf course in Boulder County is now the source of a legal dispute over its historical value.

Haystack Ranch sits at the base of Haystack Mountain in the small town of Niwot. After the Haystack Mountain Golf Course closed in 2021, developer Michael Markel purchased its 110 acres for about $6 million, according to the Left Hand Valley Courier.

Markel split Haystack Ranch into three parcels, kept one for himself and listed the others. The easternmos­t parcel was sold to Anders and Jaclyn Hester, who Markel is now suing.

In his Jan. 31 lawsuit, Markel alleged the Hesters have ignored requiremen­ts that were spelled out before they bought the land, namely that they demolish a barn, garage and golf clubhouse there. The Hesters have refused to sign demolition permits, according to Markel.

“We all agreed to what the community was going to look like, and now they’re reneging,” the founder of Markel Homes in Boulder said during an interview.

“Even though they signed everything, something tells me they didn’t really believe what they agreed to, and now they’re trying to obstruct me in every way possible. I’ve just sort of had it,” Markel said. “I’ve got to protect my community and my property.”

In November, the Hesters asked the Boulder County Historic Preservati­on Advisory Board to list the barn, garage and clubhouse as historic landmarks. And they may succeed.

Haystack Mountain was once a prime spot for bison spotting, and its base served as a Native American campground, according to a preservati­on applicatio­n the Hesters filed. The widow of a gold mining homesteade­r bought the mountain and the ranch in the late 19th century.

After changing hands a few times, it became the nine-hole public golf course in the 1960s and remained that way until the course closed 16 months ago, after its owner’s death.

“The barn, garage and the Haystack Mountain Golf Course clubhouse at 5767 Niwot Road are important historical structures for their associatio­n with Boulder County’s history from the 1800s through October 2021,” the Hesters’ applicatio­n states.

“The barn ( built sometime around/ before 1882) and the garage ( built sometime around/ before 1905) tell the story of early settlers to the Haystack Mountain area,” it notes.

“The golf course’s clubhouse was built in 1974 and encapsulat­es the history of the course.”

The Hesters have found receptive ears among the staff of the Boulder County Historic Preservati­on Advisory Board, who recommende­d the board approve the Hesters’ applicatio­n over the objections of

Markel, who believes the applicatio­n was filed in bad faith.

“Like virtually every other property on the Front Range, ownership can be traced back to agricultur­al use in the 1800s,” Hester’s attorney, Craig Blockwick,

wrote to the board Dec. 1. “There is no unique historical significan­ce in that original acquisitio­n and use, either in terms of the people involved or events. There is no vestige of those historical antecedent­s.”

The barn, he said, is an “ordinary agricultur­al barn in somewhat run- down condition” and “the shed, simply stated, is an ordinary storage structure.”

As for the clubhouse, there is “nothing significan­t in its use or history,” and it’s made “of common brick of no particular novelty.”

On Feb. 1, one day before a historic preservati­on board vote, Boulder County District Judge Robert Gunning ordered a temporary restrainin­g order and the board tabled the matter indefinite­ly. It is not scheduled to be voted on at the

board’s March meeting.

Markel is represente­d in the lawsuit by attorneys Keith Edwards and Matthew Simonsen with the Hutchinson Black & Cook law firm in Boulder.

The Hesters are represente­d by Jack Storti with Berg Hill Greenleaf Ruscitti in Boulder. He did not respond to requests for comment about the lawsuit.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States