History Continued...
In addition to the above listed highlights of the Apprentice and Journeyman Training Program, the UA held an Apprentice Contest at Purdue University from 1954-1973. The following Apprentices represented Pipefitters Local Union 208 and the State of Colorado.
|
Apprentice |
Year |
|
Apprentice |
Year
|
|
A. R. Thorp
John D. Harper
William H. Durant
Michael E. Richter
Donald E. Baker
Edward J. Hunter
David Schoen
Donald Redmond
Leonard N. Fleming |
1954
1955
1956
1957
1958
1959
1960
1961
1962 |
|
Michael V. Young
John T. Parker
Victor A. Fulford
Kenneth L. Rook
Thomas E. Fabrizio
Jack Lee Schofield
Thomas L. Oldfield
James I. Mitchell |
1963
1964
1965
1966
1968
1969
1970
1973 |
|
|
|
Graduating class of 1951
|
|
Graduating class of 1975
|
|
|
|
Graduating class of 1979
|
|
Graduating class of 1997
|
A (Union) Family Affair
A good number of Local 208 members have family members who were also Local 208 members going back many years. Many families have local union roots going back several or more generations.
Below is a list of families that have ancestors in the local for at least fifty (50) years.
|
The 50 Year Union Family Club
|
|
Relationship
|
Members Name
|
Card Number
|
Init Date
|
|
Father
Son
Son
Grandson
Grandson
Grandson
Grandson
|
RALPH ARNOLD
GARY ARNOLD
LYLE ARNOLD
HOWARD ARNOLD
CARL ARNOLD
GARY D ARNOLD
DAN ARNOLD
|
|
03-1947
04-1956
09-1961
03-1982
10-1978
10-1987
05-1987 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Father
Son
Grandson
Grandson
Grandson
Grandson
Grandson
Great Grandson |
NELSON E. SCHOFIELD
JACK E. SCHOFIELD
JACK L SCHOFIELD
ROBERT E SCHOFIELD
GEROLD N. COFFMAN
ROBERT D. COLLINS
JAMES M. ROBERTS
JERRY COFFMAN |
|
02-1925
07-1946
12-1965
03-1968
08-1964
05-1969
11-1972
10-1998 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Father
Son
Grandson
Grandson
Grandson |
DELBERT L. THORP
A.R. THORP
JIM THORP
RONNIE THORP
LAYNE THORP
|
|
01-1952
10-1951
10-1967
07-1976
02-1983 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Father
Son
Grandson |
EARL GRAZIER
CLIVE GRAZIER
DAN GRAZIER |
|
03-1918
03-1939
05-1969 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Father
Son
Grandson |
EDGAR BURGESS
FLOYD BURGESS
JAY BURGESS |
|
08-1941
01-1972 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Father
Son
Grandson |
TOM F. TUTTLE
TOM A. TUTTLE
TOM W. TUTTLE |
|
10-1943
05-1968
06-1978 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Father
Son
Grandson |
CHARLES E BECKNER
RON BECKNER
RON BECKNER JR |
|
05-1948
08-1968
03-1992 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Father
Son
Grandson
Grandson |
E.L. BOLTON
GEORGE BOLTON
DAVE RICHTER
TIM RICHTER
|
|
07-1948
09-1955
03-1979
02-1979 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Father
Son
Son
|
AL HUNTER
EDWARD J HUNTER
BILL HUNTER
|
|
09-1914
04-1956
06-1959 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Father
Son
Son |
RICHARD M. DURANT
RICHARD D. DURANT
JOHN DURANT
|
|
05-1945
01-1963
12-1969 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Father
Son
Son |
WN. J. ROGERS
GERALD ROGERS
JOHN C. ROGERS |
|
04-1937
10-1963
12-1972 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Father
Son
Grandson
|
HAROLD RANDALL
BARRY RANDALL
BARRY RANDALL JR
|
|
03-1948
11-1966
08-1993 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Father
Son
|
LEE R. BEAVERS
RICHARD BEAVERS |
|
08-1946
05-1998 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Father
Son
|
ORAN E. OWENS
TOM OWENS |
|
05-1943
04-1955 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Father
Son
Son
Grandson
|
HENRY ACEVEDO
GILBERT ACEVEDO
FLOYD ACEVEDO
FLOYD ACEVEDO JR |
|
08-1942
03-1969
10-1951
12-1978 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Father
Son
|
ALAN BRACY
TIM BRACY |
|
06-1947
02-1978 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Father
Son
|
EDWARD L. FABRIZIO
THOMAS FABRIZIO |
|
08-1948
11-1965 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Father
Son
|
ERNEST A SORENSON
RICH SORENSON |
|
01-1941
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Father
Son
|
FRED SWANSON
FRED SWANSON JR. |
|
01-1944
10-1963 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Father
Son
|
JAMES R. BROWNELL
JAMES R. BROWNELL JR |
|
04-1918
05-1958 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Father
Grandson
|
TOM HAMBLY
ROBERT HAMBLY |
|
01-1926
11-1993 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Father
Son
|
FRANK YERXA
ROBERT YOUNG |
|
06-1940
02-1952 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Father
Son
|
FRANK KEEGAN
HAROLD KEEGAN |
|
07-1946
09-1987 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Father
Son
Grandfather
Grandson
|
FLOYD GRAZIER
ROBERT L GRAZIER
WALT J. MCCULLOCH
TOM W. TUTTLE |
|
11-1920
01-1947
05-1946
06-1978 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Father
Son
|
ISADORE POKRAKA
JOHN POKRAKA |
|
11-1948
01-1971 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Father
Son
Grandson
|
ALBERT “SAM” LEONARD
STEVE LEONARD
JOSEPH LEONARD |
|
07-1951
09-1977
07-2000 |
Profiles of Union Commitment
Bob Young: Political Action to build a Union City
Bob Young may be retired, but he is a very busy man these days. Young, a Pipefitters Local 208 member who retired in 1992, has been working full-time to help make Denver a Union City. He is one of many Local 208 members who contribute their time, energy, enthusiasm and experience to build the labor movement in our community. You might say he is just fulfilling the legacy and heritage of what Local 208 members have been doing consistently now for the past one hundred years.
While volunteering as a Labor 2000 Coordinator in the 2000 elections, he was paired with an SEIU activist, the first time he had worked with a member from another union. It was a valuable experience, "because we've gotten to know each other and each other's issues," he says. So now when Young gets an e-mail from the Denver Area Labor Federation asking him to write legislators, he fires off letters, sometimes three a week. And, as campaign manager for a union-friendly city council candidate in a Denver suburb, he calls on a multi-union network of activists to contact members and visit their homes.
Building from a core of committed activists
Young is among a core of 1,000 labor council activists who recruit volunteers and generate turnout for political campaigns, union organizing drives and rallies with community and faith-based groups. In 1998, the Denver labor council board agreed on a member mobilization strategy built on a committed base of activists -- and it's worked. Today, from among the 85,000 Denver-area members, 1,000 are key activist and 100 are representatives of locals who communicate through monthly council meetings as well as by e-mail and monthly political newsletters. Coming from 45 affiliated locals -- up from only 14 in 1998 -- the activists have transformed Denver into a union city.
Leslie Moody, labor council president, says the labor council board that came together in 1998 represented union activists and staff from all levels -- organizers, local political chairs, some local presidents -- who are open to trying new tactics. "People from different Denver unions were willing to come together with different perspectives and strengths."
In November 2000, labor council activists, working with the Colorado AFL-CIO, were key to winning six of eight state senate races in the metropolitan area. Activists visiting worksites and making home visits educated fellow union members about the importance of electing legislators who support a working families agenda. This work included electing worker friendly members to the state senate to ensure the legislature would not pass a so-called right to work law - which the anti-worker legislature was poised to do. That same bedrock of activists tuned out at the state capitol last February to celebrate their candidates taking office.