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Sigman, Louis K., 1881-

 Person

Biography

Louis K. (L.K.) Sigman was born in New York 1881 and came to Denver at the age of eight. In 1903 he married Theresa Cohen, daughter of Yitzchak Cohen. L.K. Sigman worked delivering meat in his father-in-law's butcher shop. In 1905 L.K. Sigman founded the Denver Packing Company in 1902 and in 1909 he merged his company with the Klink and Bourk Packing Company located at 1538 Blake St., Denver, Colorado. Beginning in Christmas of 1931 and continuing until 1941, L.K. Sigman gave away an average 60,000 pounds of meat each Christmas. The first year over 10,000 people waited in front of the Denver Post building to receive packages of meat.

Found in 12 Collections and/or Records:

Sigman Family Scrapbooks and Photographs, 1900-1997

 Series
Identifier: B300.02
Scope and Contents

This series contains photographs and papers about the Sigman family and the K. and B. Packing Company in Denver, Colorado. Louis K. Sigman and his sons Sam and Morris Sigman distributed free meat from their company during the depression from 1931-1940. Most of the material consists of digital images that were scanned from two scrapbooks.

Dates: 1900-1997

Thousands Receive Free Meat From K and B, 1931 December

 Item
Identifier: B300.02.0002.0001.00006
Abstract Thousands of people are lined up for a meat give away in Christmas of 1931 by K. & B. Packing and Provision Company. Louis K. Sigman gave away an average of 60,000 pounds of meat annually from 1931 to 1941. The meat distribution was done in front of the Denver Post Building at Sixteenth and Champa streets, Denver, Colorado. During the first year distribution in 1931 a crowd of 10,000 people waited for hours to receive a five pound bag of meat. Fifty extra policemen had to be brought in...
Dates: 1931 December

Additional filters:

Type
Archival Object 9
Collection 3
 
Subject
Denver (Colo.) 9
Jews 7
Colorado 6
Beef packers 3
Jewish families 3