Serving Longmont for 50 years Turner Realty celebrating its golden anniversaryBy Tony Kindelspire Longmont Times-CallPosted: 01/08/2012 07:22:02 PM MST
LONGMONT -- The business's owners call him the "little man." On the front window of the business is an old-fashioned drawing of a man holding two signs: one reads "for sale" and the other "Turner Realty."
That iconic symbol and the business turn 50 this year.
"It's a caricature of our father in 1962," Arnold Turner said. "We think it's significant that he's got his coat off and his sleeves rolled up and he's ready to go to work for you."
Brothers Arnold and Darrel Turner now run the business started by their parents, Evadean and Carl, in 1962.
Arnold Turner, 60, said that the signature advertising symbol was drawn by one of the first artists employed by Longmont Signs, which opened around the
Darrel Turner, left, and Arnold Turner, of Turner Realty, are celebrating the 50th anniversary of their family-owned company. ( LEWIS GEYER )same time as Turner Realty. He and his brother have been approached many times over the years to partner up with much larger realty companies -- common names known up and down the Front Range -- but that would have meant giving up Turner Realty's identity and its "little man," he said. "We weren't willing to do that," Arnold Turner said. "We've had him for 50 years and we think we'll keep him for another 50."
Building on a legacy
Though semi-retired, Darrel Turner still plays an active role in the business at 71, which should be no surprise. If 65 is retirement age, that's certainly not a number his parents paid any attention to.
Carl Turner worked well into his 80s until ill health slowed him down, and he died in 2003 at age 87. Evadean Turner was also well past 80 when she stopped working, and even after that she still kept in touch through her sons. She died in 2007 at age 89.
The couple moved to Estes Park when they first came to Colorado in 1948. After moving Longmont in 1955, they bought a now-defunct motel on north Main Street. Not long after, Evadean got her real estate license and a year later Carl did, too.
They launched Turner Realty in the
Carl and Evadean Turner, center, and sons Darrel, left, and Arnold are photographed in 1989 by the Times-Call story about the Turner's 50 years of marriage. (Times-Call File Photo) front room of their house in 1962 and within a few months had bought a former telephone company building at 425 Coffman St. The business is still there today. "Depending on who you ask, she was either the first or second woman that had her (real estate) license in Longmont," Arnold Turner said. "Mother always made the distinction that she was the first that did it full-time."
After some time working in theater in the Northeast U.S., Arnold Turner moved back to Colorado and joined his parents' firm in 1976. Darrel primarily made his living as a manufacturer's representative -- a traveling salesman of sorts -- and sold some real estate on the side before joining Turner Realty full-time in 1979.
The sign on the front window reads, as it always has, residential, commercial, farms and industrial.
In fact, Darrel Turner said, it's that versatility that has allowed Turner Realty to survive all these years. They've even added property management to the firm's portfolio.
Turner Realty's impact on Longmont has been significant. Carl Turner was instrumental in helping secure the land for the Federal Aviation Administration's air traffic control center, as well as the library, police station and several other community landmarks. But both parents took their biggest satisfaction in residential real estate, especially helping put people in their first home, the brothers said.
And their parents passed on an appreciation for preserving history where it
Turner Realty's staff, from left: Realtor Robin Weir, Realtor Maria West, and director of property management Arissa Pedroza, are photographed on Wednesday. ( LEWIS GEYER )could be preserved, Arnold Turner said. The firm once relocated an old house from the west side of Terry Street, where a parking lot was going to be built, and moved it south, down a steep hill, to the 200 block of Terry, where it still stands today. Arnold recalls that the Longmont City Council gave the company an award on a Tuesday night for preserving the house, then the following day the city served it with a fine for damaging the street. And Darrel Turner completely renovated what had been a Texaco gas station at 541 Main St. into a modern office building that today houses a dentist's office
The Turners were also instrumental in helping start Boulder County's open space program, Arnold Turner said.
"Our heritage for us is important," he said. "Saving that old house, saving that nice old building, saving that open space."
The sons carry on the memory
"Dad was involved in politics," Darrel Turner said, explaining that while his dad never ran for office himself, he was active in local politics behind the scenes.
Arnold Turner said that there was a time when politics -- at least as far as the city's business went -- weren't as partisan as they are today.
"Although they were (sometimes) on different sides politically, they were all for the community," Arnold said. "They were for the community more than they were for party."
"The middle is not a bad place to be" was a favorite saying of his father, he said.
Another saying his dad had, when it came to business, was, "'You've always got to leave a little bit on the table for the next guy,'" Arnold said. "And I think that is a rare thing."
Carl and Evadean Turner were married for 64 years when Carl passed away. Their sons continue to work hard to maintain the legacy left behind, and it's a legacy that's appreciated outside the firm, as well.
The Longmont Association of Realtors renamed its Citizen of the Year Award the Carl Turner Citizen of the Year Award in 2003, the year Carl Turner died.
"We were proud as punch," Arnold Turner said. "We were absolutely as proud as we could be. Those trophies, given by their peers, meant as much to them as anything except their religion."
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