931 14th St.
14th Floor Executive Offices

The Board Room, both in 1929 (left) and in 2006 (right) (THG Archives)
The Board Room, both in 1929 (left) and in 2006 (right) (THG Archives)

The fourteenth floor is known as the executive floor. It contained the offices of the President and his assistant, the Vice President, the General Auditor, and the Secretary Treasurer, along with a Board of Directors’ Room. Even today, the walls are the original 1929 hand-carved black walnut paneling, with some of the finest-grained pieces coming from the roots of trees. The beveled glass in the internal walls is still original. Much of the furniture, including the president’s desk and filing cabinet, is original and was designed for the building.

Sidebar: Vail Chair

Theodore Vail is often considered the architect of the Bell System. It was Vail, as AT&T CEO, who ordered three small Bell companies (The Colorado Telephone Company, Rocky Mountain Bell Telephone Company, and Tri-State Telephone Company) to combine. They were merged into one larger company, Mountain States Telephone and Telegraph Co. Mountain States’ Board established the “Vail chair,” indicated by the bronze plate on the back. The chair was to the President’s immediate right hand and was assigned to the company’s longest-serving director.
President’s office: In 1929, the fireplaces were operational; they are not today. The decor, such as the light fixtures and wood paneling, is mostly original. Former Mountain Bell President Robert Timothy had his office next to this room. The piano now on display here was originally in the operator’s lounge.

Board room: Albion Johnson’s original picture of the boardroom features a table from the previous company headquarters on Champa Street. The custom-designed table (still in the board room today) for the new headquarters building wasn’t finished in time for the new building’s grand opening. When the table was finished, the top was a very large single slab of wood—too big for the freight elevator. A window in the board room was removed, casement and all. A hoist was built on the roof. The plan was to hoist the tabletop outside the building and maneuver it through the window opening. The building’s chief architect said it wouldn’t work; the phone company’s engineer said it would. A bet was made. The telephone engineer won.

In 1974, Public Relations writer Herb Hackenburg wrote a story in MB Times, the Mountain Bell newspaper, that described a house service man carefully screwing a hook to the underside of the board table. Why is that hook historically significant? Because it was put in place to hold the handbag of Mountain Bell’s first female member of the Board of Directors, Blanche T. Cooperthwaite.

The 14th floor was home to the president’s office, the board room, and other executive offices. See below for images from 1929 and 2006.



Click here to continue the guided tour in the 14th floor museum.


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on to 14th Floor Museum



Exhibit Entry | Site History | Local Com History | Architecture | True Murals | Building Tour Basements | Main | Even | Odd | 14th Floor | Museum | 15th Floor

931 14th St.
14th Floor Executive Offices


The Board Room, both in 1929 (left) and in 2006 (right) (THG Archives)

The fourteenth floor is known as the executive floor. It contained the offices of the President and his assistant, the Vice President, the General Auditor, and the Secretary Treasurer, along with a Board of Directors’ Room. Even today, the walls are the original 1929 hand-carved black walnut paneling, with some of the finest-grained pieces coming from the roots of trees. The beveled glass in the internal walls is still original. Much of the furniture, including the president’s desk and filing cabinet, is original and was designed for the building.

Sidebar: Vail Chair

Theodore Vail is often considered the architect of the Bell System. It was Vail, as AT&T CEO, who ordered three small Bell companies (The Colorado Telephone Company, Rocky Mountain Bell Telephone Company, and Tri-State Telephone Company) to combine. They were merged into one larger company, Mountain States Telephone and Telegraph Co. Mountain States’ Board established the “Vail chair,” indicated by the bronze plate on the back. The chair was to the President’s immediate right hand and was assigned to the company’s longest-serving director.


President’s office: In 1929, the fireplaces were operational; they are not today. The decor, such as the light fixtures and wood paneling, is mostly original. Former Mountain Bell President Robert Timothy had his office next to this room. The piano now on display here was originally in the operator’s lounge.

Board room: Albion Johnson’s original picture of the boardroom features a table from the previous company headquarters on Champa Street. The custom-designed table (still in the board room today) for the new headquarters building wasn’t finished in time for the new building’s grand opening. When the table was finished, the top was a very large single slab of wood—too big for the freight elevator. A window in the board room was removed, casement and all. A hoist was built on the roof. The plan was to hoist the tabletop outside the building and maneuver it through the window opening. The building’s chief architect said it wouldn’t work; the phone company’s engineer said it would. A bet was made. The telephone engineer won.

In 1974, Public Relations writer Herb Hackenburg wrote a story in MB Times, the Mountain Bell newspaper, that described a house service man carefully screwing a hook to the underside of the board table. Why is that hook historically significant? Because it was put in place to hold the handbag of Mountain Bell’s first female member of the Board of Directors, Blanche T. Cooperthwaite.

The 14th floor was home to the president’s office, the board room, and other executive offices. See below for images from 1929 and 2006.


The old president's office, 1929.


Another view. Today, a large meeting table takes up most of the space.


The old president's office in 2006. Today, this is used as a meeting room (there's a large table, not in the photo) and houses the piano that used to be in the operators' retiring room.


The president's office when Robert K. Timothy was president of Mountain Bell.


Another office on the 14th floor.


Click here to continue the guided tour in the 14th floor museum.


back to top
back to Odd Floors
on to 14th Floor Museum



Exhibit Entry | Site History | Local Com History | Architecture | True Murals | Building Tour
Basements | Main | Even | Odd | 14th Floor | Museum | 15th Floor