Joann windholz biography

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SenatorAmabile, Judy

18

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303-866-4872 judy.amabile.senate@coleg.gov RepresentativeArmagost, Ryan

64

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303-866-2906 ryan.armagost.house@coleg.gov RepresentativeBacon, Jennifer

7

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303-866-2909 jennifer.bacon.house@coleg.gov SenatorBaisley, Mark

4

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303-866-4877 mark.baisley@senate.co.com SenatorBall, Matt

31

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303-866-4861 matt.ball.senate@coleg.gov RepresentativeBarron, Carlos

48

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303-866-2943 carlos.barron.house@coleg.gov RepresentativeBird, Shannon

29

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303-866-2843 shannon.bird.house@coleg.gov RepresentativeBoesenecker, Andrew

53

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303-866-2917 andrew.boesenecker.house@coleg.gov RepresentativeBottoms, Scott

15

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303-866-5525 scott.bottoms.house@coleg.gov RepresentativeBradfield, Mary

21

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303-866-2946 mary.bradfield.house@coleg.gov RepresentativeBradley, Brandi

39

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303-866-2935 brandi.bradley.house@coleg

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Barbs, Bullets, and Blood: The 1880s Texas Barbed Wire Wars

Published: June, 2025  Pages: 448  Features: 50 b&w illus. Notes. Bib. Index.

In 1874 Joseph Glidden patented and manufactured the nation’s first barbed wire, and the next year Henry Sanborn came to Texas selling Glidden’s wire to cattlemen. Sales increased each year, and in 1883 Sanborn sold Texas ranchers one million dollars’ worth of barbed wire, but free-range cattle advocates and homesteaders revolted against the barbed wire fences; more than half of Texas’s counties experienced fence cutting. In the eyes of some Texans, barbed-wire fences stopped cattle drives, interfered with homesteading, and wrecked the state’s economy, but the act of fence cutting precipitated e

JoAnn Windholz

American politician

JoAnn Windholz (January 22, 1947 to December 14, 2023) was an American politician from the state of Colorado. A Republican, Windholz served one term in the Colorado House of Representatives, representing District 30.

Windholz was from Commerce City, Colorado.[1] She ran for the Colorado House in 2014, and defeated incumbentJenise May in the general election by 106 votes.[2]

Following the Colorado Springs Planned Parenthood shooting, Windholz suggested that Planned Parenthood was the "true instigator" of the attack.[3]

In the 2016 general election, Windholz lost to Democratic challenger Dafna Michaelson Jenet. Windholz received 45.81% of the vote to Michaelson Jenet's 54.19%.[4]

Windholz passed away in 2023 of unknown causes.

References

External links

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