On 1 May 1975 John and Joyce Cooper found a Scott’s Oriole (Icterus parisorum) in Red Rocks Park, near Morrison, Jefferson Co., Colorado (Cooper 1975). On 2 May Robert Andrews and Remsen relocated the bird and studied it for 20 minutes as it foraged in flowering and budding cottonwoods in a brushy gully surrounded by large rock formations, foothill grassland, and scattered junipers. This location is on the eastern slope of the eastern foothills of the Rocky Mountains. Remsen obtained five photographs of the bird, from which the identification was confirmed by Laurence C. Binford, Curator of Birds, California Academy of Sciences, San Francisco, California. Binford (pers. comm.) noted that the age and sex of the bird could not be determined due to the difficulty in distinguishing immature males from dark-throated adult females and that the only thing which could be said with certainty was that it was not an adult male. Copies of the photographs have been deposited in the files of the Official Records Committee (O.R.C.) of the Colorado Field Ornithologists. Although the record has already been accepted as the first for Colorado on the basis of written descriptions submitted by John Cooper, Andrews and Remsen (record N-54-53; Reddall 1976), this note is the first report of the existence of the photographs to confirm the identification.