Old Colorado City Explained

Official Name:Old Colorado City
Pushpin Map:USA Colorado Colorado Springs
Pushpin Label Position:right
Pushpin Map Caption:Location within El Paso County and Colorado Springs (highlighted in red)
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name:United States
Subdivision Type1:State
Subdivision Name1:Colorado
Subdivision Type2:County
Subdivision Name2:El Paso
Subdivision Type3:City
Subdivision Name3:Colorado Springs
Established Title2:Incorporated (town)
Established Date2:August 11, 1859[1]
Population Density Sq Mi:auto
Timezone:MST
Utc Offset:-7
Timezone Dst:MDT
Utc Offset Dst:-6
Coordinates:38.8481°N -104.8642°W
Footnotes:
Old Colorado City Historic Commercial District
Embed:yes
Nrhp Type:hd
Nocat:yes
Architect:Multiple
Architecture:Western Victorian
Added:November 2, 1982
Refnum:82001018

Old Colorado City, formerly Colorado City, was once a town, but it is now a neighborhood within the city of Colorado Springs, Colorado. Its commercial district was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982.[2] It was founded during the Pikes Peak Gold Rush of 1859 and was involved in the mining industry, both as a supply hub and as a gold ore processing center beginning in the 1890s. Residents of Colorado City worked at some of the 50 coal mines of the Colorado Springs area. It was briefly the capital of the Colorado Territory. For many years, Colorado Springs prohibited the use of alcohol within its border due to the lifestyle of Colorado City's opium dens, bordellos, and saloons. It is now a tourist area, with boutiques, art galleries, and restaurants.

Etymology

It was initially and briefly known as El Dorado for the gold mines found during the gold rush.[3] The name Colorado City was selected by its founders because of the red sandstone rocks and red outcroppings in the vicinity (specifically, the Rampart Range and Garden of the Gods formations).[4] The word Colorado in Spanish means "blushing" or "red".

Geography

The approximate boundaries are U.S. Highway 24 to the south, 32nd Street to the west, 13th Street to the east and Uintah Street to the north, with the town square restructured as Bancroft Park.[5]

History

Founded

Colorado City Town Company laid claim to two square miles of land that would become Colorado City on May 22, 1859. Founded at the confluence of Fountain and Camp creeks on August 13, 1859, it was the first Pikes Peak region settlement.[6] [7] The founders— Melancthon Beach, Anthony Bott, George Bute, and Rufus Cable[8] —envisioned Colorado City as a major supply hub for the new gold mines in South Park and the Blue River, where major strikes in the Pike's Peak Gold Rush had recently been made. The location for the town was selected for its proximity to Ute Pass, the route westward to the gold mines.[9]

In 1859, Colorado City was in the most westerly part of Kansas Territory.[10] The Colorado City area became part of the Jefferson Territory on October 24, 1859. There were more than 300 cabins that had been built by 1861. Its residents included ranchers, farmers, freighters, and outfitters for gold prospectors.

Territorial capital and county seat

Colorado Territory was established on November 5, 1861. Until August 14, 1862 (including one legislative session), the city was the Colorado Territory capital until it was moved to Golden.[11] Colorado City effectively functioned as the capital for only five days. When the second territorial legislature met at Colorado City on July 7, 1862, in a log cabin that still stands on Colorado Avenue, they found the accommodations so inadequate that they voted to adjourn on July 11 and reconvene in Denver on July 16.[12]

El Paso County was formed in 1861 and Colorado City was the county seat until 1873, when the courthouse moved to Colorado Springs.[13]

Saloons and bordellos

For the first two decades, the population of the town decreased. Some people chose to farm or ranch outside of the town limits. In addition, the town did not get the travelers it anticipated because most people chose to travel through Denver due to skirmishes with Native Americans along the Arkansas River. Its primary interest was as a "watering hole", due to its many saloons on the south side of Colorado Avenue. There were brothels and gambling rooms on upper floors of the saloons and brothels behind the saloons on Cucharras Street. Tunnels under Colorado Avenue ensured that men could enter these businesses without being seen. In addition to saloons and brothels, Colorado City had opium dens in its early days. When William Jackson Palmer purchased the land for Colorado Springs, he outlawed the consumption of alcohol within the new town's borders in reaction to the businesses he found unsavory in Colorado City. In 1896 and until 1916, ordinances were passed that prohibited prostitution, opium dens, and dance halls, but brothels continued to be established after 1896. The mayor of the town had warned prostitutes to leave Colorado City by 1908 or 1909, when most of the red-light district was burned down in two separate fires. Between 1902 and 1909, there were other fires along Saloon Row and the red light district.[14] Liquor was outlawed in Colorado City in 1916. For the bordellos that rebuilt or remained, they received continued pressure to close down until Colorado City was annexed to Colorado Springs in 1917. At that time, at least one owner, Laura Bell McDaniel, was arrested. In 1933, at the end of Prohibition, Colorado Springs lifted the ban of the sale and consumption of alcohol.[15] [16]

Coal miners

Coal was mined in Colorado Springs beginning in 1859. At the industry's height, there were 50 coal mines in the Colorado Springs, mostly in the Rockrimmon and Cragmor - Colorado Springs Country Club area.[17] [18] Mine workers often lived on the west side of town, like Old Colorado City, while investors lived in the Old North End.[19]

Transportation

Historic trails and roads

Roads into the area included a toll road that connected to the northeast with the Overland's 1865 "Despatch Express Route". Southward out of Colorado City a stage road (now Old Stage Road) traversed through South Cheyenne Creek's canyon to Cripple Creek,[20] and a carriage road through North and South Cheyenne Canyons[21] and westward was the Ute Pass Wagon Road.[22] Another route into the area was the north–south Cherokee Trail / Jimmy Camp Trail,[23] which was near the Goodnight–Loving Trail. The Jimmy Camp Trail was one branch of the Trapper's Trail, a trail used by trappers and explorers from 1820 and during the gold rush. Trapper's Trail ran north–south from Fort Laramie to the El Pueblo trading post in the present Pueblo County, and from there branched off to Bent's Old Fort or Taos, New Mexico.[24]

Railroad spurs growth

In 1883, the Colorado Midland Railroad came to Colorado City, with its operating and administrative headquarters in the town.

Industries located in and around town to take advantage of the convenient rail access. The industries that generated thousands of jobs included ore processing mills, Ute Pass Paint Factory, Colorado City Glass Works, and Hassell Iron Works. Banks, restaurants, rooming houses, offices, meeting halls and other supporting commercial establishments were built along the north side of Colorado Avenue between Court and 26th Street. The town's workforce also included railroad workers.

Supply hub and processing mills

Major gold strikes were made west of Colorado City during the Cripple Creek Gold Rush in the 1890s. The town grew as ore was sent to the town to be processed and prospectors came to purchase supplies and for amusement.[25] Ore processing mills were established in Colorado City in the 1890s. Eventually Colorado City was processing much of the gold ore mined at Cripple Creek. There were four processing companies in Colorado City before 1912.[26] Golden Cycle Mill had a better reduction process and by 1912 the other mills had ceased to operate.[27]

Colorado City was the location of a 1903 strike that spread to Cripple Creek and eventually led to the Colorado Labor Wars.[28] In the 1910s, a reduction in demand for the railroad and ore processing mills depressed Colorado City's economy.

Annexation

Part of Old Colorado City was annexed in 1898.[29] It was finally incorporated into Colorado Springs in 1917 and called West Colorado Springs, or more popularly, the West Side.

Historic district

Since the mid-1970s, Old Colorado City had been part of private and public revitalization efforts, including capturing the historical character of its buildings, burying utility wires, and landscaping. Buildings have been painted colors used around the turn of the 20th century, modern signs have been replaced or removed, and architectural details have been exposed.

In 1982, the Old Colorado Historic Commercial District was listed on the National Register of Historic Places. It includes 27 properties situated primarily along Colorado Avenue between 24th and 26th streets and some additional properties on Court Street and the block between 26th and 27th streets.

One-story frame and brick buildings are the earliest known style of construction. Western Victorian, turn-of-the-century commercial buildings are the second style. These structures are generally two-story, red brick structures with Queen Anne, Romanesque Revival and Italianate style architecture. Bancroft Park is located within the district. It includes a bandshell, pavilion and early pioneer cabin.

Modern history

Old Colorado City has a shopping district featuring art galleries, boutiques, restaurants, and tourist shops. Special attractions include Simpich Showcase and Magic Town at The Michael Garman Museum and Gallery.[30] [31]

Notable people

See also

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Founding of Colorado City (1859). LaDonna Gunn. August 15, 2007. https://web.archive.org/web/20070427174119/http://history.oldcolo.com/history/genhist/commorgs/founding.html. April 27, 2007. dead.
  2. Book: Colorado. April 1, 2008. Fodor's Travel Publications. 978-1-4000-1909-0. 405.
  3. Book: Capace, Nancy. Encyclopedia of Colorado. January 1, 1999. Somerset Publishers, Inc.. 978-0-403-09813-2. 171.
  4. Book: Anthony Bott. 1859. Life and Reminiscences of Anthony Bott.
  5. Web site: Old Colorado City Historical Maps . 2008-09-13 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080406040500/http://history.oldcolo.com/oldtown/maps/Fosdick_map.html#Fosdick_map . 2008-04-06.
  6. Web site: Colorado Springs History and Heritage . Visit Colorado Springs . May 24, 2013 .
  7. Web site: El Paso County . https://web.archive.org/web/20120826005828/http://www.historycolorado.org/oahp/el-paso-county . dead . August 26, 2012 . .
  8. Web site: Colorado City, El Paso County History . Old Colorado City Historical Society . June 25, 2018.
  9. Web site: [{{NRHP url|id=82001018}} National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination: Old Colorado City Historic Commercial District ]. National Park Service. Deborah Edge Abel . November 2, 1982 . June 24, 2018. With
  10. Book: Jerome C. Smiley. Semi-Centennial History of Colorado. Chicago. Lewis. 1913. 267–268.
  11. Book: Jerome C. Smiley . Semi-Centennial History of Colorado . Chicago . Lewis . 1913 . 367–369 .
  12. Book: Duval. Linda. Banks. Marty. Insiders' Guide® to Colorado Springs. August 2, 2011. Insider's Guide. 978-0-7627-6936-0. 29.
  13. Book: Hellmann, Paul T.. Historical Gazetteer of the United States. February 14, 2006. Routledge. 1-135-94859-3. 129.
  14. Book: MacKell, Jan. Red Light Women of the Rocky Mountains. October 12, 2011. UNM Press. 978-0-8263-4612-4. 101, 104–105.
  15. Book: Jan MacKell. Brothels, Bordellos, and Bad Girls: Prostitution in Colorado, 1860-1930. 2007. UNM Press. 978-0-8263-3343-8. 72.
  16. Book: Inner Source Designs. Kathy and Lee Hayward. Drinking and Driving in Colorado: A Guide to Colorado's Brewpubs. November 1, 2009. Inner Source Designs. 978-0-9822571-1-1. 112.
  17. Web site: Cragmor Area Map, Colorado Springs Coal Field . Johnson & Higgins. Schnabel Engineering Associates. March 21, 1988 . Mined Land Reclamation Division, State of Colorado . May 5, 2017.
  18. Web site: Geologic Hazards (Colorado Springs). c. 1986 . CIDBIMENA - Biblioteca Médica Nacional - UNAH . May 5, 2017. 23–26.
  19. Book: Linda Duval. Marty Banks. Insiders' Guide® to Colorado Springs. August 2, 2011. Insider's Guide. 978-0-7627-6936-0. 8, 24.
  20. Book: Randy Jacobs. Robert Ormes. Guide to the Colorado Mountains. March 1, 2000. The Mountaineers Books. 978-0-9671466-0-7. 91.
  21. Book: Manitou and the Mountains . Chicago, Rock Island . Pacific Railway Company . Chicago . Poole Brothers . 1898 . 15–16.
  22. . 1999 . Historic Trail Map ... Central Colorado . Geologic Investigations Series I-2639 (Sheet 1 of 2) . Scott, Glenn R..
  23. Book: Stanley Buchholz Kimball. Historic Sites and Markers Along the Mormon and Other Great Western Trails. registration. January 1, 1988. University of Illinois Press. 978-0-252-01456-7. 179.
  24. Book: Stanley Buchholz Kimball. Historic Sites and Markers Along the Mormon and Other Great Western Trails. registration. 1988. University of Illinois Press. 978-0-252-01456-7. 169, 179.
  25. Book: Project, Federal Writers'. The WPA Guide to Colorado: The Highest State. October 31, 2013. Trinity University Press. 978-1-59534-205-8. PT125.
  26. Book: MacKell, Jan. Red Light Women of the Rocky Mountains. October 12, 2011. UNM Press. 978-0-8263-4612-4. 101.
  27. Book: Capace, Nancy. Encyclopedia of Colorado. January 1, 1999. Somerset Publishers, Inc.. 978-0-403-09813-2. 174.
  28. Book: Colorado's War on Militant Unionism, James H. Peabody and the Western Federation of Miners. registration. George G. Suggs Jr. . 1972. 47.
  29. Book: Stephanie Waters. Ghosts of Colorado Springs and Pikes Peak. 2012. The History Press. 978-1-60949-467-4. 97.
  30. Web site: Simpich Showcase . Colorado Springs Independent . June 24, 2018.
  31. Book: Duval. Linda. Banks. Marty. Insiders' Guide® to Colorado Springs. August 2, 2011. Insider's Guide. 978-0-7627-6936-0. 108.