|
Byway
History
| In
1890, cowboy and prospector Bob Womack discovered the rich gold ore that
touched off the legendary Cripple Creek Gold Rush. The ranching country
on Pikes Peak's western slopes was quickly transformed as prospectors flocked
to the area.
With
the discovery of gold, it became a high priority to link the Cripple Creek
and Victor Mining District to the cities of the Front Range and Arkansas
Valley. Roads, and later railroads, carried construction materials, food,
clothing, coal, ore and people to and from the District. |
Bob
Womack |
In 1892,
Cañon City completed the Shelf Road, the first stage route linking
the Arkansas Valley with the District. A trip along the Shelf Road took
six hours upgrade and four hours downgrade. Tolls ranged from thirty cents
for a horse and rider to $1.75 for a six-horse stagecoach.
Florence
c. 1910
Soon
after, Florence completed the Florence and Cripple Creek Free Road through
Phantom Canyon. In 1894, the Florence and Cripple Creek Railroad (F&CC)
replaced that road. This narrow gauge railroad quickly became the major
transportation link between the gold camps and the Arkansas Valley. Twelve
stations were established along the F&CC Railroad grade to service
the trains hauling coal and supplies upgrade and gold ore downgrade to
Florence's smelters.
| Tourists
enjoyed visiting the bustling gold camps and several excursion trains ran
daily along the "Gold Belt Line". The Hundley Stage Route, between Florissant
and Cripple Creek, linked the District with the Colorado Midland Railroad
and Colorado Springs. Today, Teller One between Cripple Creek and Florissant
follows this historic stagecoach and wagon route. |
Colorado
Midland |
Over 500 mines in the Cripple
Creek and Victor Mining District produced over 21 million ounces in gold
exceeding the combined production of the California and Alaska Gold Rushes.
Towns sprang up on the mountainsides and in the gulches of the District.
Cripple Creek, the financial heart of the District, boomed. Stockbrokers,
stock exchanges, newspapers, engineering firms, boarding houses, restaurants,
general stores and saloons are examples of Cripple Creek's thriving business
sector in 1900. Victor, a "stone's throw" from the richest mines, housed
many of the District's miners. The Wood brothers discovered the prosperous
Gold Coin Mine in the heart of Victor while digging a foundation for a
hotel.
Portland
Mining Company |
Just after the turn of the
century, the District's gold production began declining. Today, the story
of the Cripple Creek Mining District continues to unfold. Two economic
endeavors limited stakes gaming and heap leach gold mining
have renewed interest in "America's Greatest Gold Camp". |
| Take
a longer view of history by noticing the geologic features of the Gold
Belt Tour. Today's landscape resulted from multiple episodes of mountain
building alternating with periods of flooding by an inland sea. The sandstone
formations in Red Canyon Park and the limestone cliffs at the Shelf Road
Climbing Area had their origins in sediment deposits beneath this inland
sea. |
Red
Canyon Park
The
remains of ancient plants and animals deposited during the flooding produced
the rich coal and oil fields in the Arkansas Valley near Florence and the
fossil beds at Garden Park and Indian Springs near Cañon City. |
| Closer
to Cripple Creek and Victor, volcanic activity ending six million years
ago shaped the landscape. One volcanic cone was nearly 15 miles wide and
rose 6,000 feet above the surrounding hills before blowing its top. Look
for Mount Pisgah and Nipple Mountain near Cripple Creek, both peaks were
formed by volcanic activity. |
Cripple
Creek Around 1900 |
Two
buried treasures were greatly influenced by volcanic activity. Veins of
gold telluride ore in the Cripple Creek Mining District rose near the surface
along the edge of one of the volcanic caldera. Further north, volcanic
mudflows and eruptions buried another treasure - plant and animal life
of 35 million years ago - today's Florissant Fossil Beds National Monument.
Historic
photos courtesy of Cripple Creek District Museum, Lowell Thomas Museum;
Florence photo - Colorado State Historical Society via Bob Curzen of the
Florence Citizen. |