A reserve price is the minimum price the seller will accept. This price is hidden from bidders. To win, a bidder must have the highest bid and have met or exceeded the reserve price.
You are bidding on this wonderful historical piece.
I HAVE MANY OTHER COLORADO BOOKPLATE PRINTS LISTED RIGHT NOW...
PLEASE VISIT MY STORE..JUST CLICK HERE ----->
It is a 40 - 50 year old (my best guess) bookplate print from some sort of historical textbook.
It measures 8 5/16" x 10 5/16".
The image size is approximately 6 1/2 X 8 1/4"
There is a 1769 Plan of Edenton on the reverse side and the paper is thick enough that it does not show through to the image side.
I always ship in between cardboard in a clasp envelope. Shipping and Handling is $5.95 for the first piece and an additional $1.50 for each piece thereafter.
The images below may seem blurry on your monitor but I assure you they are as clear and crisp as a cold autumn morning
Pueblo is situated at the confluence of the Arkansas River and Fountain Creek 103 miles (166 km) south of the Colorado State Capitol in Denver.
The area is considered to be semi-arid with approximately 14 inches
(350 mm) of precipitation annually; however with its location in the "banana belt," Pueblo tends to get less snow than the other major cities in Colorado. Pueblo is the heart of the Pueblo Metropolitan Statistical Area and an important part of the Front Range Urban Corridor.[2]. Many consider Pueblo to be the economic hub of southeastern Colorado and northern New Mexico. Because of this some people call Pueblo "Colorado's second city,"
although Pueblo is no longer the second largest city by population.
Pueblo is one of the largest steel-producing cities in the United
States; because of this Pueblo is referred to as the "Steel City." It is now home to a number of electronics and aviation companies. The Historic Arkansas River Project (HARP) is a beautiful river walk that graces the historic Union Avenue district. It shows the history of the Pueblo Flood.
It is the hometown of Damon Runyon,
who never returned after 1911 or so, but mentioned Pueblo in many of
his newspaper columns (notably his "Our Old Man" pieces). Pueblo is
also the home of Dutch Clark,
the first man from Colorado in the NFL hall of fame. Pueblo's largest
football stadium is named after him. At this stadium is where the
oldest high school rivalry west of the Mississippi takes place, The
Bell Game, which is played by The Pueblo Central Wildcats and the
Pueblo Centennial Bulldogs.
Pueblo City Hall.
Pueblo is the hometown of four Medal of Honor recipients - Drew D. Dix, Raymond G. Murphy, William J. Crawford, and Carl L. Sitter.
President Dwight D. Eisenhower upon presenting Raymond G. "Jerry"
Murphy with his Medal in 1953 commented, "What is it... something in
the water out there in Pueblo? All you guys turn out to be heroes!". In
1993, The City Council adopted the tagline "Home of Heroes" because it
can claim more recipients per capita than any other city in the United
States. On July 1, 1993, the Congressional Record recognized Pueblo as
the "Home of Heroes" (http://www.pueblo.org/homeofheroes/.
There is a memorial to the recipients of the medal at the Pueblo
Convention Center. Central High School is known as the "School of
Heroes", as it is the alma mater of two recipients, Sitter and
Crawford, more than any other high school in the country.
The art room at the Buell Childrens Museum, which was ranked the #2 children's museum in the United States by Child Magazine.[5]
Pueblo is the home to Colorado's largest single event, the Colorado
State Fair, held annually in the late summer, and the largest parade,
the state fair parade, as well as and an annual Chili Festival.
The National Street Rod Association's
Rocky Mountain Street Rod Nationals have been held in Pueblo for 23
years, and this is the region's largest and premier street rod event.
The highways U.S. Highway 50 and Interstate 25
cross each other at Pueblo, possibly making it the second most
important intersection in the state, after I-70 and I-25 in Denver. The
local airport, Pueblo Memorial Airport, lies to the east of the city. It is home to the Pueblo Weisbrod Aircraft Museum
(named for Fred Weisbrod, late city manager), reflecting the airport's
beginnings as an Army Air Corps base in 1943. Pueblo Transit provides
bus service six days a week throughout the city. Due to the growth of
the Pueblo Metro Area they are considering forming a regional
transportation district so they can serve some of Pueblo's fastest
growing suburbs.
The Pueblo city council is in the process of annexing over 24,000 acres (97 km2)
north of Pueblo, owned by a Las Vegas development company, to be called
the Pueblo Springs Ranch. This development has the potential of being
one of the largest planned communities in the country, and will nearly
double Pueblo's land area. According to the Pueblo Chieftain, the
development will include residential area as well as a major tech park.
Pueblo is becoming the region's renewable energy capital. Vestas
just announced that it would build the largest plant in the world which
manufactures wind turbines at Pueblo's industrial park at close to
700,000 square feet. Also, AEHI along with other companies want to
build a 21,000 acre energy park east of Pueblo and would be the largest
of its kind in the United States. It will include nuclear, solar,
natural gas, wind turbines and hydroelectric power plants as well as
manufacturing companies who want to be located next to major sources of
power. The park will be called the Colorado Energy Park and the cost to
build it will be close to 10 billion dollars.[6]
George Simpson, among other traders and trappers such as Mathew
Kinkead, claimed to have helped construct the plaza that became known
as El Pueblo or Fort Pueblo around 1842. George married Juana Maria
Suaso and lived there for a year or two before moving; however, Simpson
had no legal title to the land. The adobe structures were built with
the intention of settlement and trade next to the Arkansas River, which
then formed the U.S./Mexico border. About a dozen families lived there,
trading with Native American tribes for hides, skins, livestock, as
well as (later) cultivated plants, and liquor. Evidence of this trade,
as well as other utilitarian goods, such as Native American pottery
shards were found at the recently excavated site. According to accounts
of residents who traded at the plaza (including that of George
Simpson), the fort was raided sometime between December 23 and December
25, 1854, by Native American Ute Tribe and Jacarilla Apache
tribes. They allegedly killed between fifteen and nineteen men, one
woman, and captured two children. The trading post was abandoned after
the raid, but it became important again between 1858 and 1859 during
the Colorado Gold Rush of 1859.[7]
The current city of Pueblo represents the consolidation of four
towns: Pueblo (incorporated 1870), South Pueblo (incorporated 1873),
Central Pueblo (incorporated 1882), and Bessemer (incorporated 1886).
Pueblo, South Pueblo, and Central Pueblo legally consolidated as the
City of Pueblo between March 9 and April 6, 1886. Bessemer joined
Pueblo in 1894[8].[9][10]
The consolidated city was once a major economic and social center of
Colorado, and was home to important early Colorado families the
Thatchers, Ormans and Adams. Until a series of major floods culminated
in the Great Flood of 1921, Pueblo was considered the 'Saddle-Making
capital of the World'. Roughly one-third of Pueblo's downtown
businesses were lost in this flood, along with a substantial number of
buildings. Pueblo has long struggled to come to grips with this loss,
and has only recently begun a resurgence in growth.[11]
The economic situation of Pueblo was further exacerbated by the
decline of American steel in the 1970s and 1980s, and Pueblo still
actively seeks to diversify its economic base. The City features a
river walk, extensive trail system, industrial park, and revitalized
downtown area to this effect
The steel mill
The foundation, stoves, and powerhouse of A-Furnace
The main industry in Pueblo for most of its history was the Colorado Fuel and Iron
(CF&I) steel mill on the south side of town. The steel-market crash
of 1982 lead to the decline of the company. After going through several
bankruptcies, the company was acquired by Oregon Steel Mills
and recently changed its name to Rocky Mountain Steel Mills. Since the
acquisition, the company has been plagued with labor problems, mostly
due to accusations of unfair labor practices. The problems culminated
with a major strike in 1997, leading to most of the workforce being
replaced.
Of the many production and fabrication mills which once existed on
the site, only the steel production (electric furnaces, used for scrap
recycling), rail, rod, bar, and seamless tube mills are still in
operation. The wire mill was sold in the late 1990s to Davis Wire,
which still produces products such as fence and nails under the
CF&I brand name.
The facility operated blast furnaces until 1982, when the bottom
fell out of the steel market. The main blast furnace structures were
torn down in 1989, but due to asbestos content, many of the adjacent
stoves still remain. The stoves and foundations for some of the
furnaces can be easily seen from Interstate 25, which runs parallel to
the plant's west boundary.
Several of the administration buildings, including the main office
building, dispensary, and tunnel gatehouse were purchased in 2003 by
the Bessemer Historical Society. They are currently undergoing
renovation. In addition to housing the historic CF&I Archives, the
first phase of the project has been turned into the Steelworks Museum
of Industry and Culture [1].
Presidential visits
President Woodrow Wilson, on a speaking tour to gather support for the entry of the United States into the League of Nations,
collapsed on September 25, 1919 following a speech in Pueblo. He
suffered a stroke a week later which incapacitated him for the rest of
his presidency.
Theodore Roosevelt
arrived at the Pueblo Union Depot in order to lay the first brick down
for the Y.M.C.A., and also check the water resources in Colorado.
President George H. W. Bush
(when he was Vice President) had come to the Pueblo Nature Center's
Raptor Center to release an American Bald Eagle that had its wings
healed.
Other national leaders to visit Pueblo include President John F. Kennedy, President [[Bill Clinton, Senator John Kerry, and Vice President Al Gore.
In the 2008 presidential campaign Pueblo has been visited by both
President-elect Obama and Republican nominee Senator McCain. This is
due to the fact that the state of Colorado is considered a key
"battleground" state and Pueblo, as the democratic strong hold, a key
city for Obama to win.
TIMELINE OF HISTORY OF THE STATE OF COLORADO
Colorado's
first inhabitants were probably the Anasazi Indians who, four centuries
before Columbus, lived in multi-story cliff dwellings in canyons in the
southwestern corner of Colorado. At the end of the thirteenth century,
these Indians abandoned their cliff dwellings and apparently moved
southward.
1 to 1299 - Advent of great Prehistoric Cliff Dwelling Civilization in the Mesa Verde region.
1276 to 1299 - A great drought and/or pressure from nomadic tribes forced the Cliff Dwellers to abandon their Mesa Verde homes.
16th century
1500 - Ute Indians inhabit mountain areas of southern Rocky Mountains making these Native Americans the oldest continuous residents of Colorado.
1541 - Coronado, famed Spanish explorer, may have crossed
the southeastern corner of present Colorado on his return march to
Mexico after vain hunt for the golden Seven Cities of Cibola.
17th century
1682 - Explorer La Salle appropriates for France all of the area now known as Colorado east of the Rocky Mountains.
18th century
1765 - Juan Maria Rivera leads Spanish expedition into San Juan and Sangre de Cristo Mountains in search of gold and silver.
1776 - Friars Escalante and Dominguez seeking route from
Santa Fe to California missions, traverse what is now western Colorado
as far north as the White River in Rio Blanco County.
19th century
1803 - Through the Louisiana Purchase, signed by President
Thomas Jefferson, the United States acquires a vast area which included
what is now most of eastern Colorado. While the United States lays
claim to this vast territory, Native Americans have resided here for
hundreds of years.
1806 - Lieutenant Zebulon M. Pike and small party of U.S.
soldiers sent to explore southwestern boundary of Louisiana Purchase;
discovers peak that bears his name, but fails in effort to climb it;
reaches headwaters of Arkansas River near Leadville.
1807 - Pike crosses Sangre de Cristo Mountains to Conejos
River in San Luis Valley and builds Pike's Stockade; placed under
nominal arrest by Spanish authorities and taken to Santa Fe; later, he
and his men are released.
1820 -
Numerous Native American tribes live in the Colorado area. The Utes
live in the mountains, the Cheyenne and Arapahoe reside on the plains
from the Arkansas to the Platte rivers, and the Kiowas and Comanches
live south of the Arkansas River. The Pawnee tribe hunts buffalo along
the Republican River and the Sioux sometimes hunt in the outskirts of
the Cheyenne and Arapahoe lands.
Major Stephen H. Long is sent by President Monroe to
explore southwestern boundary of the Louisiana Purchase. Long's party
came up the South Platte River. Long's Peak named for him. Dr. Edwin
James, historian of Long's expedition, leads first recorded ascent of
Pike's Peak. James Peak, west of Denver, named for him.
1825 - Opening of era of fur-traders, trappers and Mountain
Men - Bent brothers, Ceran St.Vrain, Louis Vasquez, Kit Carson, Jim
Baker, James Bridger, Thomas Fitzpatrick, "Uncle Dick" Wooten, and Jim
Beckworth - who established posts in Arkansas and South Platte Valleys.
1832 - Bent's Fort, one of the most important trading posts
in the West, is built by the Bents and St. Vrain near present city of
La Junta.
1836 - Texas becomes independent republic and claims narrow
strip of mountain territory extending northward through Colorado to
42nd parallel.
Early 1840's - Mexico granted lands to the wealthy, south of
the Arkansas Valley and in the San Luis Valley hoping to secure claims
against Texas or America.
1842 - Lieutenant John C. Fremont undertakes first of his
five exploration trips into Rocky Mountains. His last expedition, in
1853, took him through the San Luis Valley and into the Gunnison River
country.
1846 - General Stephen W. Kearney leads Army of the West
along Santa Fe Trail through southeastern Colorado en route to conquest
of New Mexico during Mexican War.
1848 - By Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, Mexico cedes to United States most of that part of Colorado not acquired by Louisiana Purchase.
1850 - Federal Government purchases Texas' claims in Colorado, and present boundaries of Colorado established.
1851 - First permanent non-Indian settlement in Colorado is
founded at Conejos in San Luis Valley; irrigation is begun; Fort
Massachusetts established in San Luis Valley to protect settlers from
Indians who believe that the non-Indians are encroaching on their land.
1853 - Captain John W. Gunnison leads exploring party across
southern and western Colorado. Gunnison named for him. Fremont's last
expedition, seeking feasible railroad route through mountains, follows
Gunnison's route.
1854 - Treaties with Native American groups prove
unsatisfactory which results in conflict as the Utes kill fifteen
inhabitants of Fort Pueblo on Christmas Day.
1858 - Green Russell's discovery of small placer gold
deposits near confluence of South Platte River and Cherry Creek,
precipitates gold rush from the East and "Pikes Peak or Bust" slogan.
Montana City, St. Charles, Auraria, and Denver City are founded on
present site of Denver. November 6, two hundred men meet here to
organize County of Arapahoe, Kansas Territory. Pueblo founded as
Fountain City.
1859 - Gold is found by George A. Jackson along Chicago
Creek on present site of Idaho Springs. March 9, first stagecoach with
mail for Cherry Creek settlements leaves Leavenworth, Kansas. April 23,
first newspaper in the region, the Rocky Mountain News, is
published by William N. Byers. May 6, John Gregory makes famous
gold-lode strike on North Clear Creek, stimulating rush of prospectors,
who establish camps of Black Hawk, Central City and Nevadaville.
October 3, O.J. Goldrick opens first school, at Auraria. Jefferson
Territory is organized without sanction of Congress to govern gold
camps; officers are elected. Prospectors spread through mountains and
establish camps at Boulder, Colorado City, Gold Hill, Hamilton,
Tarryall, and Pueblo.
1860 - Rich placer discoveries cause stampede of miners to
California Gulch on present site of Leadville. First schoolhouse is
built at Boulder. Region continues to be administered variously by
Jefferson Territory officials, and Miners' and People's Courts.
1861 - Congress establishes Colorado Territory with
boundaries of present state; President Lincoln appoints William Gilpin
as first Territorial governor. July, Supreme Court is organized and
Congressional delegates chosen. September, first assembly meets,
creates 17 counties, authorizes university, and selects Colorado City
as Territorial capitol. Manufacture of mining machinery begins. The
population of the Colorado Territory is 25,371.
1862 - Colorado troops aid in defeating Confederate General
Henry H. Sibley's Army at La Glorieta Pass, New Mexico. Second
Territorial Legislature meets for a few days at Colorado City, adjourns
to Denver, and selects Golden as the new capitol. First tax-supported
schools are established. First oil well drilled near Florence.
1863 - Telegraph line links Denver with East; ten words to
New York cost $9.10. Plains Indians attempt to drive white intruders
from their hunting lands on the Eastern slopes.
1864 - Tension between non-Indians and the Native American
tribes escalates. The massacre (Sand Creek Massacre) of Native American
men, women and children in a Cheyenne and Arapahoe Indian encampment by
soldiers and settlers stirs Native Americans to fresh violence and
overland trails are often closed. Fort Sedgwick is established near
Julesburg. Camp Collins established to protect travelers on Overland
Trail. Later became Fort Collins. Colorado Seminary (now University of
Denver) is chartered; Sisters of Loretto open academy.
1865 - Indian attacks along trails reach highest intensity;
food is scarce for settlers and prices high; potatoes bring $15 a
bushel and flour costs $40 per 100 pounds. Fort Morgan established for
protection against Indians.
1867 - Denver established as permanent seat of government by territorial legislature meeting in Golden. Golden Transcript established by George West.
1868 - Nathaniel Hill erects first smelter in Colorado, at
Blackhawk, inaugurating era of hard-rock mining. Cheyenne Indians
disastrously defeated at Beecher Island near present site of Wray. The Pueblo Chieftain established by Dr. M. Beshoar at Pueblo.
1869 - The final military engagement between whites and
plains Indians in the eastern part of the territory took place at
Summit Springs.
1870 - Denver and Pacific Railroad is constructed to connect
Denver with Union Pacific at Cheyenne, Wyoming; the Kansas Pacific
enters Colorado from Missouri River. Union Colony is established by
Horace Greeley and Nathan C. Meeker at Greeley, and first irrigation
canal surveyed there. The Greeley Tribune established. Population of
Colorado territory 39,864.
1871 - Colorado Springs is founded by General William J.
Palmer. Denver and Rio Grande Railroad is built southward from Denver
by Palmer. Colorado School of Mines established at Golden.
1872 - Blackhawk and Central City are connected with Denver
by railroad; Denver and Rio Grande reaches Pueblo. Agricultural
settlements established throughout South Platte Valley. Out West, later
the Colorado Springs Gazette, was established. This year signals an end
to the major use of the "Mountain Branch" of the Santa Fe Trail.
1874 - Colorado College is founded at Colorado Springs;
territorial legislature appropriates $15,00 for University of Colorado
at Boulder, on condition that equal sum is raised by that city. W.H.
Jackson, famous photographer of the Hayden Geological Survey, notes ruins of ancient cliff dwellings along the canyon on Mancos River.
1875 - Lead carbonate ores, rich in silver, are found near
present site of Leadville. Constitutional Convention of 38 members
holds first meeting.
1876 - Colorado is admitted to Union as 38th State; John L.
Routt is elected first governor. Greeley's first industry, the tanning
of buffalo hides, turns out 12 robes a day.
1877 - University of Colorado opens classes at Boulder, with two teachers and 44 students. State Board of Agriculture is created to develop Agricultural College at Fort Collins.
1878 - Leadville is incorporated; rich silver strikes on
Iron, Carbonate, and Fryer hills soon make is one of the world's
greatest mining camps. Central City opera house opens. First telephones
are installed in Denver.
1879 - Colorado College of Agriculture and Mechanic
Arts offers instruction at Fort Collins. Nathan C. Meeker, Indian Agent
on White River (near Meeker) and several employees are slain in Ute
uprising. Major Thornburg and half of his command of 160 soldiers
killed in effort to give protection to Meeker. Utes defeated.
1880 - Denver & Rio Grande lays tracks through Royal
Gorge and on to Leadville. Great Ute Chief, Ouray, dies. Dry land
farming undertaken extensively in eastern Colorado. Population of
Colorado, 194,327.
1881 - Ute tribes are removed onto reservations. Grand
Junction is founded. Small quantities of carnotite are found in western
Colorado along with gold; later, this mineral is found to contain
radium. Tabor Opera House opens in Denver, built by H.A.W. Tabor,
famous Leadville capitalist.
1882 - Steel is milled in Pueblo from Colorado ores. Company later becomes Colorado Fuel and Iron Company.
1883 - Narrow gauge line of Denver & Rio Grange is
completed from Gunnison to Grand Junction. First electric lights are
installed in Denver.
1886 - The Steamboat Pilot established at Steamboat Springs.
Charles H.Leckenby becomes owner and publisher, 1893. Denver Union
Stockyards are established, later becoming largest receiving market for
sheep in the nation. Town of Lamar is founded. The last public hanging
in Denver occurred when Andrew Green was executed for the murder of
streetcar driver, Joseph Whitnah.
1888 - Band of Utes from Utah under Colorow make last Indian
raid into Colorado; they are defeated and returned to the reservation.
Union Colony at Greeley completes 900,000 acre irrigation project.
Cliff Palace ruins, in what is now Mesa Verde National Park, discovered
by two cowboys.
1890 - Passage of Sherman Silver Purchase Act raises price
of silver to more than $1.00 an ounce. New rich silver strikes are made
along Rio Grande and Creede is founded. July 4, cornerstone of State
Capitol at Denver is laid. October 3, first building of the State
Normal School (now University of Northern Colorado) at Greeley is
occupied. Population of state, 413,249. Boulder Daily Camera established by L.C. Paddock.
1891 - Robert Womack's discoveries open great gold field of
Cripple Creek. First national forest reserve in Colorado is set aside -
White River Forest in Meeker area. Pike's Peak cog railroad begins
operation.
1892 - The Denver Post established. H. C. Brown opens Brown Palace Hotel in Denver.
1893 - National panic brings great distress to Colorado.
Repeal of Sherman Act strikes silver mining a paralyzing blow and adds
to already acute unemployment problems. Grand Junction Sentinel
established.
1894 - State Capitol is completed at a cost of $2,500,000.
Colorado is second state in the nation to extend suffrage to women,
following the precedent set by Wyoming.
1899 - First beet sugar refinery is built at Grand Junction.
20th century
1900 - Gold production reaches peak of more than $20,000,000
annually at Cripple Creek, the second richest gold camp in the world.
Population of State, 539,700.
1902 - Constitutional amendment permits towns of 2,000 to
adopt "Home Rule"; Denver becomes home rule city. Beet sugar refinery
built at Fort Collins. David H. Moffat and associates begin construction of Moffat Railroad over the Continental Divide. Completed to Steamboat Springs in 1980 and to Craig in 1913.
1903 -
With Ben B. Lindsey as Judge, Denver Juvenile Court opens - the first such court in the United States.
Mine, mill and smelter workers strike in many camps for higher
wages and better working conditions; at Cripple Creek, strike results
in much property damage and loss of life; all strike objectives in gold
field are lost. Uncompahgre irrigation project, first federal
government reclamation project in Colorado, is authorized.
1905 - Colorado has 3 governors in one day in a political
squabble. First, Alva Adams, then James H. Peabody, and finally Jesse
F. McDonald. Construction of the six mile Gunnison water tunnel started by Bureau of Reclamation.
1906 - United States Mint, Denver, issues first coins. March
12, National Western Stock Show is born with chartering of Western
Stock Show Association following successful showing of about 60 head of
cattle and horses and a few sheep and hogs in makeshift tent at
Stockyards. July 29, Mesa Verde national Park is created by Congress.
1908 - July 7, Denver municipal Auditorium, seating 12,500,
is completed in time for the Democratic National Convention, when
William Jennings Bryan was nominated the third time for President.
August 1, Colorado Day is first celebrated, marking thirty-second
anniversary of State's admittance to Union. Dome of the State Capitol
is plated with gold leaf at a cost of $14,680.
1909 - Colorado attains first rank among states in
irrigation area with 2,790,000 acres under irrigation. Gunnison water
tunnel completed by Reclamation Service and opened, on September 23, by
President William Howard Taft at the tunnel site. Western State
Teachers College opens at Gunnison.
1910 - Population of State, 799,024. Number of farms,
46,170. Colorado voters adopt a constitutional amendment giving to the
people the right of the initiative and referendum. May 8, first long
distance phone call made from Denver to New York City. First airplane flight in Denver.
1911 - Colorado National Monument west of Grand Junction, created by Presidential order.
1913 - State Tax Commission created by Legislature. Assessed
value of Colorado property for tax purposes set at $1,306,536,692. The
"Big Snow of 1913" covers Colorado to a depth of 3 - 5 feet;
transportation paralyzed for weeks. State begins licensing autos for
the first time.
1914 - Strike of coal miners in southern Colorado fields is
climaxed by "Battle of Ludlow" near Trinidad; several men, women and
children killed during hostilities between miners and the State
militia. August: WWI begins.
1915 - Worker's compensation measures are passsed: State
Industrial Commission is created. Rocky Mountain National Park created
by Congress. Toll road for auto travel to top of Pikes Peak built by
Spencer Penrose. Construction of Broadmoor Hotel at Colorado Springs started.
1916 - Colorado adopts prohibition. Emily Griffith
Opportunity School is opened in Denver. Mining of tungsten causes
flurry in Boulder-Nederland area.
1917 - April 6: Congress declares war on Germany and many
Coloradans volunteer for service. Colorado reaches maximum mineral
production, more then $80,000,000. William F. "Buffalo Bill" Cody,
Famous Indian scout, dies and is buried on Lookout Mountain, west of
Denver.
1918 - Agricultural production increased sharply to aid war
needs. Dry lands plowed up to produce wheat. Colorado citizens purchase
Liberty Bonds by the millions of dollars to help finance war. More than
125,000 Colorado men register for the draft for army service.
Fitzsimmons General Hospital established near Denver. Coal production
of state reaches new high of 12,500,000 tons. Impetus of war stirs
development of mining of molybdenum at Climax, near Leadville - the
nation's greatest source of the metal. Denver Tourist Bureau
establishes free auto camp ground for tourists at Overland Park,
Denver. Other cities follow suit during the next few years. Federal
Reserve branch bank established in Denver. Colorado voters approve
constitutional amendment providing Civil Service for state employees.
November, 11, 1918, Germany surrenders.
1919 - Post-war inflation brings higher prices to farmers
and producers; prices of farm land high; wages high; boom times
everywhere. Colorado enacts tax of one cent per gallon on gasoline, for
building of roads. Monte Vista stages first Ski-Hi Stampede.
1920 - Population of State, 939,629. Employees of Denver Tramway company go on strike. Aroused by editorials in The Denver Post, strikers raid Post building and do much damage to property.
1921 - General Assembly creates State Highway Department
with seven man Advisory Board. Colorado begins building concrete
highways on main traveled routes. Pueblo suffers disastrous flood in
June; scores drowned and property damage amounts to $20,000,000. Post
war deflation sets in and decline in prices brings trouble in the rural
areas. During the next several years, numerous banks serving farming
areas close, price and farm lands decline sharply from levels reached
in World War I, and farmers clamor for farm relief.
1922 - Coloradans vote $6,000,000 in bonds for highway construction. Moffat Tunnel Improvement District is created by General Assembly for construction
of 6.4 mile bore under Continental Divide to provide better rail
connections between Eastern and Western Slopes of the State. First
commerical radio license in Colorado is issued, to station KLZ. Daring
daylight hold-up of Federal Reserve bank truck is staged as it leaves
U.S. Mint in Denver and $200,000 stolen. Robbery never solved.
1923 - Oil discovered in Wellington field north of Fort Collins; flurry of oil stock promotion follows.
1924 - April 26, Colorado is second state to ratify child
labor amendment to federal Constitution. Celebration held in Greeley
marking completion of concrete pavement between Denver and Greeley -
first two major cities in State to be connected by paved highways. Ku
Klux Klan secures domination of Republican party in Colorado and elects
a pro-Klan Governor and U.S. Senator.
1925 - Adams State Teachers College at Alamosa and junior colleges at Grand Junction and Trinidad are opened.
1931 - Population reaches over one million.
1941 - Denver recruiting offices swamped by over 2,000 enlistments during the month of December as United States enters World War II.
1941-1945 -
During World War II agriculture industry has greatest production in Colorado history.
Growth of military installations in Colorado mushroom.
1942 - Federal government established Amache, a camp for Japanese-Americans who were interned and relocated from their homes on the West Coast.
1945-1950 - Federal government presence in Colorado grows,
military installations and scientific institutions continue to develop
while many veterans relocate to Colorado. These changes cause a steady
increase in population.
1958 - Air Force Academy is built near Colorado Springs and first class graduates in June, 1959.
1950's and 1960's -Numerous water storage and diversion
projects are constructed in response to increased agricultural and
municipal water demands. Tourist and ski industries blossom. Population
continues to increase.
1960 - Colorado gets the Denver Broncos professional football team which eventually wins two Super Bowls.
1962-1965 - Disposition of poisonous wastes into a deep well
at the Rocky Mountain Arsenal results in earthquakes and hundreds of
tremors around the Denver area.
1967 - Denver Rockets become Colorado's professional American Basketball Association team. In 1974 they are renamed the Denver Nuggets.
1973 - Eisenhower Tunnel is built beneath the Continental
Divide sixty miles west of Denver, making it easier to reach the ski
slopes of western Colorado.
1974 - Desegregation of schools in Denver begins as busing attempts to achieve racial balance.
1970's and 1980's -Tremendous growth of Denver suburbs occurs.
1970's - The population swells, traffic problems grow, and
the "brown cloud" develops over much of the Front Range. Coloradans
become concerned over the consequences of pollution and overselling
Colorado and reject hosting the 1976 Winter Olympics as a result.
July 31, 1976 - A cloudburst on the Big Thompson River results in a massive flood in Larimer County, killing more than 145 people.
1980 - Coal mining production in Colorado on the Western
Slopes hits all time high as United States becomes more dependent on
energy resources at home rather than overseas.
1982 - The state economic structure is shaken when the oil
shale giant Exxon announces the closure of its oil shale development
fields in Rio Blanco, Mesa and Garfield counties. Thousands are laid
off and the economic stability of the western slope of the state is
severely impacted.
1980's and 1990's Major growth of technological industries occurs in Colorado.
1992 - The voters of Colorado pass a citizens' initiative to
limit the growth of state and local governments with the passage of the
TABOR (Taxpayer Bill of Rights) amendment to the state constitution.
1993 - Colorado Rockies become first regional major league baseball team.
1995 - Quebec Nordiques National Hockey League team moves to Colorado to become the Colorado Avalanche.
1998 - Colorado voters elect the first Republican Governor (Bill Owens) to the statehouse in twenty-four years.
Shipping and handling
$1.50 shipping for each additional eligible item you buy from phyounglifer.
*The estimated delivery time is based on the seller's handling time, the shipping service selected, and when the seller receives cleared payment. Sellers are not responsible for shipping service transit times. Transit times may vary, particularly during peak periods.
I carefully pack each piece and they all leave my home in good shape...Sometimes the Post Office will bend the envelope (even though I have stamped DO NOT BEND all over it. I will not be responsible for bent, torn or creased items...Feel free to add the small amount the post office charges for insurance to you item at the end of the auction....If you would like insurance I will add it to your invoice prior to payment...PLEASE EMAIL ME IF YOU HAVE ANY QUESTIONS.
Thank you!!!
Seller assumes all responsibility for this listing.