Monday, February 27, 2023

Figuring out Lebanon

Lebanon, Colo., North of Cortez, Colo. photo taken 1920 to 1929. Two men stand near a wood frame house under construction while another sits in a horse-drawn carriage (surrey) with a fringe on the top in Lebanon (Montezuma County), Colorado. Also, women sit on the porch of the Parker Hotel and a man drives a horse-drawn wagon down the street. Shows telegraph poles, and a ditch with water.
Colorado Historical Society, Denver and Rio Grande collection

School, community survives long after founding company collapses

By Rob Carrigan, robcarrigan1@gmail.com

 When I was a youngster, (four or five years old) the neighbor across the street from our home in Dolores on Hillside Avenue would allow me to ride with him on the Montezuma County "maintainer" out in the area known as Lebanon, as my mom picked fruit out near the "apple shed."   I always had a little trouble figuring out what Lebanon was. A town, a farm, school district, a maintenance route? And what were the boundaries? Eventually, I just came to know it as the area between Dolores and Cortez with an old school that no students go to anymore, with the possible exception of special meetings and events.

Built in the dense setting of Cedars — as was the Biblical Lebanon — in the shadow of Sleeping Ute Mountain,  the village was originally named by the Railway Building & Loan Company of Pueblo, in 1908, according to property records in the county.

United States Department of the Interior, National Park Service noted the significance of the school building in the National Register of Historic Places continuation sheet and identified the Lebanon School as being eligible for the National Register under Criterion A in the two areas of education, and recreation and entertainment. 

"The school served as the second and last educational facility in the Lebanon community from its construction in 1908 until its closure in 1963. It is the best resource capable of conveying the community's important efforts to educate its children. Beyond its educational function, the school building served as the center of community recreational activities as the location of numerous plays, musicals, dinners, club meetings and other social gatherings. The Lebanon School is also eligible under Criterion C for its architectural significance as an important and rare example of Classical Revival styling adapted to a rural school." 

Lebanon had its beginnings in the 1890s as an agricultural community based on fruit production, grain farming and cattle ranching. A school district was formed in 1896 and classes were held a small building south of the existing Lebanon School. By 1908 the Colorado Land and Improvement Co. was organized by a group of investors and perspective landowners in Pueblo and Trinidad to develop the Lebanon area. 


"The company immediately began to plan improvements for the infant community, sold town and rural plots, plowed roads and strung telephone lines, and advertised the area as being ideal for orchards. New property owners cleared land, put out ten acre tracts to orchards, and began
farming. In July of 1908 a 16-room hotel opened and newspaper reports noted that the new up-to-date schoolhouse was expected to be completed by the fall. During the summer a number of individuals bought property in the Lebanon area while current residents worked to improve their holdings. Work progressed on a bank and office building. W.E. Miller, president of the land company, filed the town plat on August 8, 1908, " says the paperwork submitted for historic designation.

"The company soon went into insolvency and all assets were sold to satisfy creditors. The community hung on and the area became highly regarded for its fruit, in part the result of its regular ability to avoid frost and hail damage."

According to the designation application, "The original school may have been destroyed by a fire or perhaps simply proved inadequate for the anticipated growth. During the summer of 1908 the eastern portion of the current Lebanon School building was constructed. The new school opened in the fall with 25 pupils in attendance under the care of teacher Mable Sater, recently of Union Town, Iowa. Grades 1 through 8 were taught. The January 1, 1909 edition of the Dolores Star reported that Sater passed the teachers examination the previous week in Cortez and secured a teaching certificate."

"School population increased significantly by the following year. New teacher Edna Duncan reported an enrollment of 35 pupils. Some rumblings were already being heard about the need for a larger school building.
The schoolhouse continued to serve the community well, but swelling enrollments necessitated an expansion before the end of its first decade of operation. An addition off the west side in 1916 doubled the size of the original classroom. First through fourth grade students used the original
classroom, called the "little room," while the fifth through eight grade students occupied the new classroom, called the "big room." 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Sunday, February 19, 2023

Twilight Zone episode seems familiar?

 


Twilight Zone Actors Burgess Meredith, Robert Sterling and Pat Crowley

This hour-long episode of the Twilight Zone aired first in 1963 and was written by Charles Beaumont, and based on his 1951 short story "The Devil, You Say."

 Introduction: Take away a man's dream, fill him with whiskey and despair, send him to a lonely bridge, let him stand there all by himself looking down at the black water, and try to imagine the thoughts that are in his mind. You can't, I can't. But there's someone who can—and that someone is seated next to Douglas Winter right now. The car is headed back toward town, but its real destination is the Twilight Zone.

Douglas Winter, the editor of a newspaper called The Dansburg Courier, is being pushed out of business by a big conglomerate paper, The Gazette. Though Douglas is an exceptionally kind and accommodating boss, his staff begin abandoning him when he becomes unable to pay them. After the linotype operator quits, the only remaining employees of The Courier are Douglas himself and his girlfriend, Jackie Benson. Douglas is an earnest dreamer who sees The Courier as his purpose in life; faced with its demise, he drives to a bridge to contemplate suicide. There he is approached by a strange man who introduces himself as "Mr. Smith,"and says he came to town hoping to join The Courier as a linotype operator and reporter. Even after witnessing Mr. Smith's speed and precision with the linotype machine, Doug tries to talk him out of it, saying he cannot pay him or even resume operation of The Courier due to an overdue debt payment to the bank of nearly $5,000. Mr. Smith immediately loans him the $5,000.

Shortly after his hiring, Mr. Smith produces a report of a bank robbery that occurred just a half hour before. Business booms for the little newspaper, as Mr. Smith scoops The Gazette on dramatic news stories, with special editions which sometimes hit the streets barely two hours after the events happen. The owner of The Gazette, Mr. Franklin, offers to buy out The Courier. Though Douglas himself doubts that The Courier can stand up to Franklin's monopolizing tactics, assuming his recent success is down to luck, he refuses his offer. The day after, a fire burns down The Gazette building. When an edition of The Courier goes on sale just two hours after, Franklin accuses Doug of arson. Doug has witnesses to account for his whereabouts at the time, and when he asks Mr. Smith if he caused the fire, Smith successfully dodges the question.

Jackie, still suspicious of Mr. Smith, prods Douglas for information on where he came from, and says he should get rid of him now that the $5,000 loan has been repaid. Douglas refuses, and becomes irritable when she asks what he was doing at the bridge where he met Smith.

At last Mr. Smith reveals why he joined The Courier: he wants Doug to sign a contract assuring Mr. Smith's continued services in exchange for Doug's soul. When Doug is reluctant, Mr. Smith uses a variation of doublethink, arguing that while he believes himself to be the devil, he is clearly mad, and to a sane sophisticated man like Doug things like souls and the devil clearly do not exist. Doug signs the contract.

Eventually, however, he comes to the conclusion that Mr. Smith is somehow causing the events that he writes about, and tells Mr. Smith he wants him gone. Smith says that is impossible now that the contract has been signed, and writes a story about Jackie being injured in an auto accident at 11:30—an hour and a half in the future. He tells Douglas that when he joined The Courier he modified the linotype machine so that anything typed on it happens, and will write that Jackie died of her injuries unless Douglas kills himself. In this way Smith could immediately claim his soul and move on to other clients, instead of having to work at The Courier for the rest of Douglas's natural life. Douglas tosses aside the offered gun and goes frantically searching for Jackie. Meanwhile, she confronts Mr. Smith. He agrees to leave town if she gives him a lift, and asks to drive.

Unable to find Jackie, Doug returns to The Courier building and uses the linotype machine to write a new story. The car with Jackie and Mr. Smith runs off the road, but Jackie is uninjured, and Mr. Smith has vanished. Doug shows a confused Jackie the story he wrote, which says that Mr. Smith left town at 11:29, and that his contract with Doug was declared void due to Doug's not fully understanding the terms of the agreement. Douglas resumes running The Courier after having the infernal linotype machine destroyed, and hauled away. 

 Exit the infernal machine, and with it his satanic majesty, Lucifer, prince of darkness—otherwise known as Mr. Smith. He's gone, but not for good; that wouldn't be like him—he's gone for bad. And he might be back, with another ticket... to The Twilight Zone.

Wednesday, February 8, 2023

Rico railroad in railyard, 1950s


Rio Grande Southern Railroad yard at Rico (Colo.): looking south
Date/circa: 1952-05
Photographer: Chione, Alfred G. (Morton, Ill.)
Notes: Mile Post 066.24. A closer view than photoprint P026119 looking down the rails toward the water tank and (on the right) the engine house.
Photoprint#: P026120



Rio Grande Southern Railroad depot and tank at Rico (Colo.): looking north
Date/circa: 1952-05
Photographer: Chione, Alfred G. (Morton, Ill.)
Notes:Mile Post 066.24.
Photoprint#: P026123



Rio Grande Southern Railroad buildings and structures at Rico (Colo.)
Date/circa: 1950/1965
Photographer: Chione, Alfred G. (Morton, Ill.)
Notes: Mile Post 066.24. A slightly more distant view than photoprint P026121.


Rio Grande Southern Railroad tank and depot at Rico (Colo.): 
front and south 3/4
Date/circa: 1952-05
Photographer: Chione, Alfred G. (Morton, Ill.)
Notes: Mile Post 066.24.
Photoprint#: P026124
 
Rio Grande Southern Railroad Collection
Center for Southwest Studies, Fort Lewis College

Tuesday, February 7, 2023

George L. Beam photos of Cortez, 1910 to 1915

 Thing of the past ...


Cortez, Colorado
Creator: Beam, George L. (George Lytle), 1868-1935.
Frame or brick houses and commercial buildings in Cortez (Montezuma County), Colorado. Shows fenced yards with cultivated gardens, outhouses, sheds, and timber piles near commercial buildings with signs that read: "Journal Building" and "Charles Duff, General Merchandise." A woman stands in a back yard beside a hose and sprinkler in a garden. Shows the two story stone Montezuma State Bank, a horse-drawn carriage in a road and Sleeping Ute Mountain in the distance.
Date: [between 1910 and 1915?]
History Colorado, Original photographs collection


Thing of the past ...
Cortez, Colorado
Creator(s): Beam, George L. (George Lytle), 1868-1935.
Main Street in Cortez (Montezuma County), Colorado; shows men, a horse drawn wagon, an automobile, boardwalks, storefronts, ashlar stone office buildings with entablature and balustrades, and signs: "Bozeman Realty Company," "Hays & Aton Wall Paper, Varnishes, and Decorating," "Meat Market," "Case Rooming House," and "First National Bank."
Date: [between 1910 and 1915?]

Notes: History Colorado.; Condition: stained.; Handwritten on envelope: "C-Cortez"  


Monday, February 6, 2023

Stoner on the Rio Grande Southern railroad

 


Rio Grande Southern Railroad tank and buildings at Stoner (Colo.)
Date/circa: 1952
Photographer: Chione, Alfred G. (Morton, Ill.)
Notes: Mile Post 087.40.
Photoprint#:P026134
Negative#: 968
Center of Southwest Studies, Fort Lewis College



RGS narrow gauge motor car number 4
Photographer: Richardson, Robert W.
Three-quarter view of right sid of motor car, from the front end, close view: Galloping Goos near water tank.
Photographed: Stoner, Colorado, May 23, 1951
Western History Department, Denver Public Library




Rio Grande Southern narrow gauge locomotive, Engine number 20, engine type 4-6-0
Photographer: Richardson, Robert W.
Right rear view of engine, close view, at water tank, brush at rear of tender
Photographed: Stoner, Colorado, May 23, 1951
Western History Department, Denver Public Library





Rio Grande Southern narrow gauge views
Photographer: Richardson, Robert W.
Water tank and section house (quarters for maintenance workers)
Photographed: Stoner, Colorado, 1953
Western History Department, Denver Public Library