Sunday, January 28, 2024

Irish Gypsy wagon latest in long line of projects

I wrote this story about one man's compulsion to build interesting things for the April 1 edition of  Courier-View back in 2014. 


By Rob Carrigan, robcarrigan1@gmail.com


Herman Beeh, of Woodland Park, always liked Gypsy wagons, he says. And as with so many things that he likes, he decided to go ahead build one. That is also how he got the full-size castle in his back yard.

For that matter, the beautiful log cabin and garage appeared the same way, over the years. His latest project, a replica of an Irish Gypsy wagon, was built over the last year, starting with nothing more than a photo that he pulled from the Internet. 

Beeh did all the welding, and wood work, and most of the sheet metal work for the Gypsy wagon project, and even build the cast iron stove from scratch. But Beeh is used to building his own stuff from scratch. 

He first began building his log cabin here in Woodland Park in 1975 from the foundation up, with the help of two high school kids. 

He finished that project in 1978, and later added the garage and started the castle in the back yard beginning in 2003. 

He finished the castle, complete with four-story, three-story and two-story turrets, wine cellar and medieval kitchen about a year ago. 

Thus, the Gypsy wagon emerged as the new project to concentrate on. Beeh, a tool and die maker by trade, having worked for Hewlett Packard for more than 30 years, is able to build almost anything. 

“When I told my wife I was going to build a castle, I think she thought it was going to be a smaller-scale version. I am from Europe and always wanted a castle. Everyone should have their own castle.” he said.

Saturday, January 27, 2024

Stilllife and light helping us to see

“Photography takes an instant out of time, altering life by holding it still.”
– Dorothea Lange


By Rob Carrigan, robcarrigan1@gmail.com

A photograph well done can capture a thought, a time, and a soul.

Looking at the black-and-white image transported me back there to isolated northwestern Colorado in 1895. The three Shaw brothers lounge in hard backed chairs, rifles in hand; out in front of a rustic cabin as a deer carcass hangs from the crown beam in front of the door.

An alternately dark-and-light colored dog (its name could easily be Spot) rests in front of one of the gun-toting brothers, another white bulldog occupies its own chair, and a black cat independently and disinterestedly stares off into space in the corner. A buck saw, several pack frames and other miscellaneous tools hang from the outside of the cabin.

The three brothers all wear narrow-brimmed hats, suspenders and riding boots. The Shaw brothers’ homestead on the Williams Fork near Craig was part of the last area of the state to be settled. The relatively famous shot of my great, great uncles is not the only image in my mind that says Colorado.

A photographic comparison of the southwestern Colorado town of Dolores in 1893 and then again in 2000, in John Fielder’s popular coffee table book “Colorado: 1870-2000” shows the main street with many of the same buildings. Sometimes things don’t change much. The one building I note as missing, I can remember well the night it burned.

In our Monument office, several photos hang on the walls that I recognize as Bill Kezziah’s handiwork during his 19-year tenure here as editor and publisher of the Tribune. One of those, a photo of the Westcliffe School down in the southeastern part of the state caught the attention of a visitor recently. “Hey, I know where that is. I grew up near there.”

“Does it still look like that,” I asked.

“I have no idea. I haven’t been back there in 25 years, but that is how I remember it.”

Maybe that is why it is important what pictures we take today.

Thing of the past ...

 


Thing of the past ...
Old dredge, at mouth of Swan River
Date: 1905?
A placer dredge at Valdora, Summit County, Colorado, in the Swan River. Gold miners pose on the Bucyrus-built hydraulic mine boat and processing plant.
Notes: Title inked on back of photoprint.
Denver Public Library Special Collections.
 

Thing of the past ...
Excursion party
Date: 1882
A crowd of gathers in front of a one-story, wood frame, gabled cabin in the town of Bonanza, Saguache County, Colorado. The cabin has a porch, where a little girl stands with two men, one wearing an apron. Two women and a baby sit on burros held by a man. A man in a top hat and beard stands next to a third burro. A boy in a baseball uniform swings a bat in front of the group.
Notes: Photoprint has yellowed. Stamped on back of photoprint: From: Clark's Studio, 112 S. Tejon St., Colorado Springs, Colo.
Title hand-written on back of photoprint. Denver Public Library Special Collections.
 
 

Thing of the past ...
Catholic Church at Gillett in 1919
Date: 1919
Catholic Church, Gillett (Teller County), Colorado; children pose in the doorway. Architectural features include brick and wooden framing, a frame vestibule, a barrel-curved roof topped by a bell tower frame with a cross, and a brick chimney.
Denver Public Library Special Collections
 

Thing of the past ...
Denver - girls' dance group
Creator: Rhoads, Harry Mellon, 1880 or 1881-1975
Date: [1920-1940?]
Donor: Morey Engle
A group of girls pose in a chorus line, Denver, Colorado. Their costumes includes ruffles, flounces, and wide brimmed hats.
Format of Original Material: 1 photonegative : glass ; 13 x 18 cm (5 x 7 in.); 1 photoprint ; 13 x 18 cm (5 x 7 in.)
Original Material Found in Collection: Harry M. Rhoads photograph collection. Denver Public Library Special Collections.
 
 

Thing of the past ...
Canning factory Delta, Colo. peeling tomatoes
Date: [1930-1940]
Women workers can tomatoes at a Delta, (Delta County) Colorado canning plant, by benches of tin cans. A man picks up pails; a conveyor belt, pulleys, belts, and other machinery are in the background.
Format of Original Material: 1 photoprint ; 19 x 25 cm (7 1/2 x 9 3/4 in.)
Type of Material: Photographic prints; Black & white photographs
Photoprint has yellowed. Stamped on back of photoprint: Walker Art Studio, Montrose, Colo. Title hand-written on back of photoprint.
Denver Public Library Special Collections.
 
 

Thing of the past ...
Filming a movie in Steamboat Springs
Actors and actresses, members of the cast of the movie "The Wolves of the Street" directed by Otis Thayer and produced by the Art-O-Graph Film Company, pose near the corner of 9th (Ninth) St. and Lincoln in Steamboat Springs (Routt County), Colorado. Many of the men are mounted on horses. The women sit in automobiles. A movie camera is set up on a tripod in the street. Observers stand on the sidewalk and near commercial buildings. Signs on businesses read: "Barber Shop," "Art-o-Graf Film Company," and "Hugus & Co."
Date:[1919]
Notes: Condition: badly soiled, torn, ripped, discolored.; Formerly F98; Handwritten on envelope: "C-Steamboat Springs-Streets"; Note handwritten on back of print reads: "The building on NW corner of 9th and Lincoln, Steamboat Springs. It was once the banking house of F. E. Milner, who was one of these progressive men who wanted to see the county grow a healthy pace, and was ever ready to loan money for industrial development. His son Earle is at the front window in the U. S. National Bank and could give you some history. His father first freighted by of teams across Rabbit Ears Pass in the early days of this section, later he ranched, ran a store, and banked. The event shown in the photo was a part of the filming of a picture, "The Wolves of Wall Street." The taller brick left was the famous old Hugus store, the small portion of brick is now a shoe shop. The church at right is the Episcopal Church, is of native Dakota sandstone. Taken about 1918."
History Colorado.


Thing of the past ...
Ski jumping
Creator: McClure, Louis Charles, 1867-1957
Date: [1916-1923?]
A ski jumper taking off from the platform at Howelsen Hill, Steamboat Springs (Routt County), Colorado. The town is across the Yampa River in the distance. Louis Charles McClure papers.
Notes: Copy negative made from vintage photographic print. Title and signature hand-lettered on front of original.
Denver Public Library Special Collections.
 

Thing of the past ...
U.S. Gold placer no. 6, San Miguel River : building flume
Creator: Goodman, Charles, d. 1912.
Men work on a flume for a U.S. Gold Placers mining operation beside the San Miguel River in Montrose or San Miguel County, Colorado. The workmen pose near a wooden flume that is under construction. Shows piles of lumber.
Date: [between 1880 and 1890?]
Notes: History Colorado.; Penciled on negative envelope: Mining-Building flume on San Miguel RIver. Charles Goodman. Title inked on glass plate.
Physical Description: 1 negative : glass ; 13 x 20 cm. (5 x 8 in.)
Is Part Of: History Colorado, Ronzio Collection
 

Thing of the past ...
 Beer supply?
Note: Handwritten description on front says
"Budweiser Relief Train, Telluride, Colo."
Front of pack train carrying barrels
Date/circa: 1900/1930
Photographer: Byers Photo (Montrose, Colo.)
Walker Art Studio (Montrose, Colo.)
Center of Southwest Studies, Fort Lewis College
 

Thing of the past ...
One timber per wagon, please.
Title:Wagon with big timber
Date/circa: 1900/1930
Photographer: Byers Photo (Montrose, Colo.)
Subjects: San Juan Mountains; San Juan Mountains (Colo. and N.M.)
Notes:The Studio assigned this item # 5011G.
Negative#:1501
From Walker Art Studio collection, Center of Southwest Studies, Fort Lewis College.
 

Thing of the past ...
Paradox - Colo.
Summary: View of Paradox, Colorado in Montrose County, shows a single dirt street surrounded by tents pitched among wood-frame houses in the middle of a broad valley.
Date: [1905?]
Notes: Formerly F5101.; Photoprint has yellowed.; Title hand-written on back of photoprint.; R7100129237
Physical Description 1 photoprint ; 8 x 13 cm. (3 x 5 1/2 in.)
Western History/Genealogy Dept., Denver Public Library.
 
 

Thing of the past ...
Title: San Miguel Valley (Colo.) before Telluride was built
Date/circa: 1870s?
Photographer: Byers Photo (Montrose, Colo.)
Subjects: San Miguel Valley (Colo.); Telluride (Colo.)
Notes: The Studio assigned this item # 5011G.
Center of Southwest Studies, Fort Lewis College.
 

Thing of the past ...
Three Colorado soldiers send a message home from Korea, Dec. 1952. From left: Pfc. James R. David, Silverton; Sgt. (first name obscured) Wilson of Cortez; Pvt. Gordon K. Barrett, Durango.
Western History and Genealogy Dept., Denver Public Library.
Is Part Of: Rocky Mountain News Photograph Collection
 

Thing of the past ...
Hole in the Wall Gang
Creator: Rose, Noah H.
Date: 1880-1890
In Fort Worth, Texas, the Hole in the Wall Gang poses in suits, ties, gold chains, and bowler hats. Named for their Wyoming hideout, these outlaws are (l to r): Harry Longabaugh (The Sundance Kid), Will Carver, Ben Kilpatrick, Harvey Logan (Kid Curry), and Robert Leroy Parker (Butch Cassidy).
Denver Public Library Special Collections
Notes: "See RMN July 16, 1902 P.1 C.1." Stamp reads: "This is a print from the famous Rose Collection of old time photographs N. H. Rose photograper P.O. Box 463 - San Antonio, Texas." Identifications are inked in margin of print. Typed paper affixed to back of photoprint has identification.
 

Thing of the past ...
Beer depot thru which the Zang Brewing Co. of Denver distributed their beer
Date: [1900?]
A wagon drawn by a team of horses is parked next to a brewery in the town of Creede, Colorado, in Mineral County. The driver sits in the cart and a man stands next to the wagon. The building is a two-story, wood- frame structure with gables, shingles, chimneys, rectangular windows, and a covered porch with spindles. Snow covers the ground and the hills in the background. A "Beer Depot of P.H. Zang Brewing Co. Jno. Knodel, Agt." shows.
Format of Original Material: 1 copy photonegative ; 13 x 18 cm (5 x 7 in.); 1 photoprint on cabinet card : cabinet cards ; 15 x 21 cm (6 x 8 1/4 in.)
Type of Material: Cabinet photographs; Film negatives.
Notes: Hand-written on back of photoprint: Knodal was their agent. Photoprint has yellowed, cabinet card has yellowed and is stained. Title hand-written on back of photoprint.
Denver Public Library Special Collections.
 

Thing of the past ...
Infant of Prague Nursery
Creator: Rule, Lloyd
Date: [1948-1955?]
Donor: Pierce O'Farrill, donor
Orphan boys and girls pose at the Infant of Prague Nursery, an orphanage in Denver, Colorado.
Format of Original Material: 1 negative ; 10 x 13 cm (4 x 5 in.)
Lloyd Rule papers; Lloyd Rule photograph collection.
Denver Public Library Special Collections.
 
 

Thing of the past ...
Decoration Day, Montrose, Colo.
Creator: Goodman, Charles, 1843-1912
Date: 1888
Donor: T.J. McKee
Decoration Day parade with a marching band and men in cavalry uniforms in Montrose (Montrose County), Colorado. Men carry drums, rifles, swords, and a United States flag. The Mears Hotel with chimneys is at Cascade Avenue and Main Street. Signs on brick and frame buildings include: "W.W. Robinson Wholesale & Retail Grocer," "Johnson's Confectionery and Bakery," "Mrs. Wils[on's] Millinery," "Olson's Dry Goods," and "Ling Lee Laundry." People stand on sidewalks near wagons, buggies, and a woman riding sidesaddle.
Format of Original Material: 1 copy negative : nitrate ; 20 x 25 cm (8 x 10 in.)
Original Material Found in Collection: C Photo Album 103. Thomas M. McKee album
Type of Material: Nitrate negatives
Notes: Formerly attributed to Thomas McKee. Formerly Mc310. Hand-lettered title reproduced on copy nitrate negative. Number: "Mc310" inked on copy nitrate negative.
Denver Public Library Special Collections.
 
 

Friday, January 19, 2024

To have a heapin' helpin' of their hospitality

Come and listen to my story
'Bout a man named Jed
A poor mountaineer,
Barely kept his family fed.
And then one day
He was shootin' at some food,
And up through the ground came a-bubblin' crude.

The ballad of Jed Clampett, Lester Flatt, Earl Scruggs, 1962

Continental Oil Company Building, 1960, at 18th (Eighteenth) Street and Glenarm Place in downtown Denver, Colorado. Automobiles drive near the Art Deco style building with towers, battlements, and an electric sign that reads: "Conoco." Denver Public Library Special Collections.

A least 300 days of shine


Denver & Rio Grande and Rio Grande Junction railroad depot and frame buildings in the town of Grand Valley (Parachute) in Mesa County, Colorado. About 1915. Men stand near boxes, crates and milk jugs on the platform of the depot. A sign on the depot reads: "Western Union Telegraph & Cable Office." Girls or women are in the street near a horse-drawn wagon and a timber commercial building with signs that read: "Doll Bros and Smith, General Merchandise," "Gasoline, Polarine [?] Supplies." The "Grand Valley News" building is near a D.& R.G. freight car on tracks.
George L. Beam photo. History Colorado.

By Rob Carrigan, robcarrigan1@gmail.com

Many longtime Colorado folks can identify with mythical hillbilly characters that go from rags to riches as oil begins bubbling up out of the ground on their property. They have had reason to hope. But they also know about the flipside of boom and bust.

More than forty years ago, the young, busy, not-so-little town of Parachute died one night in its sleep. In what is still called “Black Sunday” on the western slope, Exxon pulled the plug on its $5 billion Colony shale oil project in Garfield County and laid off over 2,200 workers on May 2, 1982.

 


When oil prices plunged sharply, Exxon Corp. pulled the plug on its $5 billion Colony Oil Shale Project near Parachute, Colorado on a day that was called "Black Sunday," May 2, 1982. Others energy companies followed, leaving western Colorado's super-heated economy in a shambles. Many people, like the owner of this truck packed up and left Parachute on Monday May 3, 1982. Steve Groer, Rocky Mountain News.

The town's name comes from Parachute Creek which runs through the township, before it merges with the Colorado River. The Ute people originally called the creek Pahchouc (meaning twins), with early settlers mispronouncing the word as parachute. In 1908 the town was renamed Grand Valley, but in the 1980s was changed back to Parachute. The population was 1,390 at the 2020 census. 

Now, with oil prices over $75 per barrel and an estimated 1.5 to 1.8 trillion barrels lying around in Green River shale deposit that are mostly in Colorado, it seems sort of interesting again. Especially, given the fact that new technology may allow recovery at about $30 per barrel.

Shell was working on an in-situ process that involves drilling holes, inserting heaters and slowly extracting oil out ofthe rock at its Cathedral Bluffs property in Rio Blanco County in the early 2000s and had promising results but the Mahogany Oil Shale Project was abandoned by Shell in 2013 due to unfavorable project economics.

Of course, we have seen the boom before. With gold, with silver, with uranium, and even with oil and natural gas several times.

Colorado was the second state to produce oil commercially and has usually resided in the top 10 states in terms of production over the years, according to “Historical Atlas of Colorado” by Thomas J. Noel.

“Commercial use began when Alexander M. Cassidy developed an ‘oil spring’ near Florence in 1862,” writes Noel. “To exploit the Florence Field, Cassidy formed a firm that evolved into the Continental Oil Company, or CONOCO. Headquartered in Denver until the 1930s, CONOCO inadvertently erected the first Colorado Gas station in 1909 when two large hot-water boilers were put on a warehouse platform with gas to fuel autos.”

The Florence Field, a few miles south of us, continues to produce as it has for over a century. In 1901 rich fields were found near Boulder and Rangely. The Wellington Field near Fort Collins opened in the 1920s along with the Moffat Field south of Craig. Then in the 1970s, after the 1973 Arab oil embargo, domestic crude soared and made the first billions for well-known Colorado
tycoons like Phillip Anschutz and Marvin Davis.

But as we know all too well, mineral prices travel both directions – up and down. In 1979, crude oil by the barrel was $42 and nearly everyone in the world saw its price going only upward, thus time for a $5 billion investment in “burning rocks” from the Green River basin. By 1983, oil prices had dropped like a stone to $9.

According to a story by Gargi Chakrabarty in the Sept. 21, 2005, Rocky Mountain News, “A year after Black Sunday, property foreclosures in Grand Junction and Mesa County were more than four times their 1980s numbers, and bankruptcies had doubled.”

Hillbilly dreams or not, it is something for us Coloradans to think about. As Mother Teresa once noted, “To keep a lamp burning, we have to keep putting oil in it.”

But Colorado, with over 300 sunny days per year, has tremendous solar potential and was one of the first states in the U.S. to have a Renewable Energy Standard. There are multiple solar programs in Colorado for rooftop solar, community solar and utility-scale solar. 

Currently about 8.24 percent of the state's electricity comes from solar sources ranking us 12th in the nation, but up from 25th in just 2022, and prices have fallen 42 percent in the last ten years on nearly $7 billion in solar investment. I know, prices go up and down.  

But wouldn't it be nice for us local hillbillies to have energy drop out of the sky on us? Rather than waiting for it to come bubbling up out of the ground again.


Parachute Creek valley
Parachute Creek valley in Garfield County, Colorado; a man is by a car; a cabin and Roan Cliff formations and oil shale deposits are in the distance, between 1910 and 1930. Penciled on envelope: "Industry - Oil Shale - Grand Valley District," and "Box 6 Env 255."; Title supplied; penciled on verso: "It is important on oil shale locations to have water and roads nearby. At the extreme left of this picture (scarcely discernable) is Parachute Creek. The photograph was taken near Grand Valley, Colorado. The mountains in the background are oil shales," History Colorado.

Saturday, January 13, 2024

Fossil Beds, Tom Mix, AdAmAn Club, Much More ...


Thing of the past ...
Tom Mix
Creator: Rhoads, Harry Mellon, 1880 or 1881-1975
Date: [1925-1935?]
Donor: Morey Engle
Summary: Actor Tom Mix poses with two unidentified women in Denver, Colorado. He wears a cowboy hat, boots, riding pants, coat, and tie. One woman wears a fur stole over her dress.
Format of Original Material 1 photoprint ; 26 x 21 cm (10 x 8 in.)
Original Material Found in Collection: Harry M. Rhoads
photograph collection
Type of Material: Photographic prints
Denver Public Library Special Collections

 

Thing of the past ...

Group outing in mountains
Creator: Buckwalter, Harry H.
Men, women, and children pose on and near a large petrified tree stump (the "Big Stump") in Florissant (Teller County), Colorado. (Later Florissant Fossil Beds National Monument). The women wear dresses with high collars and hats. The boys wear knickers. They are on a fossil collecting excursion.
Date: [1900?]
History Colorado, Buckwalter collection ; no. 381
 

Thing of the past ...
Florissant School
Date: September, 1894
School children and their teachers pose in front of their schoolhouse in Florissant, Colorado.
Denver Public Library Special Collections.
Title hand-written on front of original.
 

Thing of the past ...
I wonder how many would like to spend a New Year holiday climbing a 14,000 foot peak in order to celebrate the Fourth of July out of season
Creator: Standley, Harry L.
Date: [1935-1950?]
Night view taken during the AdAmAn Club's annual New Year's Eve climb of the upper terminal of the Pikes Peak Cog Railway encrusted with ice, above Colorado Springs, El Paso County, Colorado. Teeth of the railway show through the snow and footprints lead to the platform.
Format of Original Material 1 copy photonegative ; 10 x 13 cm (4 x 5 in.); 1 photoprint : black-and-white ; 12 x 17 cm (5 x 7 in.)
Type of Material Film negatives; Photographic prints; Black & white photographs.
Denver Public Library Special Collections.
 



Thing of the past ...
Photo 1: Location of cabin of D.C. Oakes
The grandson of D.C. Oakes, a Colorado Pioneer, stands on the spot where D.C. Oakes had his cabin near Larkspur (Douglas County), Colorado. A field with sheeves of wheat and mesas are in the distance.
Format of Original Material: 1 photographic print ; 7 x 12 cm (3 x 4 1/2 in.) Notes: "Taken on the spot where cabin of Grandpa Oakes stood fifty years ago. There is nothing left here except some old sticks and rocks. We found an old coffee mill here. August 1914. Title supplied."
Photo 2: The site of the fort
Men and the widow of D.C. Oakes, an elderly woman, pose at the site of what used to be Fort Lincoln located at the site of the town of Huntsville (near the current town of Larkspur) in Douglas County, Colorado. The fort was built by D.C. Oakes to protect the early settlers from Indian attack, it was known as Oakes Folly. The men wear hats. The farmer who owns the land, Otis Skinner (?) wears gloves and has his arms folded. The grandson of D.C. Oakes wears suspenders and a hat and tie. Mrs. Oakes wears a bonnet, a long dress and a shawl. A hill with a rock hogback is in the distance. Notes: Inked on verso of print: From left to right. The farmer who the present owner, Otis Skinner [?] , grandma, papa. The hill in the back ground is where the Indians used to look over at the movement of the whites in the fort in the year 1864. Title inked on front of photographic print.
Photo 3: Yours truly, D. C. Oakes
Creator: Rinehart, A. E. (Alfred Evans)
Date: [1870-1875?]
Studio bust portrait of Daniel C. Oakes, Colorado lumber merchant, Ute Indian Agent, and U.S. Land Surveyor. Oakes wears a wool jacket with a matching vest. and patterned tie. He has a full goatee and mustache and his hair is parted.
Denver Public Library Special Collections.
 

Thing of the past ...
Cameron's Cone from Ute Pass
Creator: Jackson, William Henry, 1843-1942
A man in a carriage rides down the Ute Pass road in Teller County, Colorado. Cameron Cone is in the distance.
Date: [between 1882 and 1890?]
Notes: Attribution to Jackson based on the photonegative's inclusion in the History Colorado William Henry Jackson Collection.; History Colorado.; Condition: negative retouched.; Formerly Jackson 2266A.; Hand-lettered title on negative.; Number: "423" hand lettered on negative.
 

Thing of the past ...
Rio Grande Southern narrow gauge motor car number 4
Creator: Richardson, Robert W.
Date: 1949
Left rear view of motor car; Galloping Goose at road crossing. Photographed: Rio Lado Lodge, Colorado, August 9, 1949.
Format of Original Material: 1 photonegative ; 7 x 11 cm (2 3/4 x 4 1/2 in.)
Denver Public Library Special Collections.
 

Thing of the past ...
Freighting out-fit, Rico, Colo.
Date: 1890
Main Street, Rico, Dolores County, Colorado; shows yoked oxen, Conestoga wagons, an oversized pocketwatch advertisement, and a boy on boardwalk. Signs read: "Louis Clark One Price Clothing House Hats, Boots, Shoes, &c.," "Restaurant," "The Mountain," "New and 2nd Good," "City Bakery," and "Drugs."
Format of Original Material: 1 copy photonegative ; 10 x 13 cm (4 x 5 in.); 1 photoprint on mat board ; 16 x 20 cm (6 x 8 in.)
Type of Material: Film negatives; Photographic prints
Notes: Photoprint has fold-crack and spotting. Title inked on photoprint.
Denver Public Library Special Collections.
 
 

Thing of the past ...
Raven Hill. Katherine. Elkton.
Creator Poley, H. S. (Horace Swartley)
Date: 1895
A Colorado Springs & Cripple Creek District Railway train makes its way near Elkton, Teller County, Colorado. The Katherine Mine works is on Raven Hill. The loading station for the Katherine Mine is near the tracks. The town of Elkton is located further down the valley.
Format of Original Material: 1 copy photonegative : nitrate ; 13 x 10 cm (5 x 4 in.); 1 photoprint ; 19 x 24 cm (7 1/2 x 9 1/2 in.)
Original Material Found in Collection: C Photo Collection 37. H. S. Poley collection.
Notes: Title from etching in nitrate copy negative. Vintage photographic print. Written on back of print: "Raven Hill, Katherine, Elkton".
Denver Public Library Special Collections.
 Thing of the past ...
On Pikes Peak, alt. 14147 ft.
Creator: Hiestand, J. G.
Date: [1892 Sept. 1]
Well dressed men, women, and a young girl pose in front of the U.S. Signal Station, a stone stone weather station building near the cog-railroad tracks of the Manitou & Pikes Peak Railway on the summit of Pikes Peak in El Paso County, Colorado. The women wear hats, caps, long coats, dresses, and fur coats. The men wear long coats, hats, caps, jackets and scarves. Jessie Link sits on a suitcase on the front row; she wears a light coat, a hat and holds a striped umbrella. A sign on the building reads: "Western Union Telegraph Office."
Format of Original Material: 1 photographic print on card mount : albumen ; 13 x 21 cm (5 x 8 in.)
Digital Version Created From Terry R. Reynolds; gift; July 13, 2004.
Type of Material: Albumen prints; Card photographs; Group photographs; Photographic prints
Notes: "Fred H. Thompson, 1859 Lynn Mass" penciled on verso. "Merry Christmas to Jessie, Dec. 25th, '95" inked on verso. Photographer's stamp printed on verso. Title inked on original and reproduced in photographic print.
Forms part of the Lucy May Thompson collection.
Denver Public Library Special Collections.

 

Thing of the past ...
J.H. Kilday & W. Weld, prop.'s, White-House saloon, Cripple Creek, Colo.
Creator: Gillen, William J., photographer.
Date:[1893 or 1894]
The White House Saloon, Cripple Creek (Teller County), Colorado; J. H. Kilday & W. Weld (proprietors), other men and a donkey pose by the bar, a spittoon, and a cigar case. Liquor, alcohol and wine bottles line shelves; signs read: "Positively no credit from This date - February, 1893" and "Mineral Water."
Format of Original Material: 1 copy negative ; 10 x 13 cm (4 x 5 in.); 1 photoprint on cabinet card ; 12 x 19 cm (4 1/2 x 7 1/2 in.)
Digital Version Created From Rosenstock
Type of Material: Cabinet photographs; Group portraits
Notes: Cabinet card with spots and worn edges. Formerly negative F10286. Hand-written on back of cabinet card: Cripple Creek - Saloons. Inked on front bottom edge of cabinet card: Cripple Creek, Colo. Photographer's stamp and address on back of cabinet card: Wm. J. Gillen, photographer, tin types a specialty, open Sundays, duplicates furnished on short notice, Cripple Creek [inked], Colo. Title hand-lettered on original negative by photographer, additional hand-lettering includes: "Our" - Pet.
Denver Public Library Special Collections.
 

Thing of the past ...
Eng No. 101
History Colorado, Buckwalter Collection, Book IV, no. 21
Creator: Buckwalter, Harry H.
A group of men and women pose on engine no. 101 of the Denver, Northwestern and Pacific Railway Company near Corona in Grand County, Colorado. Included in the group is the famed pioneer movie producer Colonel William Selig (far left) and his wife (on far right).
Date: [1904]
Notes: "Railroad Denver Northwestern & Pacific RR special party on first passenger train into Corona on Moffat Road Eng No. 1010" handwritten on negative envelope.; Condition: Emulsion is chipped.; Title supplied.
Physical Description: 1 negative : glass ; 22 x 17 cm. (8 1/2 x 6 1/2 in.); 1 photoprint ; 26 x 21 (8 x 10 in.)
Is Part Of: History Colorado, Buckwalter Collection
History Colorado, Buckwalter Collection, Book IV
 

Thing of the past ...
Funeral on the mountain
Date: 1902
Funeral procession for Superintendent Charles M. Baker, murdered during a WFM labor strike, at the Smuggler-Union mine near Telluride, in San Miguel County, Colorado. Miners carry a flower covered casket and stand on the porch of the boarding house.
Notes: Title and "Mine boarding house at the Smuggler-Union mine, Telluride Chas. M. Baker, Superintendent of Smuggler-Union mine, Telluride Times (weekly) John McRhee, San Miguel Forum." hand-written on back of print.
Denver Public Library Special Collections
 

 
Thing of the past ...
Seated left, Lennard Vogel, standing right, Alphonse Thuet
Date 1909
Group of men pose outside the Adolph Coors Company brewery, Golden, Colorado; they hold long handled whisk brooms, mugs of beer, and shovels with "Wet Golden 1909," "Malt House 1909" and "Section 11 Brewery," lettered on them. Lennard Vogel sits on a wooden barrel keg on the left, Alphonse Thuet stands in the back right.
Format of Original Material: 1 photoprint ; 12 x 21 cm (5 x 8 in.)
Type of Material: Photographic prints
Subject Golden (Colo.); Thuet, Alphonse; Vogel, Lennard.
Geographic Area: Golden (Colo.)
Title hand-written on bottom border of photoprint.
Denver Public Library Special Collections.
 

Thing of the past ...
Tivoli Brewery team
Date: [1940-1950?]
The Tivoli Brewery wagon and Clydesdale horses in Denver, Colorado; people ride the conveyance and watch from behind a fence by a loudspeaker. Harness includes silver studs.
Format of Original Material: 1 photographic print : black-and-white ; 20 x 25 cm (8 x 10 in.)
Type of Material: Photographic prints; Black & white photographs
Denver Public Library Special Collections

 
Thing of the past ...
Filming a movie in Steamboat Springs
Actors and actresses, members of the cast of the movie "The Wolves of the Street" directed by Otis Thayer and produced by the Art-O-Graph Film Company, pose near the corner of 9th (Ninth) St. and Lincoln in Steamboat Springs (Routt County), Colorado. Many of the men are mounted on horses. The women sit in automobiles. A movie camera is set up on a tripod in the street. Observers stand on the sidewalk and near commercial buildings. Signs on businesses read: "Barber Shop," "Art-o-Graf Film Company," and "Hugus & Co."
Date:[1919]
Notes: Condition: badly soiled, torn, ripped, discolored.; Formerly F98; Handwritten on envelope: "C-Steamboat Springs-Streets"; Note handwritten on back of print reads: "The building on NW corner of 9th and Lincoln, Steamboat Springs. It was once the banking house of F. E. Milner, who was one of these progressive men who wanted to see the county grow a healthy pace, and was ever ready to loan money for industrial development. His son Earle is at the front window in the U. S. National Bank and could give you some history. His father first freighted by of teams across Rabbit Ears Pass in the early days of this section, later he ranched, ran a store, and banked. The event shown in the photo was a part of the filming of a picture, "The Wolves of Wall Street." The taller brick left was the famous old Hugus store, the small portion of brick is now a shoe shop. The church at right is the Episcopal Church, is of native Dakota sandstone. Taken about 1918."
History Colorado.

 

Thing of the past ...
Gold Coin Club, Victor
Date: [1900-1905]
Gold Coin Club, 413 West Diamond Avenue, with large group of men posed on first & second story portico in Victor, Colorado. The club house (rebuilt after August 1899 fire and formally reopened in March, 1900) was constructed by Wood Investment Company for employees of Gold Coin Mine and eventually sold by Wood brothers after 1904 to Dr. C.E. Elliot who converted it to a Red Cross Hospital for nearly a decade. The two-story rectangular social club building was constructed of brick with stone & wood trim in Colonial Revival style with truncated hip roof, projecting cornice with exposed rafters, classical pediment across front with decorative frieze around entire building, first floor windows with single sash & leaded glass transoms, double entry doors with segmental arched top & side panels, and two-story front portico with Ionic columns on both floors.
Format of Original Material: 1 copy photonegative ; 10 x 13 cm (4 x 5 in.); 1 photoprint ; 12 x 17 cm (4 3/4 x 6 1/2 in.)
Notes: Hand-written on back of photoprint: Gold Coin Club, 1899-1900. Title supplied by cataloger.
Denver Public Library Special Collections.

 

Thing of the past ...
June 13th on the Denver, Boulder & Western Ry
Alternate Title June 13th on the Denver, Boulder and Western Railway
Creator: McClure, Louis Charles, 1867-1957
Date: Jun 13, 1909
Group of men, women and children posed on Denver, Boulder & Western Railroad (formerly Colorado and Northwestern) rear car's platform; train stopped at large snowbank; train employee standing on side, right background; women and girls in fashionable dress, coats and hats; narrow gauge tracks.
1 photonegative : glass, black-and-white ; 21 x 26 cm (8 x 10 in.); 1 photoprint ; 19 x 24 cm (7 1/2 x 9 1/2 in.)
Original Material Found in Collection: WH2300. Louis Charles McClure papers
Digital Version Created From WH2300. Louis Charles McClure papers, album VIII, 82
Type of Material: Glass negatives; Photographic prints
Notes: Glass plate retouched by photographer. Title and signature hand-lettered on glass plate. Vintage photographic print. Denver Public Library Special Collections.
 
 

Thing of the past ...
Edwin Blake and his companions
Creator: McKee, Thomas Michael, 1854-1939
Donor: T.J. McKee
A boy in a sailor suit with knickers and leather boots kneels with dogs on a woven rug in front of an adobe house in Naturita (Montrose County), Colorado. An older boy wears a suit and stands beside a laughing woman in a dress with gigot sleeves. A woman is inside behind the window.
Format of Original Material: 1 photographic print ; 12 x 17 cm (5 x 6 1/2 in.) mounted on album page 32 x 39 cm (12 1/2 x 15 1/2 in.)
Original Material Found in Collection: C Photo Album 103. Thomas M. McKee album
Type of Material: Photographic prints.
Notes: Photographic print in C Photo Album 103, the Thomas McKee photo album. Title and date inked in Thomas McKee photo album. Denver Public Library Special Collections.
 
 

Thing of the past ...
Carlton Tunnel - Xmas party - supts at portal
Creator: Zellers, Bob.
Construction superintendents laugh and smile by the mouth of the Carlton Tunnel in Teller County, Colorado. Mine drainage pipes and rail tracks flank the men; one man is unusually tall, and another wears jodhpurs. Letters read: "1939-1941 Safety First - Carlton Tunnel." Pine boughs, a painted cross, a United States flag, and a clock with letters: "Compliments of Southern Colorado Power Company" adorn the concrete entrance.
Date:[between 1940 and 1950?]
Notes: History Colorado.; Title penciled on negative sleeve with: "1441," and "safety film."
 
 

Thing of the past ...
AdAmAn Club, climbing Pikes Peak to set off New Year's fireworks display
Creator: Bates, James, Colorado photographer.
Date: 1959
AdAmAn Club members climb among boulders, ice, and blowing snow, on Pikes Peak, Colorado Springs, El Paso County, Colorado. They wear parkas, backpacks, and have walking sticks.
Format of Original Material: 1 photoprint on mat board ; 21 x 26 cm (8 x 10 in.)
Type of Material: Photographic prints; Black & white photographs.
Title penciled on back of mat board.
Denver Public Library Special Collections.