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Colorado Springs

KNOWLEDGE OF Colorado Springs

The history of Colorado Springs does not begin with its discovery, its first inhabitants, or even its founding, as is the case with so many other American cities. Instead its birth dates back tens of millions of years ago when powerful geological forces molded this part of the earth into a range of sky-scraping mountains.

Today's Colorado Springs, a natural retreat located at the base of Pikes Peak, was once considered an unconquerable alpine wilderness, too rugged for human habitation. However, despite its seemingly harsh landscape, the beauty of the Colorado Springs area drew settlers from several Native American tribes, including the Arapaho and Cheyenne. They found the land rich with wild game and pure mineral springs and thrived on it for several hundred years.

In the first decade of the nineteenth century, intrepid explorers began to push further west in search of land, fur and wealth. In 1806 a young lieutenant in the United States Army, Zebulon Pike headed the most famous expedition to the Colorado Springs area. Upon sighting the immense mountain, Pike vowed to conquer it. His small climbing party, however, was battered by a winter storm and eventually had to concede the climb. Nevertheless, Pike was later honored for his ambitious quest when the beautiful peak was named after him.

The passing decades saw few settlers but a great deal of traffic as prospectors flooded west into California, seeking their fortune in gold nuggets. By 1859, a small town called Colorado City had formed to serve as a midway point where supplies and mining equipment could be housed. It was from this developing industry that brought General William Jackson Palmer to town.

Palmer was scouting the land for a railway he was building when he passed through Colorado City. The mild climate and breathtaking countryside vistas of the area held a special appeal for the Civil War veteran and railroad magnate. He imagined creating a sprawling resort community modeled after those he frequented along the East Coast. Hence, in 1871 he established himself in the community and began planning the town that would be Colorado Springs.

In the years before the turn of the century, the new city flourished as a western retreat for upscale travelers from New England. It was during this time that Palmer constructed what was the first incarnation of a Colorado Springs institution, the Antlers Hotel. The larger-than-life frontier environment and warm lodge-like accommodations attracted luminaries from the uppermost echelons of society. And Americans were not the only ones enchanted—so many British tourists frequented during the summer months, the city was dubbed "Little London."

This bustling, yet peaceful, microcosm was shattered in 1891 when gold was struck in the city's neighboring town of Cripple Creek. Colorado Springs experienced a huge influx of people—the population more than tripled—all eager to claim their part of the riches. Many of these new residents found their dreams realized and settled in Colorado Springs as gold-rush millionaires.
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