| Indians had roamed the upper Arkansas River valley for centuries before white men of any sort became acquainted with the region. It's difficult to determine who the first white men to visit Chaffee County were. However, historians believe the first were a Spanish troop under the command of Juan
Bautista de Anza, governor of Northern New Spain. They chased
a band of Comanches led by Cuerno Verde — Greenhorn
— north over Poncha Pass into the area that would become Poncha Springs in 1779.
Earlier, Spanish and French explorers passed through
and in 1802, mountain man James Purcell
reported bountiful beaver on Chalk Creek. Purcell told Capt.
Zebulon Pike of gold in Bayou Salado (South Park) in 1806.
Pike dutifully noted the report, but it didn’t trigger a gold
rush. That was to come a half-century later. Pike and 22 men, assigned
to set the southwestern boundary of the 1803 Louisiana Purchase,
sought the Arkansas’ headwaters. The Christmas 1806 historic
site on U.S. 285 commemorates Pike’s visit.
 Visit salida.com for a complete historical timeline of Chaffee County
Some unknown, daring and untiring prospector in 1859-60 made his way
up the Arkansas, and found glittering gold in its sand and gravel.
Prospectors working the river came at Kelley’s
Bar, about 4 miles south of Granite, staked the first official
claim April 12, 1860. The rush to gold in the central Rockies was
on!
To serve the thousands of miners in the valley
and booming mines, railroads pushed west. The Denver
& Rio Grande Western battled for and ultimately won the
Royal Gorge route up the Arkansas, establishing Salida in late May
1880. D&RG crews raced the Denver, South Park & Pacific
coming over Trout Creek Pass
through Buena Vista, reaching Leadville July 20. The D&RG laid
rails through Poncha Springs, up Poncha Pass along Otto
Mears’ toll road and over Marshall Pass to Gunnison
and points west. The DSP&P, meanwhile, turned south and west,
the first railroad to punch through the Continental Divide at the
famed Alpine Tunnel near St. Elmo. A few years later, the Colorado
Midland, the first standard gauge line into the valley, came
over Trout Creek on it’s way to Aspen.
By the 1920s, however, only the D&RG survived,
with some 500 employees working out of the Salida yard. From the
mid-1950s, the D&RG’s presence in the valley gradually
diminished. Tracks over Marshall
Pass came up and in the 1980s, rails west of Salida to Monarch
Quarry were yanked out. Owned today by the Union Pacific, rails
through the valley over Tennessee
Pass remain though the line sees little use.
Along
with ranching and agriculture,
booms and busts are a part of the region’s heritage. Through
the 1900s, precious metal mining continued, though on nothing like
the scale of the late 1800s. Later in the 20th Century, molybdenum
once again fueled a boom. Established in the 1920s, the Climax
Mine north of Leadville produced a steel-hardening agent,
growing to 1,700 miners by 1970, surging to 3,100 by 1980, with
some 900 living in Chaffee County. The bust of the 1980s, however,
decimated mining once again. Today, only maintenance crews and a
handful of employees work the Fremont Pass mine and the last silver
mine in Leadville closed in the late 1990s.
From a severe depression in the late 1980s, with
unemployment of from 15 to 30 percent, upper Arkansas communities
slowly rebuilt. Today’s diverse economy is based on recreation,
real estate and construction, a growing arts community, lone eagles,
small manufacturers and prison services. |