Colorado! What an open-air sound
that word has! The music of the wind is in it,
and a peculiarly free, rhythmical swing, suggestive
of the swirling lariat. Colorado is not, as some
conjecture, a corruption or revised edition of Francisco
Vasquez de Coronado, who was sent out by the Spanish
Viceroy of Mexico in 1540 in search of the seven cities
of Cibola: it is from the verb colorar-colored
red, or ruddy-a name frequently given to
rivers, rocks, and ravines in the lower country.
Nor do we care to go back as far as the sixteenth
century for the beginning of an enterprise that is
still very young and possibly a little fresh.
In 1803 the United States purchased from France a vast
territory for $15,000,000; it was then known as Louisiana,
and that purchase included the district long referred
to as the Great American Desert.
In 1806 Zebulon Pike camped where
Pueblo now stands. He was a pedestrian.
One day he started to climb a peak whose shining summit
had dazzled him from the first; it seemed to soar
into the very heavens, yet lie within easy reach just
over the neighboring hill. He started bright
and early, with enthusiasm in his heart, determination
in his eye, and a cold bite in his pocket. He
went from hill to hill, from mountain to mountain;
always ascending, satisfied that each height was the
last, and that he had but to step from the next pinnacle
to the throne of his ambition. Alas! the peak
was as far away as ever, even at the close of the
second day; so famished, foot-frozen and well-nigh
in extremity, he dragged his weary bones back to camp,
defeated. That peak bears his name to this day,
and probably he deserves the honor quite as much as
any human molecule who godfathers a mountain.
James Pursley, of Bardstown, Ky.,
was a greater explorer than Pike; but Pursley gives
Pike much credit which Pike blushingly declines.
The two men were exceptionally well-bred pioneers.
In 1820 Colonel Long named a peak in memory of his
explorations. The peak survives. Then came
General Fremont, in 1843, and the discovery of gold
near Denver fifteen years later; but I believe Green
Russell, a Georgian, found color earlier on
Pike’s Peak.
Colorado was the outgrowth of the
great financial crisis of 1857. That panic sent
a wave westward,-a wave that overflowed
all the wild lands of the wilderness, and, in most
cases, to the advantage of both wave and wilderness.
Of course there was a gradual settling up or settling
down from that period. Many people who didn’t
exactly come to stay got stuck fast, or found it difficult
to leave; and now they are glad of it. Denver
was the result.
Denver! It seems as if that should
be the name of some out-of-door production; of something
brawny and breezy and bounding; something strong with
the strength of youth; overflowing with vitality; ambitions,
unconquerable, irrepressible-and such is
Denver, the queen city of the plains. Denver
is a marvel, and she knows it. She is by no means
the marvel that San Francisco was at the same interesting
age; but, then, Denver doesn’t know it; or,
if she knows it, she doesn’t care to mention
it or to hear it mentioned.
True it is that the Argonauts of the
Pacific were blown in out of the blue sea-most
of them. They had had a taste of the tropics on
the way; paroquets and Panama fevers were their portion;
or, after a long pull and a strong pull around the
Horn, they were comparatively fresh and eager for
the fray when they touched dry land once more.
There was much close company between decks to cheer
the lonely hours; a very bracing air and a very broad,
bright land to give them welcome when the voyage was
ended-in brief, they had their advantages.
The pioneers of Denver town were the
captains or mates of prairie schooners,
stranded in the midst of a sealike desert. It
was a voyage of from six to eight weeks west of the
Mississippi in those days. The only stations-and
miserably primitive ones at that-lay along
Ben Holliday’s overland stage route. They
were far between. Indians waylaid the voyagers;
fires, famine and fatigue helped to strew the trail
with the graves of men and the carcasses of animals.
Hard lines were these; but not so hard as the lines
of those who pushed farther into the wilderness, nor
stayed their adventurous feet till they were planted
on the rich soil of the Pacific slope.
Pioneer life knows little variety.
The menu of the Colorado banquet July 4, 1859,
will revive in the minds of many an old Californian
the fast-fading memories of the past; but I fear,
twill be a long time before such a menu as
the following will gladden the eyes of the average
prospector in the Klondyke:
Menu.
Soup.
A la Bean.
Fish.
Brook Trout, a la catch
’em first.
Meats.
Antelope larded, pioneer
style.
Bread.
Biscuit, hand-made,
full weight, a la
yellow.
Vegetables.
Beans, mountain style,
warranted boiled
forty-eight hours, a
la soda.
Dessert. Dried Apples,
Russell gulch style. Coffee, served in tin
cups, to be washed clean for the occasion, overland
style, a la no cream.
In those days Horace Greeley, returning
from his California tour, halted to cast his eye over
the now West. The miners primed an old blunderbus
with rich dust, and judiciously salted Gregory gulch.
Of course Horace was invited to inspect it. Being
somewhat horny-handed, he seized pick and shovel and
went to work in earnest. The pan-out was astonishing.
He flew back to New York laden with the glittering
proofs of wealth; gave a whole page of the Tribune
to his tale of the golden fleece; and a rush to the
new diggings followed as a matter of course.
Denver and Auraria were rival settlements
on the opposite shores of Cherry Creek; in 1860 they
consolidated, and then boasted a population of 4000,
in a vast territory containing but 60,000 souls.
The boom was on, and it was not long before a parson
made his appearance. This was the Rev. George
Washington Fisher of the Methodist Church, who accepted
the offer of a saloon as a house of worship, using
the bar for a pulpit. His text was: “Ho,
everyone that thirsteth! come ye to the waters.
And he that hath no money, come ye, buy and eat.
Yea, come buy wine and milk without money and without
price.” On the walls were displayed these
legends: “No trust,” “Pay as
you go,” “Twenty-five cents a drink,”
etc.
Colorado Territory was organized in
1861, and was loyal to the Union. Denver was
still booming, though she suffered nearly all the ills
that precocious settlements are heir to. The
business portion of the town was half destroyed in
1863; Cherry Creek flooded her in 1864, floating houses
out of reach and drowning fifteen or twenty of the
inhabitants. Then the Indians went on the war-path;
stages and wagon trains were attacked; passengers
and scattered settlers massacred, and the very town
itself threatened. Alarm-bells warned the frightened
inhabitants of impending danger; many fled to the
United States Mint for refuge, and to cellars, cisterns,
and dark alleys. This was during the wild reign
of Spotted Horse along the shores of the Platte, before
he was captured by Major Downing at the battle of
Sand Creek, and finally sent to Europe on exhibition
as a genuine child of the forest.
Those were stirring times, when every
man had an eye to business, and could hardly afford
to spare it long enough to wink. It is related
of a certain minister who was officiating at a funeral
that, while standing by the coffin offering the final
prayer, he noticed one of the mourners kneeling upon
the loose earth recently thrown from the grave.
This man was a prospector, like all the rest, and
in an absent-minded way he had tearfully been sifting
the soil through his fingers. Suddenly he arose
and began to stake out a claim adjoining the grave.
This was, of course, observed by the clergyman, who
hastened the cérémonials to a conclusion, and
ended his prayer thus: “Stake me off a claim,
Bill. We ask it for Christ’s sake.
Amen.”
Horace Greeley’s visit was fully
appreciated, and his name given to a mountain hamlet,
long after known familiarly as “Saint’s
Rest,” because there was nothing stimulating
to be found thereabout. Poor Meeker, for many
years agricultural editor of the New York Tribune,
founded that settlement. He was backed by Greeley,
and established the Greeley Tribune at Saint’s
Rest. In 1877 Meeker was made Indian agent, and
he did his best to live up to the dream of the Indian-maniacs;
but, after two years of self-sacrifice and devotion
to the cause, he was brutally betrayed and murdered
by Chief Douglas, of the Utes, his guest at the
time. Mrs. Meeker and her daughters, and a Mrs.
Price and her child, were taken captive and subjected
to the usual treatment which all women and children
may expect at the hands of the noble red-man.
They were rescued in due season; but what was rescue
to them save a prolongation of inconsolable bereavement?
When General Grant visited Central,
the little mountain town received him royally.
A pavement of solid silver bricks was laid for him
to walk upon from his carriage to the hotel door.
One sees very little of this barbaric splendor nowadays
even in Denver, the most pretentious of far Western
burgs. She is a metropolis of magnificent promises.
Alighting at the airy station, you take a carriage
for the hotel, and come at once to the centre of the
city. Were you to continue your drive but a few
blocks farther, you would come with equal abruptness
to the edge of it. The surprise is delightful
in either case, but the suddenness of the transition
makes the stranger guest a little dizzy at first.
There are handsome buildings in Denver-blocks
that would do credit to any city under the sun; but
there was for years an upstart air, a palpable provincialism,
a kind of ill-disguised “previousness,”
noticeable that made her seem like the brisk suburb
of some other place, and that other place, alas! invisible
to mortal eye. Rectangular blocks make a checker-board
of the town map. The streets are appropriately
named Antelope, Bear, Bison, Boulder, Buffalo, Coyote,
Cedar, Cottonwood, Deer, Golden, Granite, Moose, etc.
The names of most trees, most precious stones, the
great States and Territories of the West, with a sprinkling
of Spanish, likewise beguile you off into space, and
leave the once nebulous burg beaming in the rear.
Denver’s theatre is remarkably
handsome. In hot weather the atmosphere is tempered
by torrents of ice-water that crash through hidden
aqueducts with a sound as of twenty sawmills.
The management dams the flood when the curtain
rises and the players begin to speak; the music lovers
damn it from the moment the curtain falls.
They are absorbed in volumes of silent profanity between
the acts; for the orchestra is literally drowned in
the roar of the rushing element. There was nothing
that interested me more than a copy of Alice Polk Hill’s
“Tales of the Colorado Pioneers”; and
to her I return thanks for all that I borrowed without
leave from that diverting volume.
Somehow Denver, after my early visit,
leaves with me an impression as of a perfectly new
city that has just been unpacked; as if the various
parts of it had been set up in a great hurry, and the
citizens were now impatiently awaiting the arrival
of the rest of the properties. Some of the streets
that appeared so well at first glance, seemed, upon
inspection, more like theatrical flats than realities;
and there was always a consciousness of everything
being wide open and uncovered. Indeed, so strongly
did I feel this that it was with difficulty I could
refrain from wearing my hat in the house. Nor
could I persuade myself that it was quite safe to
go out alone after dark, lest unwittingly I should
get lost, and lift up in vain the voice of one crying
in the wilderness; for the blank and weird spaces
about there are as wide as the horizon where the distant
mountains seem to have slid partly down the terrestrial
incline,-spaces that offer the unwary neither
hope nor hospice,-where there is positively
shelter for neither man nor beast, from the red-brick
heart of the ambitious young city to her snow-capped
ultimate suburb.