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Caroline Bancroft - Unique Ghost Towns and Mountain Spots (HTML)

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Forty-two of Colorados romance-packed high country towns have their stories told with old and new photos, history, and maps.

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Page 1 UNIQUE GHOST TOWNS and MOUNTAIN SPOTS By the Author Colorful - photo 1
Page 1
UNIQUE GHOST TOWNS
and
MOUNTAIN SPOTS
By the Author
Colorful Clorado: Its Dramatic History
"...a remarkable feat of condensation...ought to be a copy in your car's glove locker,"
Robert Perkin, Rocky Mountain News
Silver Queen: The Fabulous Story of Baby Doe Tabor
"Attractive, sprightly, well-printed book...which is more informative and genuinely human than preceding works giving the Tabor story.
Fred A. Rosenstock, The Brand Book
The Unsinkable Mrs. Brown
"Caroline Bancroft's booklets are brighter, better illustrated and cheaper than formal histories of Colorado.... The Unsinkable Mrs. Brown was a delightful person, and I wish I had known her."
John J. Lipsey, Colorado Springs Free Press
Colorado's Lost Gold Mines and Buried Treasure
"The casual reader...will find his own treasure buried in this little booklet."
Claude Powe, The Central City Tommy-Knawker
Six Racy Madams of Colorado
"This delightful booklet is written both with humor and good taste."
Rocky Mountain News

title:Unique Ghost Towns and Mountain Spots Bancroft Booklets
author:Bancroft, Caroline.; Peterson, Daniel K.
publisher:Johnson Books
isbn10 | asin:0933472242
print isbn13:9780933472242
ebook isbn13:9780585020815
language:English
subjectCities and towns--Colorado--History. , Colorado--Guidebooks, Extinct cities--Colorado--History.
publication date:1967
lcc:F776.B22 1967eb
ddc:978.8
subject:Cities and towns--Colorado--History. , Colorado--Guidebooks, Extinct cities--Colorado--History.
Page 2
DKP 1960 The Author Caroline Bancroft is a third generation - photo 2
D.K.P., 1960
The Author
Caroline Bancroft is a third generation Coloradan who began writing her first history for The Denver Post in 1928.
Her long-standing interest in western history was inherited. Her pioneer grandfather, Dr. F. J. Bancroft, was a founder of the Colorado Historical Society and its first president.
His granddaughter has carried on the family tradition. She is the author of the interesting series of Bancroft Booklets, Silver Queen: T h e Fabulous Story of Baby Doe Tabor, Famous Aspen, Denver's Lively Past, Historic Central City, The Brown Palace in Denver, Tabor's Matchless Mine and Lusty Leadville, Augusta Tabor:
Her Side of the Scandal, Glenwood's Early Glamor, Colorado's Lost Gold Mines and Buried Treasure, The Unsinkable Mrs. Brown and Colorful Colorado.
A Bachelor of Arts from Smith College, she later obtained a Master of Arts degree from the University of Denver, writing her thesis on Central City, Colorado. Her full-size Gulch of Gold is the definitive history of that well-known area, which includes Nevadaville, the scene of the accompanying photo. She is shown with Daniel K. Peterson who drew the maps and took most of the contemporary pictures for the new booklet on ghost towns.
Picture 3
STEPHEN L. R. McNICHOLS
Governor of Colorado
1956-1962
The Cover
The Dumont boarding house in North Empire, unique for its ground-level dormer windows, was built about 1872 for miners working on the Benton lode, owned by John M. Dumont. In 1897, with a date still on the wall, it was bought by a Mrs. Bishop who painted the building a purplish blue. She operated it as a boarding house until about 1906 when she took over the Peck House (Hotel Splendide) in Empire. Still later, in the 1930's, Waldemar Nelson lived in the "Blue House" and used one section as a machine shop. A forge was still there in 1960. Photo by Dan Peterson.
Page 3
UNIQUE
GHOST TOWNS
and
MOUNTAIN SPOTS
CAROLINE BANCROFT
Assisted by
DANIEL K. PETERSON
JOHNSON BOOKS
Boulder, Colorado
Page 4
Personal to the Reader
I love the high country of Colorado-and in a less effusive manner, so does Dan Peterson. Partly for your enjoyment and partly for our own, this booklet represents the crystallization of our mutual enthusiasms. We hope that it will serve as a useful guide for you and others who thrill to the heights and diverse grandeur of our Colorado Rockies.
But first, a word of warning: if after reading this booklet, you add one act of vandalism, or carelessly cast one burning cigarette to the winds, or messily leave a beer can in a crystal creek bed, the whole purpose of our publication has been defeated. We have written about ghost towns out of love of their dramatic past and a reverence for their present fragility. If you follow in our footsteps to these mountain spots, we entreat you to go in the same spirit.
When I said this booklet represented a "crystallization" of our mutual enthusiasms, I could not have spoken more truly. Dan is still "hurting," as he phrases it, because Gladstone, his favorite ghost town, had to be left out due to limitations of space. In order to appease his hurt, I have agreed that he can sneak in its location on the Silverton map and a short paragraph of description in the text.
And what have I had to sacrifice? Too many pets, such as Beartown, reminder of the brave history of Stony and Hunchback Passes; Mineral Point and its lonely sentinel, the San Juan Chief shaft house still perched across a fork of Poughkeepsie Gulch and seen as one jeeps up to thrilling Engineer Pass, and Mayday, where I have never been but am intrigued by its romantic sound.
Our booklet does offer you forty-two "ghost towns" in photograph and story, plus passing mention on a map or in the text of a few others. These forty-two are reached from twenty-two attractive mountain towns where it is possible to obtain good accommodations. All but three of our final choices may be visited by ordinary car. For Lulu City, you will have to walk a three-mile trail or ride a horse; for Bachelor, you may take your car most of the way but will have to walk the last mile or jeep the whole distance, and for Carson, you will have to go by jeep or horse from Lake City. For the most part our forty-two towns are easy to see and in their separate ways unique.
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