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Promise Beheld and the Limits of Place
Promise Beheld and the Limits of Place A Historic Resource Study of Carlsbad Caverns and Guadalupe Mountains National Parks and the Surrounding Areas By Hal K. Rothman Daniel Holder, Research Associate National Park Service, Southwest Regional Office Series Number Acknowledgments This book would not be possible without the full cooperation of the men and women working for the National Park Service, starting with the superintendents of the two parks, Frank Deckert at Carlsbad Caverns National Park and Larry Henderson at Guadalupe Mountains National Park. One of the true joys of writing about the park system is meeting the professionals who interpret, protect and preserve the nation’s treasures. Just as important are the librarians, archivists and researchers who assisted us at libraries in several states. There are too many to mention individuals, so all we can say is thank you to all those people who guided us through the catalogs, pulled books and documents for us, and filed them back away after we left. One individual who deserves special mention is Jed Howard of Carlsbad, who provided local insight into the area’s national parks. Through his position with the Southeastern New Mexico Historical Society, he supplied many of the photographs in this book. We sincerely appreciate all of his help. And finally, this book is the product of many sacrifices on the part of our families. This book is dedicated to LauraLee and Lucille, who gave us the time to write it, and Talia, Brent, and Megan, who provide the reasons for writing. Hal Rothman Dan Holder September 1998 i Executive Summary Located on the great Permian Uplift, the Guadalupe Mountains and Carlsbad Caverns national parks area is rich in prehistory and history. -
COLORADO MAGAZINE Published Quarterly By
THE COLORADO MAGAZINE Published Quarterly by The State Historical Society of Colorado Vol. XXVlll Denver, Colorado, Apri l, 1951 Number 2 Pioneering Near Steamboat Springs-1885-1886 As Snowx rx LETTERS OF ALICE DENISOK On April 18, 1866, a nine-year-old lad named "William Denison, a native of Royalton, Vermont, wrote a letter to his father, George S. Denison, "·ho was away on a trip, saying: "vVill you buy me a pony? I don't want a Shetland pony because it is cross. I want an Indian pony. I have heard about them." Little did that lad dream that some day he would be riding a western Indian pony on a real round-up for his own cattle. But later, as a young man, he went in search of health and did ranch in Wyoming and Colorado. Toda)· a portrait1 of \Villiam Denison, from the old family homestead in Vermont, has a place of honor in the Public Library in Steamboat Springs. The William Denison Library, established in 1887 by the Denison family, as a memorial to " \Villie" Denison, was, according to an Old Timer, "the pride of Steamboat when it was established. It was a rallying point for the unfolding and intelligence of a struggling little settlement, and when the final total is cast up it will fill a higher niche in the archives of good accomplished than many of the magnificent piles of stone and marble that Carnegie has scattered over the land.' ' 2 From pioneer clays, members of the Denison family have been prominent in many phases of Colorado life. -
Greenwich Ephemera Fair 2018
Greenwich Ephemera Fair 2018 Striking Abolitionist Broadside 1. [Abolitionist Broadside]: [Western Anti-Slavery Society]: UNION WITH FREEMEN - NO UNION WITH SLAVEHOLDERS. ANTI-SLAVERY MEETINGS! [caption title]. Salem, Oh.: Homestead Print, [ca. 1850]. Broadside, 16 x 10¾ inches. A few short closed edge tears, light toning and foxing. Very good plus. A rare and striking abolitionist broadside from Salem, Ohio, the seat of the Western Anti-Slavery Society, and a small but important center of progressive movements through much of the 19th century. As suggested by their advertisement's headline, "Union with Freemen - No Union with Slaveholders," the members of the Western Anti-Slavery Society were radical Garrisonian abolitionists who believed the U.S. Constitution was fundamentally a pro-slavery document and therefore unfit to bind together a morally just nation. Formed in the mold of Garrison's New England Anti-Slavery Society (founded 1832) and American Anti-Slavery Society (1833), the Ohio Anti-Slavery Society first assembled in 1833 in Putnam, Ohio, and in 1839 moved its headquarters to Salem and became known as the Western Anti-Slavery Society. From 1845 to 1861 the Society published a weekly newspaper, THE ANTI-SLAVERY BUGLE, printed for the first five weeks in New Lisbon, Ohio, and for all subsequent issues in Salem. The text of the broadside, a printed blank form for advertising abolitionist meetings, reads in full as follows: "Union with Freemen - No Union with Slaveholders. ANTI-SLAVERY MEETINGS! Anti-Slavery Meetings will be held in this place, to commence on [blank] in the [blank] at [blank] To be Addressed by [blank] Agents of the Western ANTI-SLAVERY SOCIETY. -
Promise Beheld and the Limits of Place - Carlsbad Caverns
Promise Beheld and the Limits of Place - Carlsbad Caverns Promise Beheld and the Limits of Place A Historic Resource Study of Carlsbad Caverns and Guadalupe Mountains National Parks and the Surrounding Areas by Hal K. Rothman Daniel Holder, Research Associate 1998 Department of the Interior National Park Service Washington, DC Continue Last Updated: 22-April-2003 http://www.nps.gov/history/history/online_books/CarlsbadCav/[12/14/2012 12:49:22 PM] Promise Beheld and the Limits of Place - Carlsbad Caverns - Table of Contents Promise Beheld and the Limits of Place A Historic Resource Study of Carlsbad Caverns and Guadalupe Mountains National Parks and the Surrounding Areas by Hal K. Rothman Daniel Holder, Research Associate 1998 Department of the Interior National Park Service Washington, DC TABLE OF CONTENTS Cover Page Acknowledgements, Executive Summary List of Illustrations, List of Maps Introduction Maps Chapter 1: From Prehistory to European Contact Chapter 2: The Spanish and Mexican Era Chapter 3: The American Appearance Chapter 4: The Military Seeks Control Chapter 5: Vectors of Settlement Photos 1 http://www.nps.gov/history/history/online_books/CarlsbadCav/toc.htm[12/14/2012 12:49:26 PM] Promise Beheld and the Limits of Place - Carlsbad Caverns - Table of Contents Photos 2 Chapter 6: Aspirations and Realities Chapter 7: A Stronger Federal Presence Chapter 8: Carlsbad Caverns in the Post-War Era Chapter 9: A Southern Cornerstone in a Subregion: Guadalupe Mountains National Park Epilogue: Parks in the Post Industrial World Bibliography Sources Consulted Note: There are some formatting differences between the original printed publication and the electronic version of this book. -
For Preview Only
By Donald Mellen © Copyright 2016, Pioneer Drama Service, Inc. Professionals and amateurs are hereby warned that a royalty must be paid for every performance, whether or not admission is charged. All inquiries regarding rights should be addressed to Pioneer Drama Service, Inc., PO Box 4267, Englewood, CO 80155. All rights to this play—including but not limited to amateur, professional, radio broadcast, television, motion picture, public reading and translation into foreign languages—are controlled by Pioneer Drama Service, Inc., without whose permission no performance, reading or presentation of any kind in whole or in part may be given. These rights are fully protected under the copyright laws of the United States of America and of all countries covered by the Universal Copyright Convention or with which the United States has reciprocal copyright relations, including Canada, Mexico, Australia and all nations of the United Kingdom. ONE SCRIPT PER CAST MEMBER MUST BE PURCHASED FOR PRODUCTION RIGHTS. COPYING OR DISTRIBUTING ALL OR ANY PART OF THIS BOOK WITHOUT PERMISSION IS STRICTLY FORBIDDEN BY LAW. On all programs, printing and advertising, the following information must appear: 1. The full name of the play 2. The full name of the playwright 3. The following notice: “Produced by special arrangement with Pioneer Drama Service, Inc., Denver, Colorado” For preview only THE PERILOUS PASSING OF PRUDENCE PROUDWELL If a live pianist is not available, consider Pioneer Drama Service’s Or… A Gold Mine in the Hand is Worth Two in the Bush Between Hisses CD. With this, you can create your own custom soundtrack to accompany your melodrama, though variations will not By DONALD MELLEN be possible. -
Ships & Shipyards
10 CIGAR MACHINE CORP. OF AMERICA 20 INTERNATIONAL TOBACCO CO. TOBACCO COLLECTION USA : MARYLAND. BALTIMORE. Shares of $10. USA : NEW JERSEY. Shares of $5. green, black. 1 AGAWAM TOBACCO CO. green, black. No 4522. Fine, clear vignette of a No 190. Shows the American eagle. cigar-manufacturing machine. Uncancelled. Photo. 20 January 1912 VF EUR 20 USA : MASSACHUSETTS. AGAWAM. Common 5 May 1924 EF EUR 90 Shares of $10. black, brown, red. Colour vignette of 21 LA FARINA CIGAR M'FG. CO. an Indian head. Gold seal. Photo. 11 COMMONWEALTH TOBACCO CO. USA : NEW JERSEY. Shares of $50. green, black. 1 November 1915 VF EUR 40 USA : NEW JERSEY. Shares of $100. green, black. No 6. Folds, edge-damage. No 76. Portrait of George Washington. Although 9 October 1923 F EUR 30 2 ALABAMA, SUMATRA & HAVANA inc. in New Jersey, the link of Washington, TOBACCO CO. Commonwealth and tobacco suggests the company 22 LIGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO CO. worked in Virginia. Pin-holes. USA : ARIZONA. Shares of $10. orange, black. No USA : NEW JERSEY/DELAWARE. Less than 100 293. A confusing piece. Formed in Arizona (but for 14 March 1904 VF EUR 40 Common Shares of $25. orange, black. No 344135. tax reasons), but printed in Chicago (where the Vignette of company logo, Mercury and a classical office was?), and working in three places, all sources 12 CONTINENTAL TOBACCO CO. lady with chemical equipment. The original Liggett of quality tobacco. Allegorical vignette of liberty, USA : DELAWARE. 100 Common Shares of $.10. and Myers was formed in the 1850s, and produced industry, etc. -
Broadsides & Broadsheets
CATALOGUE THREE HUNDRED SIXTY-SEVEN Broadsides & Broadsheets WILLIAM REESE COMPANY 409 Temple Street New Haven, CT 06511 (203) 789-8081 A Note Long before “breaking news” could be flashed across a television or cell phone screen, a highly effective way to transmit important information quickly was by printing it as a broadside, to be displayed in a conspicuous place. Whether it was bringing news of a political campaign or military victory, the text of a law or a petition for social change, a commercial announcement or news of an impending event, a broadside was an efficient way to get the word out. This catalogue is devoted to broadsides and broadsheets printed over a span of 350 years, and reflects the diverse manner in which the medium was used. Among the most remarkable items is a late 16th-century illustrated broadside celebrating Sir Francis Drake’s circumnavigation (no. 44), a very early instance of matching image and text to bring news to the populace. American wars, including the Revolution, Civil War, Mexican-American War, and World War I are represented by, among other items, a printing of the South Carolina Act of Secession (no. 25), a Pennsylvania recruiting broadside issued just a few months later (no. 24, featured on the front cover), and a Confederate law allowing slaves and free blacks to serve in certain capacities in the Rebel army (no. 28). Item 34 – a broad- sheet of the Continental Congress’ Declaration for taking up arms – contains one of the most important texts of the American Revolution. The wide range of topics is further exemplified by a series of Parliamentary lobbying petitions from the early 18th century, and the handsome poster for African-American film star Bill Pickett’s western, The Bull-Dogger (no. -
Gold Belt Tour Scenic Byway Corridor Management Plan 2018
Gold Belt Tour Scenic Byway Corridor Management Plan 2018 Photo provided by Palmer Land Trust Gold Belt Tour Scenic and Historic Byway Contents MAP OF THE GOLD BELT BYWAY ............................................................................................................... 3 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY ................................................................................................................................ 4 THE BYWAY ROUTES ........................................................................................................................... 5 .................................................................................................................................................................. 6 BYWAY AND ASSOCIATION ACCOMPLISHMENTS ........................................................................ 7 USE OF THIS DOCUMENT ................................................................................................................... 7 CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION & BACKGROUND ......................................................................................... 8 OVERVIEW ............................................................................................................................................. 8 LOCATION .............................................................................................................................................. 8 HISTORY AND PURPOSE .................................................................................................................... -
Doyle-Benton House National Register
NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 10024-0018 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service National Register of Historic Places Registration Form This form is for use in nominating or requesting determination for individual properties and districts. See instruction in How to Complete the National Register of Historic Places Registration Form (National Register Bulletin 16A). Complete each item by marking ``x'' in the appropriate box or by entering the information requested. If an item does not apply to the property being documented, enter ``N/A'' for ``not applicable.'' For functions, architectural classification, materials and areas of significance, enter only categories and subcategories from the instructions. Place additional entries and narrative items on continuation sheets (NPS Form 10-900a). Use a typewriter, word processor, or computer, to complete all items. 1. Name of Property historic name Doyle-Benton House other names/site number 5DV9200 2. Location street & number 1301 Lafayette Street [N/A] not for publication city or town Denver [N/A] vicinity state Colorado code CO county Denver code 031 zip code 80218 3. State/Federal Agency Certification As the designated authority under the National Historic Preservation Act, as amended, I hereby certify that this nomination request for determination of eligibility meets the documentation standards for registering properties in the National Register of Historic Places and meets the procedural and professional requirements set forth in 36 CFR Part 60. In my opinion, the property meets does not meet the National Register criteria. I recommend that this property be considered significant nationally statewide locally. ( See continuation sheet for additional comments.) State Historic Preservation Officer Signature of certifying official/Title Date Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, Colorado Historical Society State or Federal agency and bureau In my opinion, the property meets does not meet the National Register criteria. -
Gold Belt Tour Scenic Byway Partnership Plan
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Gold Belt Tour Scenic Byway Partnership Plan Preface The Gold Belt Tour Back Country Byway (Gold Belt Byway) was created in response to the 1986 President's Commission on Americans Outdoors which revealed the ever-growing popularity of scenic driving as an American pastime. The scenic beauty, outstanding geological areas, and historical significance more than qualified the Gold Belt Byway as one of the first scenic and historic byways in Colorado. Partnership Participation The area encompassing the Gold Belt Byway is a large geographical area with remarkably diverse recreational and educational opportunities. Clearly, a broad-based level of citizen involvement was needed to develop this byway partnership plan. In 1994, a unique partnership was formed for the purpose of developing a collective vision for the byway. This partnership was formalized through an agreement whereby the original 10 representatives from managing agencies appointed and empowered a 38-member steering committee, chosen to represent a broad spectrum of community interests. This committee, through the solicitation of public opinion and visitor surveys, public meetings, personal interviews, and the media, invited public feedback in order to develop a plan that would reflect the hopes and desires of the entire Gold Belt Byway community. Significance of the Gold Belt Byway It was the historic railroads, scenic beauty, the rugged mountains, and the history of the culture that sprang up around the Cripple Creek and Victor Gold Rush that first drew the attention of scenic byway interests. The Cripple Creek and Victor Gold Rush, which produced more gold than the California and Alaska gold rushes combined, spawned the eventual construction of the Phantom Canyon and Shelf Roads. -
The Cresson Mine: the Untold Stories Benjamin Hayden Elick and Steven Wade Veatch 40Th Annual New Mexico Mineral Symposium November 9-10, 2019,Socorro, NM Pp.15-18
The Cresson Mine: the untold stories Benjamin Hayden Elick and Steven Wade Veatch 40th Annual New Mexico Mineral Symposium November 9-10, 2019,Socorro, NM pp.15-18 Downloaded from:https://geoinfo.nmt.edu/museum/minsymp/abstracts/home.cfml?SpecificYear=2019 The annual New Mexico Mineral Symposium provides a forum for both professionals and amateurs interested in mineralogy. The meeting allows all to share their cumulative knowledge of mineral occurrences and provides stimulus for mineralogical studies and new mineral discoveries. In addition, the informal atmosphere encourages intimate discussions among all interested in mineralogy and associated fields. The symposium is organized each year by the Mineral Museum at the New Mexico Bureau of Geology & Mineral Resources. Abstracts from all prior symposiums are also available: https://geoinfo.nmt.edu/museum/minsymp/abstracts This page is intentionally left blank to maintain order of facing pages. The Cresson Mine: The Untold Stories —Benjamin Hayden Elick and Steven Wade Veatch The Cresson mine (figure 1)—situated between Crip- Roelofs (figure 2) was a newcomer to Colorado, as ple Creek and Victor, Colorado—was established in many were when the Cripple Creek gold rush ignited 1894 (MacKell, 2003). No one is certain who started in 1891. He moved to Cripple Creek in 1893 with his the mine, but records show that two brothers, insur- wife Mabel. They had one child, Richard Jr., who was ance agents J.R. and Eugene Harbeck from Chicago, born on August 19, 1894 in Cripple Creek. were early owners. After a hard night of drinking, Roelofs introduced new technology and mining they sobered up the next day and learned of their new techniques at the Cresson mine, including an aerial acquisition (MacKell, 2003).