A history of the early hotels of Boulder such as the Albany HOtel, American House, the Bonnie Briar, German House, Monticello Hotel, the Seven Gables and the St. Julien Hotel with biographies of a few early owners, Anthony Arnett, Thomas Corwin Brainard, Samuel W Breath, Alfred A Brookfield, Jonathan Tourtellot, and many more.
Daniel Pound was born in 1792 in Essex County, New Jersey. He married Sarah Webster in Scipio, Cayuga County, New York in 1815 and died in Warren County, Pennsylvania on 20 Dec 1843. His descendants moved to Wisconsin and on to Boulder, Colorado.
Genealogist and local historian Sanford Gladden sets the scene for the new town of Boulder City, Colorado Territory and takes describes how the town developed from its earliest days. He includes a look at the people, the clubs and organizations, businesses, early fire and police departments, schools and much more. If you have ancestors among Boulder's early pioneers, you'll love these books.
residents for years with its dramatic visual and narrative presentation of the birth and development of Boulder. In this updated edition, 322 photographs - more than 90 of them current - capture landmarks, buildings, major events, and quiet moments from the 1860s to 2006. Photographs showing the same locations at several intervals in history reveal Boulder's continuum from past to present.
Born out of the 1859 Pikes Peak gold rush, Boulder sits along the Front Range where the Rocky Mountains meet the plains. Discoveries of gold, silver, telluride, and coal nearby put the little supply town on the map, and early miners, farmers, and businessmen prospered there. The railroad's arrival in 1873 brought more newcomers who cultivated a diverse community full of new businesses, social organizations, and schools, and the town flourished despite the social problems and economic fluctuations that were typical of early mining towns. By the 1890s, education, health, and tourism had become significant to Boulder's economic development, a pattern that continues to this day. Great change came about during the early 1900s in the form of a citywide alcohol prohibition, the influenza epidemic, and the closure of the "Switzerland Trail" railroad in 1919, but Boulder weathered these difficult times even as it witnessed the end of the great railroading era.