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This is a new release of the original 1950 edition.
Kessinger Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of
rare and hard-to-find books with something of interest for
everyone!
Rocky I flLOunt zn Empire ROCKY EMPIRE Revealing glimpses of the
West in transition from old to new, from the pages of the Rocky
Mountain Empire Magazine of The Denver Post Edited by ELVON L. HOWE
With a foreword by Palmer Hoyt DOUBLEDAY COMPANY, INC. Garden City,
N. Y. Foreword THE STORIES you will read in this volume go at a
high lope from the hilarious to the poignant, from the exciting to
the quietly dramatic. They are tersely told, timely as todays
newspaper, and always, I think, both entertaining and revela tory
of a young, important segment of America. But there is also a sober
underlying significance to this book which I am impelled to point
out by a glance at the past and the future. The westward course of
empire was milestoned indelibly across the face of the Great
American Desert a century ago. But the human tide that rolled on
tarred wooden axles over the Santa Fe and Overland trails was at
first not an enveloping but a passing flood. It piled up against
the white-bearded Rockies only long enough to penetrate, then
rough-locked its way down and through and rolled on to salt water.
Gold was the lure California gold and the incredibly fertile
croplands waiting at the far end of the Oregon Trail. To the men in
those canvas-hooded wagons that thousand miles of grassy plains,
buffalo, Indians, granite-hard slopes, and blaz than a grueling
test of courage aftd endurance that was the purchase price of the
promised land beyon l Eventually many came back. John Gregory, for
example, returning disappointed from a land of unfulfilled
promises, stopped where the mountains meet the plains and found the
gold that had eluded him in California. His lode sprouted Central
City, now the site ofa famous summer-long operatic and drama
festival. It also aided the establishment of a supply depot at the
edge of the plains which became the city of Den-ver. Thus the
development of the huge expanse just west of the nations middle and
equal to almost one third its total area became the last chapter in
the epic of American pioneering. This development was a gradual
process. In 1870, when Illinois had already 2,500,000 residents and
distant California fully 500,000, lofty Colorado could claim only a
sparse 40,000. But more gold rushes came, and lusty ones. Sportsmen
from the East and across the seas came to hunt the abundant game
and returned with stories no one would believe. Pushed along by
steel-bodied, steel-willed cowboys, great rivers of long horned
cattle streamed forth from Texas to harvest tall, rich grass left
uneaten by the disappearing buff alo. Railroads came, and farmers
and barbed-wire fences. A great photographer, William H. Jackson,
trekked west from Omaha into the legendary wonderland called
Colters Hell to make wet-plate exposures that popped open the eyes
of Congress and led to the establishment of the nations first
national park the Yel lowstone. Tine slow discovery of the Great
American Desert, which men were once quite happy to survive and
then ignore, con tinued over decades. Boom towns crumbled and
trading posts blossomed into gleaming, modern, dynamic cities.
Unique FOREWORD Vll among them in both its geography and its
development was Denver, a most improbable metropolis and the only
one within a radius of well over five hundred miles. Denver, to a
degree approached by few other major popula tion centers in
America, was a self-made, bootstrap city. There was, to be sure, a
show of yellow in the sands of the trickle called Cherry Creek
where it joins the South Platte under the sunset shadow of 14,260-
oot Mount Evans, but scarcely enough to justify a good-sized
hamlet. As the main wagon trails had been deflected far to the
north and the south by the forbidding mountain wall, so were the
railroads...
Rocky I flLOunt zn Empire ROCKY EMPIRE Revealing glimpses of the
West in transition from old to new, from the pages of the Rocky
Mountain Empire Magazine of The Denver Post Edited by ELVON L. HOWE
With a foreword by Palmer Hoyt DOUBLEDAY COMPANY, INC. Garden City,
N. Y. Foreword THE STORIES you will read in this volume go at a
high lope from the hilarious to the poignant, from the exciting to
the quietly dramatic. They are tersely told, timely as todays
newspaper, and always, I think, both entertaining and revela tory
of a young, important segment of America. But there is also a sober
underlying significance to this book which I am impelled to point
out by a glance at the past and the future. The westward course of
empire was milestoned indelibly across the face of the Great
American Desert a century ago. But the human tide that rolled on
tarred wooden axles over the Santa Fe and Overland trails was at
first not an enveloping but a passing flood. It piled up against
the white-bearded Rockies only long enough to penetrate, then
rough-locked its way down and through and rolled on to salt water.
Gold was the lure California gold and the incredibly fertile
croplands waiting at the far end of the Oregon Trail. To the men in
those canvas-hooded wagons that thousand miles of grassy plains,
buffalo, Indians, granite-hard slopes, and blaz than a grueling
test of courage aftd endurance that was the purchase price of the
promised land beyon l Eventually many came back. John Gregory, for
example, returning disappointed from a land of unfulfilled
promises, stopped where the mountains meet the plains and found the
gold that had eluded him in California. His lode sprouted Central
City, now the site ofa famous summer-long operatic and drama
festival. It also aided the establishment of a supply depot at the
edge of the plains which became the city of Den-ver. Thus the
development of the huge expanse just west of the nations middle and
equal to almost one third its total area became the last chapter in
the epic of American pioneering. This development was a gradual
process. In 1870, when Illinois had already 2,500,000 residents and
distant California fully 500,000, lofty Colorado could claim only a
sparse 40,000. But more gold rushes came, and lusty ones. Sportsmen
from the East and across the seas came to hunt the abundant game
and returned with stories no one would believe. Pushed along by
steel-bodied, steel-willed cowboys, great rivers of long horned
cattle streamed forth from Texas to harvest tall, rich grass left
uneaten by the disappearing buff alo. Railroads came, and farmers
and barbed-wire fences. A great photographer, William H. Jackson,
trekked west from Omaha into the legendary wonderland called
Colters Hell to make wet-plate exposures that popped open the eyes
of Congress and led to the establishment of the nations first
national park the Yel lowstone. Tine slow discovery of the Great
American Desert, which men were once quite happy to survive and
then ignore, con tinued over decades. Boom towns crumbled and
trading posts blossomed into gleaming, modern, dynamic cities.
Unique FOREWORD Vll among them in both its geography and its
development was Denver, a most improbable metropolis and the only
one within a radius of well over five hundred miles. Denver, to a
degree approached by few other major popula tion centers in
America, was a self-made, bootstrap city. There was, to be sure, a
show of yellow in the sands of the trickle called Cherry Creek
where it joins the South Platte under the sunset shadow of 14,260-
oot Mount Evans, but scarcely enough to justify a good-sized
hamlet. As the main wagon trails had been deflected far to the
north and the south by the forbidding mountain wall, so were the
railroads...
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