Sunday, June 7, 2026

Our Historical Society's Open House of a Pioneer's Home


 I've written before about the ruins of the Bradford/Perley pioneer house in our community, built in 1859-60 and expanded in 1872, which was an integral part of the Colorado Gold Rush and was honored with placement on the National Register of Historic Places.

You can read the fascinating history of this house in prior posts I wrote,  here and here.


Please click on the photo to enlarge it.

This placard outside the home is a condensed timeline of the house's history.


The front of the house faces east and has a view of these large red rock formations, which are also listed on the National Register of Historic Places due to major archeology digs that have taken place in this area that show these rocks were used by early natives for shelter and hunting for as far back as nine thousand years! One native who was a frequent visitor to this area in the early gold rush days was Chief Colorow, whom I blogged about in this post. 



When my husband and I moved to Colorado, we joined our community's historical society and the History Colorado Center to learn more about our new state. We have remained members, and each year our historical society hosts an open house event where members of our community are invited to enter the home and learn more about it. That event took place this past weekend on a beautiful morning.

 
Our historical society's open house coincided with another community event taking place, called Nature Day, where families can gather in a nearby open space area to see a wild bird demonstration by Hawk Quest, take a short guided hike, participate in a nature scavenger hunt, and engage in fire safety education provided by the local fire department.


Inside the pioneer's home, our society members displayed photos and photo albums from our archives of the home and the surrounding land. This home had two owners before this area became a cattle ranch and eventually developed into a residential community. 
We also answered questions and directed visitors to other points of interest on the land.


There were archeological displays...


...and my husband demonstrated an ancient native hunting instrument called an Atlatl. This way of hunting predated the bow and arrow and allowed a spear to be thrown further and with more force. 
He showed interested visitors how to use the tool and aim at the bullseye target.
You can view a YouTube video about this instrument on this YouTube link.  


Another historical society member is also a hobbyist beekeeper and had a bee display with a tray filled with bees. She answered questions about beekeeping and how to have us all improve pollination efforts in our community.


Another historical society member was in the pioneer's apple orchard, located in the rear of the house, answering questions about the remaining trees that are still producing Ben Davis heirloom series apples one hundred and sixty-six years later! 
Our historical society maintains the trees, and starting in 2010, we undertook a program, with the aid of a horticulturist, to clone the trees by carefully taking cuttings and grafting them onto a sturdy root stock to grow new trees. This way, we hope to perpetuate the old orchard.


Our historical society also has a garden committee that works hard to plant and maintain flowers and planters around the house to beautify it for the community.


The weather was beautiful until the very end of our event, when rain clouds and wind rolled in, and we all scambled to gather our displays and run to our cars! 
It was another successful open house event, and it was a joy to share some of the early history of our community with other residents.

PS: One of the new members of our historical society, who lived in our neighborhood for many years, asked me why we joined the society as relatively new residents. I told her my husband and I always loved history, and for many years we volunteered at a very historic cemetery in Brooklyn, New York called Green-Wood Cemetery in a multi-year Civil War Project where as a group we identified over 3,000 veteran soldiers and sailors of the Civil War, many sadly lying in unmarked graves, or under gravestones that have been so badly weathered that the stones have become unreadable.
We also filled out more than 1,200 applications for new markers since the Department of Veterans Affairs supplies them if originals are unreadable or lost. If you'd like to read more about this project and see some notable graves, click on this blog post.






Sunday, May 31, 2026

Waterton Canyon and the beginning of the 567 Mile Long Colorado Trail




Waterton Canyon in Littleton, Colorado, is a well-maintained 12.4-mile round-trip trail along the South Platte River for hikers, bikers, fishermen, and horseback riders, and ends at the Strontia Springs Reservoir and Dam. It is also a road for Denver Water employees to access the canyon facilities and the Strontia Springs Reservoir. 



The canyon is home to mule deer, bighorn sheep, bears, rattlesnakes, and more than 40 species of birds. No dogs, leashed or off, are allowed on the trail to protect the bighorn sheep.



Please click on the photo above to enlarge the trail map of Waterton Canyon.




The 567-mile-long Colorado Trail #1776 (Segment 1) begins at Waterton Canyon and ends in SW Colorado near Durango, Colorado.
The Colorado Trail website states: "Mile for mile, the most beautiful trail in America… built and maintained by the volunteers of The Colorado Trail Foundation.
Since its completion more than 35 years ago (Trail History), the Colorado Trail has become known as one of the premier long-distance trails in the country, lauded by hikers, backpackers, mountain bikers, and horse riders from around the world. The CT comprises 567 miles of trail between Denver and Durango, and it passes through some of the most spectacular scenery in the Colorado Rockies. Users traveling end to end encounter the high mountain lakes and towering peaks of six wilderness areas and eight mountain ranges as they climb nearly 90,000 vertical feet. The average elevation of the Trail is 10,300 feet, topping out at 13,271 feet just below 13,334-foot Coney Summit in southwest Colorado.

You can watch a short five-minute video with photos of the trail on this YouTube link,

You can also watch a 27-minute PBS Colorado Experience Show on this YouTube link about how the Colorado Trail was built and maintained by volunteers.


Click on to enlarge


As my husband and I began a short hike along the Waterton Canyon Trail, we passed this water station at the beginning, which told us there would be no further drinking water along the trail. 


It was early morning, and we saw bicycle riders. backpacker hikers and people ready to go fishing in the river. 
There are 16 different kinds of fish in the river!


The Waterton Canyon Trail is a wide, compact dirt trail and fairly flat for the first few miles.


Please click on to enlarge

We stopped to read this placard. 

Information from the Denver Water website:
"In 1902, the Platte CaƱon Filtration Plant, later renamed Kassler, was opened at the base of Waterton Canyon by the present-day Chatfield Reservoir. Kassler, which used the English slow-sand filter process, was the first of its kind west of the Mississippi River.

Kassler’s underground infiltration galleries were built in 1890, the filter beds completed in 1906, and the reservoir and pump station were built in 1972. A whole town was built around the plant to operate and maintain the facility. At the height of its operation, Kassler delivered more than 50 million gallons per day of treated drinking water to the residents of Denver. It was named a national water landmark in 1979.

By 1985, Kassler ceased operations because it was unable to keep up with demand. Now the buildings and nearby facilities are used for educational purposes."


Please click on to enlarge

At a rest station/picnic area, we saw the placards above.

The first placard tells the story about the middle and late 1870s, when the Denver, South Park and Pacific Railroad constructed the first railroad through the canyon and through the valley of the North Fork to South Park and eventually to Leadville and Gunnison. The line was initially a narrow gauge and was later acquired by the Colorado and Southern Railway. Service on the line was terminated in 1937.

The second placard tells the story of the Berens family, Leroy and Mary, who had a homestead at this location in 1923 and raised two daughters here.


Soon, we had good views of the South Platte River.

The river water was flowing well!


We saw a wooden bee home for solitary bees along the way....


...and many wildflowers and shrubs...



...many Cottonwood Trees, already shedding their cotton-like seeds...


..and even an apple tree in blossom!




We saw a few female Bighorn Sheep...


..a giant ant hill...


..and a very large Bull Snake!


We hiked past the pipeline in Waterton Canyon that feeds water from the South Platte River to Denver Water’s Marston Treatment Plant.


We hiked about three miles, and when we returned to the parking lot, we saw horses being unloaded 
to go horseback riding along the trail. 
What a fun way that must be to see the entire length of the trail!


As we drove towards the highway to go home, the sky along the Platte River looked particularly beautiful with wispy clouds.


The Platte River leads into the Chatfield Reservoir.
The dam and reservoir were built by the United States Army Corps of Engineers as a response to the disastrous flood of the Platte River in 1965. In addition to its primary purpose of flood control, it serves as one of many water supply reservoirs for the city of Denver, Colorado.
You can read a blog post I wrote about a flood that occurred a few years ago at this reservoir on this link
Sadly, this year has been a drought year for Colorado, although I read that this reservoir level is doing well, so far. 
We hope for more rain!