The first to settle in this area was Samuel Allen Long, who came from Pennsylvania in 1884 and filed a 40-acre Homestead claim. He expanded his claim to 2,000 acres a few years later and, in 1891, built a barn and farmhouse which he called Rotherwood Ranch.
Sunday, April 19, 2026
The Higlands Ranch Mansion in Highland Ranch, Colorado
The Highlands Ranch Mansion is located in the Highlands Ranch Community, part of Douglas County, Colorado. The 27,000 square foot mansion is surrounded by 250 acres of ranchland in a beautiful suburban neighborhood around 20 miles southwest of Denver.
Highlands Ranch has a long and interesting history, which my husband and I learned about on a lecture and tour we attended at the mansion.
The ranch has a beautiful view of the Rocky Mountains in the distance. At one time, most of the Front Range land west of the city of Denver became farm and ranchland, as settlers from the East came West.
Please click on to enlarge
Please click on to enlarge
John W. Springer, a wealthy man with ties to politics, banking, and law, became the new owner from 1897 to 1913, and he renamed it to Springer Cross Country Horse and Cattle Ranch. He expanded the home to include a turret to give it a castle-like appearance. Springer became the first president of what was then called the National Livestock Association.
He became the area's largest landowner. He bought the property through a series of purchases while he was married to his first wife, Eliza Hughes Springer. The ranch grew to 12,000 acres, and Springer pursued his interest in show horses, raising rare German Oldenburg Coach Stallions. After his first wife, Eliza, died, and his second wife was involved in a murder scandal, he sold the Colorado ranch to Eliza's father, Colonel William E. Hughes, in 1913.
Please click on to enlarge
In 1913, Hughes purchased John Springer’s Cross Country Horse and Cattle Ranch, changed the name to Sunland Ranch, and continued to operate it as a working ranch. At the time of his death in July 1918, it was estimated that Hughes was Colorado’s second-wealthiest man (the first being Lawrence Phipps, Sr.). Hughes bequeathed Sunland Ranch to his granddaughter Annie, who sold it two years later to oil tycoon Waite Phillips.
Please click on to enlarge
Waite Philips purchased Sunland Ranch in 1920 and used it as a breeding location for high-grade horses and cattle. He consolidated the ranch with other nearby land purchases to create a prodigious spread called Phillips Highland Ranch, named after the Highland Hereford cattle he raised here.
Please click on to enlarge
In 1926, Frank Kistler purchased Highland Ranch from Waite Phillips, renamed it the Diamond K Ranch, and began breeding operations that specialized in dairy and Angus cattle, sheep, chickens, and hogs. During his time living on the ranch, he did extensive renovations on the ranch, converting it from a castle to an English Tudor-style home.
Please click on to enlarge
The last ranch owner was Lawrence Phipps, Jr., who named it Highlands Ranch. As one of the largest ranches in Colorado, it hosted the Arapahoe Hunt Club for more than 40 years. Upon Lawrence’s death in 1976, the ranch passed to his estate, which handled its sale to Marvin Davis, head of the Highlands Venturers Corporation.
Photo of the entire Highland Ranch Mansion
In 1978, Highland Venturers sold the property to Mission Viejo Company, and development of the modern community on 22,000 acres known as Highlands Ranch began. Mission Viejo sold Highlands Ranch to Shea Homes in 1997.
In 2010, Shea Homes gave the Highlands Mansion property, along with funds for renovation and an endowment, to the Highlands Ranch Metro District.
On June 15, 2012, the Highlands Ranch Metro District hosted the Grand Re-Opening of the Mansion.
The Highlands Ranch Mansion is open for free hours during the week and hosts many community events throughout the year. All public events and property operations are funded by private events hosted at the Mansion. It is also available to rent for weddings, corporate events, business meetings, and holiday parties.
We took a tour of the mansion's rooms that were available for viewing.
In total, the mansion features 14 bedrooms, 11 bathrooms, 5 fireplaces, a great room, a ballroom, a dining room, a billiard room, a library, a butler’s pantry and kitchen, a private courtyard, and an elegant staircase
Many pieces of the original furniture from different owners still remain.
I liked the stained glass light fixtures and parquet wood flooring in these rooms.
The long hallway with an Italian terrazzo tile floor was used for dancing
Different dining areas are located in the mansion
The butler's pantry next to the main dining room was filled with interesting objects.
To see some historic photographs of the mansion, click here.
We enjoyed visiting the mansion and learning how it developed over the years and how the surrounding area grew over the last 45 years into a master planned community.
The Highlands Ranch Mansion is located at 9950 E. Gateway Dr., Highlands Ranch, CO 80126
Check its calendar for open historic tour days and special events.
Blogs I link with:
Nature Notes, Home Matters Linky Party, Happiness is Homemade, Monday Morning Blog Club, Weekend Traffic Jam Report, Senior Salon Pit Stop, Talk About It Tuesday, The Happy Now Tuesday, Happy Tuesday, Wordless Wednesday 2, Wordless Wednesday on Comedy Plus, Wonderful Wednesday, Thankful Thursday, Thursday Favorite Things, Skywatch Friday, Fantastic Friday, Farmhouse Friday, Crazy Little Lovebirds Friday Link Up, Dare to Share, Saturday Sparks, Saturday Critters,
Sunday, April 12, 2026
The Rocky Mountain Arsenal National Wildlife Refuge
My husband and I were driving to the Denver International Airport to pick up our daughter, who was flying home from a business trip, and we decided to leave our home a few hours earlier to make a side visit to the Rocky Mountain Arsenal Wildlife Refuge, which is located on the Colorado Great Plains in Commerce City, about 8 miles (13 km) northeast of Denver, Colorado.
We began our visit at The Rocky Mountain Arsenal Wildlife Refuge Visitor Center, located at the refuge entrance. It is open Wednesdays through Sundays, 9 a.m. - 4 p.m. (closed on federal holidays.)
The Rocky Mountain Arsenal National Wildlife Refuge is one of the largest urban refuges in the country. It is a 15,000-acre expanse of prairie and home to over 330 species of wildlife, including bald eagles, bison, black-footed ferrets, deer, coyotes, burrowing owls, and prairie dogs.
There are many exhibits inside the visitor center:
According to historical information on the Wildlife Refuge's website:"Prior to becoming a Refuge, the Apache, Arapaho, Cheyenne, Comanche, and Ute followed large herds of bison and lived off the land. Later, as settlers moved west to start a new life, they began growing crops and grazing cattle.Following the attack on Pearl Harbor, the U.S. Army transformed the area into a chemical weapons manufacturing facility called the Rocky Mountain Arsenal to support World War II. As production declined at war's end, a portion of the idle facilities were leased to Shell Chemical Company for the production of agricultural chemicals. The Arsenal was later used for Cold-War weapons production and demilitarization."
"The Arsenal is one of the most studied environmental restoration sites in the country. Following an extensive site evaluation in the early 1980s, the Army and Shell began a comprehensive environmental cleanup under the oversight of federal, state, and local regulatory agencies. Soon after, a roost of bald eagles was discovered, prompting the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to become involved in managing wildlife at the site. The discovery also led Congress to designate the site as a national wildlife refuge in 1992."
About two-thirds of the refuge consists of mixed-grass and shortgrass prairie, while the remainder is a mix of forest, shrubland, and lakes, streams, and riparian areas.
The Rocky Mountain Arsenal Wildlife Refuge is free to visit, and visitors can enjoy 20 miles of hiking trails, bicycling, fishing (with a fishing license--catch and release), archery, photography, and nature programs.
Sixteen American bison were brought from the National Bison Range in Montana to an enclosed 1,400-acre (5.7 km) section of the refuge in March 2007 as part of the USFWS Pilot Bison Project. The number of bison reached 87 in 2013, forcing the USFWS to reduce the herd to just 60 animals because the limited acreage could not support that many. USFWS officials said that in a few years, they would expand the bison acreage to 12,000 acres (49 km), to allow the herd to expand to an anticipated 210 animals.
To see the bison, we entered a one-way 11-mile self-guided auto Wildlife Drive that took approximately 1 hour to complete.
I did not think we would see many bison because we were driving during the middle of the day, and wildlife is usually most active in the early morning or at dusk, but we did see some!
You can see that this resting bison is beginning to shed its winter fur.
We saw many active prairie dogs on our drive.
In 2015, America’s most endangered mammal, the black-footed ferret, was reintroduced to the Refuge. If you click on this link, you can read how this American native ferret almost became totally extinct. They are nocturnal and hard to spot, but there is a ferret enclosure at the Refuge Visitor Center where some can be observed.
I loved this quote by President Theodore Roosevelt that was on display in the Refuge Visitor Center:
"Of all the questions which can come before this nation, short of the actual preservation of its existence in a great war, there is none which compares in importance with the great central task of leaving this land even a better land for our descendants than it is for us."
The Rocky Mountain Arsenal Wildlife Refuge is located at
6550 Gateway Rd, Commerce City, CO 80022-4327
and is open daily from sunrise to sunset, and is closed on Thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Year's Day. The Visitor Center is open Wednesdays - Sundays from 9 a.m. - 4 p.m. (closed on federal holidays).
Visiting the Rocky Mountain Arsenal Wildlife Refuge was something I had wanted to do for a long time, and I was happy to have finally seen it!
Blogs I link with:
Nature Notes, Home Matters Linky Party, Happiness is Homemade, Monday Morning Blog Club, Weekend Traffic Jam Report, Senior Salon Pit Stop, Talk About It Tuesday, The Happy Now Tuesday, Happy Tuesday, Wordless Wednesday 2, Wordless Wednesday on Comedy Plus, Wonderful Wednesday, Thankful Thursday, Thursday Favorite Things, Skywatch Friday, Fantastic Friday, Farmhouse Friday, Crazy Little Lovebirds Friday Link Up, Dare to Share, Saturday Sparks, Saturday Critters,
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)


























