Monday, May 8, 2017

Bradford Perley House



This is a pioneer's tale...In my last blog post--click here--I discussed one of the Native Americans who lived and frequently traveled through the community where I live in Colorado. Before gold was discovered in California in 1848, most of the western territories, including Colorado, were inhabited mainly by indigenous people, fur trappers and settlers of Spanish and Mexican descent.  The California Gold Rush brought the greatest mass migration of people to the western part of the country. By the mid-1850s over 300,000 new people were in California, including immigrants from South America, China, Australia, and Europe. The Colorado Gold Rush, which began a decade after in 1859, brought over 100,000 people to Colorado. One of them was Robert Boyles Bradford.


Bradford was born in Davison County, Tennessee in 1813.  He joined with Russell, Majors, and Waddell (founders of the Pony Express) to form an overland transportation company. Bradford went on to Denver in 1859 to set up a store for the supplies which the company would transport by stagecoach. He then set up the Bradford Wagon Toll Road to convey miners and settlers from Denver, first to "Bradford City" and then into the foothills to what is present-day Conifer and into the mining camps in the mountains, to Tarryall, Fairplay, Leadville and eventually to Breckenridge.


These are the ruins of the original house that Bradford built in 1860 on land he obtained along the foothills of the front range, where he had hoped to establish his "Bradford City."   Bradford left the Russell, Majors and Waddell partnership in 1861, and lived full time in his stone cabin, where he raised cattle and turnips, potatoes, apples, and peaches.  Settlers also used the broad valley in this location to rest and water their livestock before heading up the rest of Bradford Wagon Toll Road into the mountains.


 The Name "Bradford" is carved into the original house lintel, facing west toward the foothills.


In 1872 Bradford added on to the house, with a larger eastern entrance, and patterned it after a southern-style mansion. It featured eighteen-inch walls made from locally quarried hand cut sandstones and had board floors and a shingled roof.

In 1863, Colonel John M. Chivington used the Bradford house to recruit soldiers during the Civil War. Colonel Chivington was later involved with the Sand Creek Massacre, which I blogged about previously--click here--to read that post.


Some of the apple trees that were noted on a Homestead Act application Bradford made in 1870, are still standing and still produce fruit! 


They are Ben Davis variety, heirloom series.  

An early photo of the addition to the Bradford -Perley House. 

In 1867, Bradford married his third wife, Fannie E. Miller. His previous two wives had passed away before he left Tennessee. Travelers abandoned the Bradford Wagon Toll Road after a newer, more direct route to the mines was built through Turkey Creek Canyon in 1867.  Despite this economic misfortune, Bradford remained in his house until his death on December 29, 1876. Fannie gave up the ranch in 1878.

James Adams Perley purchased the property in 1895. He was a direct descendant of John Adams and John Quincy Adams. Perley was a dairy farmer from Vermont, who came west with the gold rush. He eventually returned to dairy farming, when he bought the Bradford property. Perley died in 1926 when the house was then sold to John C. Shaffer, who already owned some of the surrounding lands.



The great=great granddaughter of James Adams Perley can be heard on this short YouTube video talking about her memories of her family.  More history about both Bradford and Perley can be read on this link.

 John C Shaffer's Manor House

John C. Shaffer was born in Baltimore and became a newspaper baron who first owned the Chicago Evening Post and a string of Midwest newspapers. After visiting his son, Kent, in Denver, in 1913, Shaffer expanded his empire with the purchase of the Rocky Mountain News, the Denver Times, and the Denver Republic Newspaper. He built his own large and beautiful Manor House and did not live in the Bradford Perley House, that was now part of his property but used it as a place to entertain at times. Shaffer named his ranch after his sons, Kent and Carroll, which he shortened to "Ken Caryl Ranch."   Shaffer was an influential man and was a supporter of President Theodore Roosevelt, who visited the Ken Caryl Ranch on occasions. He was also a friend of President Taft and Warren Harding. Unfortunately, Shaffer's fortunes dwindled during the depression and Ken Caryl Ranch was taken over by the banks. Ken Caryl ranch was sold to three other ranchers during the years between 1938 to 1972: Allen, Minissale, and McDannald. None of them lived in the Bradford Perley House, and it fell into disrepair.  More history about the Shaffer year can be read on this link.


Sadly, a fire destroyed the wooded aspects of the Bradford Perley House in 1967, and only the stone frame was left standing.  The Johns Manville Corporation bought the entire ranch property in 1971, and built a campus building which became Lockheed Martin when The Martin Marietta Astronautics Group bought the property in 1987, and a housing community was developed for its employees and was mostly completed in 1997. The further history of the community can be read on this link.



The Ken Caryl Historical Society had the Bradford Perley House listed on the Colorado State Register of Historic Properties and worked to secure funding to stabilize the structure. In 2002 it was listed on the states most endangered places and repair to the stone walls was done to preserve the house ruins for its historical nature. It was declared "saved in time" in 2006. The Bradford Perley House was placed on the National Register for Historic Places in February 2015.



More photos of the Bradford Perley House ruins.


My granddaughter, looking out a Bradford Perley House window.

The Ken Caryl Historical Society members are the stewards watching over the Bradford Perley House and apple orchard.  We help maintain the properties and conduct tours for interested parties and schoolchildren who are learning about their local history.  We are preserving it for future generations to learn about those who came to this area of Colorado in pioneer days.




Knowing our history enriches our lives and helps us to appreciate our surroundings even more. We can imagine those who rode Bradford's wagon road up into the foothills to seek their fortune and the Perley's ranching days when this was a remote area south west of Denver City. We can appreciate the very land our houses rest on, that was once the large Ken Caryl Ranch of John C. Shaffer, and the subsequent ranchers that came after him.  
The present tells us that we are now a stable Denver suburb that is being surrounded by fast progress and development that has come in recent decades to Colorado.  What will the future bring? That is unpredictable, but we are happy to say that we will do our best to continue to preserve the history of this place for all time.

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Monday, May 1, 2017

Chief Colorow and Colorow Cave

Colorow Cave
When I was a child growing up in Brooklyn, New York, there were the ruins of an old house located a few blocks from my house. Built around 1675, it was the remains of one of the original Dutch settlers in that area of Brooklyn, which was known as the town of Flatlands at that time. Fortunately, when developers came to build more houses in the area in the late 1950's, and that house was slated for demolition, it was dismantled and reconstructed in the Brooklyn Museum to preserve it for all time as part of Brooklyn's history. Remembering this house, the Jan Martense Schenk House, which you can read about more on my blog post--here--was the beginning of my love for local history.  I've always been curious to learn more about the peoples and places that came before me. 

When my husband and I moved to Colorado four years ago, we joined our community's historical society and the History Colorado Center. As Colorado became a state in 1876, its history is relatively new, and we were excited to learn more about it.

Please Click on to enlarge--Photos from a 2016 exhibit at Hiwan House, 
Evergreen Colorado--Chief Colorow on the Left

Native Americans lived in Colorado for thousands of yearsThe earliest traces of Paleo Indians, date back around 13,000 years ago, from artifact evidence found at an area called "Lamb Springs" near Littleton, Colorado. Click here to read my post about my visit to Lamb Springs.  One of the first recorded Native Americans, that was influential during the early 1800's, was Chief Colorow, a member of the Ute Native American tribe that frequented this area that is now known as Jefferson County, along many other areas of Colorado.  He was so well known in this vicinity that many local places are named after him, including an elementary school, a park, a road and trails, a cave and so on. Colorow was one of the most well known Utes in Colorado during his lifetime. Born a Comanche around 1813, he was captured as a child by the Muache Utes in New Mexico, who raised him. He was given the nickname "Colorado" (Red) by the Mexicans living in the San Luis Valley area because his skin had a reddish cast compared to the more brown skin of the Utes, and soon it was shortened even more to "Colorow." Colorow was six feet tall and skilled with horse rearing and training. He soon lead his very large family and tribe all over Colorado, wintering on the plains near red rock formations, where they could hunt deer and bison, as well as hunting and foraging in what he called the "shining mountains." He knew the early Spanish settlers, the fur trappers and traders, and the military men that were in Colorado at the time, and was able to co-exist and trade with them.  When gold was discovered in the Colorado Rocky Mountains, however, and settlers began streaming in from the east in the late 1850's, the Ute way of life was soon to change as their hunting grounds and living areas were slowly being taken away from them. Eventually, defeated by conflicts, broken treaties and being forced to live on a reservation in Utah, Colorow passed away of pneumonia in 1888. 

To read more about Chief Colorow click through here to his biography in the Colorado Encyclopedia.

Please click on to enlarge--more about Chief Colorow from the 2016 Hiwan House exhibit

The school children in Jefferson County learn about Chief Colorow, as part of the local history, and one of the charming legends about him was his voracious appetite.  It is said he grew to be close to three hundred pounds!  He is said to have had a special love for white settlers biscuits and would ride from homestead to homestead demanding the women of the house make biscuits for him and his braves, often stuffing them into his clothes to bring back to his tribe.  



The Ken Caryl Ranch Historical Society recently made an excellent ten minute Youtube video about the Utes and Colorow that you might enjoy watching to learn more about these native people, and specifically Chief Colorow.


One of the places that Colorow and his tribe stayed on the Front Range is a formation of Fountain Formation red rock sandstone called "Colorow Cave." This large formation of rocks is now part of private property, and is called the "Willowbrook Amphitheatre," and used by the Willowbrook Association for special events. Our community history society was invited to visit the cave, which was a very exciting event for all of us.


The top of the formation is open to the sky, but there is enough overhang to provide some shade and shelter from inclement weather. It was easy to imagine Colorow and his tribe seeking shelter here during summer thunderstorms or to escape the mid day sun, and to enjoy the warmth of the stored reflected sun's heat during the cold nights.



You can see how large this "cave" was by noticing one of our society member's grandchildren standing on the left side of the cave.



Although a flagstone floor with electrical outlets were added to make the space conductive to social functions, the rest of the cave formation was left natural.



I was startled by an owl in flight when I walked around the outside of the cave formation.



The owl perched on a distant layer of the rock formation, waiting patiently for me to leave.


The view of the Willowbrook community from the top of the hill, where the cave is located, was very bucolic.  Again, it was easy to imagine Colorow riding his horse down from the surrounding foothills to settle with his tribe to hunt the animals grazing on what was once all grasslands.



Before we left the area we also went to see the remains of a structure that is thought to be from the pioneer days, possibly a stagecoach stop?



Seeing the ruins reminded me of the little Dutch house that was fortunately saved in Brooklyn long ago for future generations to see. It reminded me how important it is for communities to work together to preserve their history, as they progress towards the future, so that their history is not lost to time.  

Do you know your community's early history and most famous resident?  Do you sometimes wander in their footsteps and imagine the life they lead?

Colorow Cave

In my next blog post I'll show you a former pioneer residence that is in my community and the interesting story of the man who built it, and for what reason.  Please visit again soon!

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