MILE HIGH CITY
by Thomas J. Noel5. A SPARKLING
JEWEL ON THE BOSOM OF THE DESERT
"The most marvelous growth of modern times is the city
of Denver, Colorado.... In 1858 there were only a few tents and huts on the spot where the
city now stands. Less than fifty people were there through the winter of 1858-59, drawn
thither by the discovery of gold. A barren waste was all that met the vision in every
direction....What do we see now where these pioneers pitched their tents? The largest,
richest, and most beautiful city of its age on eartha sparkling costly jewel on the
bosom of the desert."
William M. Thayer, Marvels of the New West
(1890)
Colorados gold and silver rushes led to another
stampedethe rush to respectability. The instant city and its overnight millionaires
demanded elegance. Between the 1858 gold rush and the 1893 silver crash, Coloradans
exported paydirt and imported culture, striving to show the world that the Highest State
was no cultural lowland. Denver, the jewel on the bosom of the desert, wanted to sparkle.
Denver soon glittered with the riches of the earth. Not
only Colorados gold and silver, but the states mining magnates gravitated to
Denver. Wealth and the wealthy from Central City, Leadville, Aspen, the San Juans, and
Cripple Creek flowed into Denver. In the Mile High City, the nouveau riches used
cultural trappings to separate themselves from less-successful gold grubbers. Peacocks in
the front yard, servants in the kitchen, and children in private schools helped the
successful flaunt their new status. Inspired by a sincere interest in culture as well as
the use of culture to define an aristocracy, Coloradans rushed to respectability.
The culture rush began during the golden territorial era
and peaked during the silver age that followed Colorado statehood in 1876. By 1890, Denver
boasted mansion-studded neighborhoods, stately churches and schools, the Tabor Grand Opera
House, and private clubs such as the Denver Club and the Denver Athletic Club, where the
wealthy and their offspring could mingle and frolic.
Mansions capped Capitol Hill, where mining millionaires
built their multi-story masonry piles. After Fairmount Cemetery sprouted in southeast
Denver and Mount Olivet northwest of town in 1890, "millionaires row" also
graced those new cemetery parks, where movers and shakers built their final
mansionspalatial mausoleums of granite and marble.
By 1892, Denver had a Blue Book to showcase its
society types. Compiler Agnes Hill described her social register as "a list of
householders having sufficient money and position to be available either as good customers
for merchant, florist or caterer, or to grace a feast, adorn a dance or add to the
interest of the occasion where a city gathers her beauty and her chivalry and her
financial power."
Society families insisted on more elegant schools for their
offspring. During the 1880s, Robert S. Roeschlaub began designing dignified educational
edifices for the Denver School district. Some of his notable schools are still standing,
including Emerson (1884) at East 14th Avenue and Ogden Street, Dora Moore at East 9th
Avenue and Corona Street, and University Hall (1890) and Chamberlain Observatory (1889)
for the University of Denver.
Roeschlaubs contemporary, William Lang, specialized
in designing stone mansions for Denvers elite. He built castle-like Romanesque
residences, bulging with turrets and towers. Lang also designed more modest, middle class,
Queen Anne-style homes, such as the Molly Brown House.
Molly Brown
The oftenand variouslytold tale of Margaret
Tobin Brown epitomized the rush to respectability. Different people see different persons
in this Irish Catholic girl of modest origins and wondrous achievements.
Actress Debbie Reynolds, who portrayed Molly in the film, The
Unsinkable Molly Brown, praised her as "a female ahead of her time. Today she
would be called a feminist, an independent woman who believed in growth and
self-expression. She was going to learn to read n writeto go n
seeto be what she had to beeven to make mistakes."
Less kind critics, such as The Denver Posts
Polly Pry, derided Molly as a social climbing fraud. Polly ridiculed her dress, deriding
her as Colorados largest fur-bearing mammal. Snubbed by Denvers high society,
Molly found acceptance on the East Coast and in Europe.
Molly started out as Maggie. Born July 18, 1867, she was
raised in a one-bedroom shack in Hannibal, Missouri, along the Mississippi River bottoms.
This bright, ambitious girl left school at age 13 to work in a cigar factory. She saved
her money and at 19 fled Hannibal for Americas great boom town of the
1880sLeadville, Colorado. In the two-mile-high Magic City, the red-haired,
green-eyed, buxom young woman found work sewing drapesand a wealthy, handsome
husband, Leadville mine manager James Joseph Brown.
After the Silver Crash of 1893, Browns resourceful
gold mining of the Little Jonny Mine made the Browns rich. Like the Boettchers, the
Campions, the Tabors and many other mining millionaires, the Browns moved to Denvers
swanky Capitol Hill neighborhood.
Mollys efforts to conquer Denver society were
hampered by the fact that her roots were all too evident. She shared her Denver home with
her aging father, John Tobin, an Irish-born day laborer, and her Irish-born mummsie,
Johanna, who smoked a pipe. Perhaps to escape her humble ancestors, Molly began traveling
a great deal. She joined European grand tours, and in 1912 decided to return with high
society on the most fashionable of vessels, the Titanic.
Molly did not sink on the Titanicwhere she
heroically saved other panic-sricken passengers. After she died in 1932, her house was
converted to a home for wayward girls. Then it became an even more cramped boarding house
for single gentlemen. By 1969, some were talking about demolishing the house for a modern
office building.
Possibly losing one of Denvers greatest landmarks
jolted the citys historical consciousness. Ann Love, wife of Governor John Love, and
others distressed about the proposed demolition incorporated a private, nonprofit
organization called Historic Denver, Inc. (HDI) on December 11, 1970. HD raised $80,000 to
buy the house and has poured in $500,000 and 250,000 hours of volunteer time.
Molly would be tickled pink to know that the restoration of
her house helped inspire a renaissance in the Capitol Hill neighborhood. For she was
Denvers pioneer preservationist: when the cottage of poet and journalist Eugene
Field faced demolition in 1927, Molly bought it and moved it to Washington Park for
recycling as a branch of the Denver Public Library.
Like Fields Cottage, Mollys own home has been
fully restored. It is a picture-perfect "house beautiful" of the aspiring
19th-century middle class, from the statue of the Nubian slave at the door to the polar
bear rug in the parlor. Since the 1970s, it has also become the towns most popular
house tour, attracting some 40,000 visitors a year.
Molly Brown House Director Leigh Fletcher Grinstead
reports: "We hope to introduce a new generation of Coloradans to the fascinating ups
and downs of Molly Brown. She is a great role model for girls, especially. She was an
early feminist, suffragist, preservationist, and philanthropist. She overcame her humble
origins with lifelong learning. She studied music, opera, French, German, Italian, Spanish
and literature to make herself a polished lady."
Henry C. Brown and His Palace
Although unrelated to Henry C. Brown, Molly Brown did enjoy
his hotel. Like the Tabor Grand Opera House, that grand hotel signified Denvers
arrival as a city of significance. Any city hoping to make it out West aspired to build a
great hotel. Elegant accommodations would help to lure the rich and the famous, to attract
newcomers and investors. Denvers grand hotel of the 1870sthe American
Houseand of the 1880sthe Windsorare long gone, but the Brown Palace has
been in business every day since its grand opening in 1892.
Denvers palace began as the dream of an itinerant
carpenterHenry C. Brown. This Ohio orphan ran away at age 16 from the farmer to whom
he was apprenticed. He headed west, working as a carpenter in St. Louis, as a contractor
in San Francisco, and as a lumberman in Oregon. By the time he landed in Denver in 1860,
Brown was a budding carpenter-contractor-developer.
He homesteaded Capitol Hill, erecting a claim cabin at 12th
Avenue and Sherman Street. From there he wheel-barrowed his tools down to Denver, where he
constructed various buildings, including one for the Denver Tribune, which he owned
and operated after the journalists defaulted. By the mid-1880s Brown was worth $250,000.
Brown boasted that his homestead, bordered by Broadway on
the west and Logan Street on the east, between East 20th and 8th Avenues, would one day be
the Queen Citys elite residential neighborhood. But Browns Bluff housed mostly
prairie dogs. To enhance his real estate, Brown donated a site for the state capitol and
built the first Capitol Hill mansion at 17th Street and Broadway. Looking somewhat like a
triple-decker, Mississippi River steamboat, Browns show home launched a building
boom on the four streets he named for his favorite Civil War heroesPresident Lincoln
and Generals Sherman, Grant and Logan. In 1879, Brown sold his mansion to Horace Tabor,
the silver magnate from Leadville, who fancied the ostentatious 20-room house perched on a
prominent corner. Nowadays, the site houses the 52-story Norwest Bank complex.
Brown reckoned that a grand hotel just across Broadway from
his house would pull Denver eastward towards Capitol Hill. After British investors failed
to build the hotel they promised, he undertook the project himself. He engaged
Denvers finest architect, Frank E. Edbrooke, and spent $2 million to make this hotel
Denvers showplace. To erect the buildings steel skeleton, Brown and Edbrooke
hired Denvers Lane Bridge and Iron Works. Edbrooke then wrapped the steel frame in a
skin of red sandstone with carved ornamentation. Some of the stone figures that once
swarmed over the facade have been scraped off, probably after loose chunks of sandstone
began bombarding pedestrians. A carved Colorado bestiary of wildlife in inset medallions
still enlivens the seventh floor. The grand stone cornice inscribed "The H. C. Brown
Hotel" has been pared off the Broadway facade, but the arched entry is still flanked
by the stone monogram, HCB, and a bust of Brown.
The Brown Palace introduced visitors to the wonders of the
agesteel-frame construction and indoor plumbing, elevators and electricity. A city
within a city, the Brown had its own power plant and two artesian wells, various shops and
services, and even a basement crematorium so guests would never have to check out. Gawking
at such a palace gave Coloradans a peek at the latest gadgets and interior decor, at new
fashions in food, dress and amusements.
Private Clubs
Characters such as Henry C. Brown and Horace Tabor
epitomized the graduation of the nouveau riches from mining rushes to cultural
rushes. Besides a grand hotel and a grand opera house, they and their colleagues
established private clubs where they could socialize and talk business. First and foremost
of these was the Denver Club. Founded in 1880, this private mens club included
noteworthies such as David Moffat, Walter Cheesman, James Grant, and Nathaniel Hill. This
club, as historian Christine Whitacre points out, "represented an effort by the
citys economic leaders to boost Denvers reputation within the national
business community and to lure new investment capital to the West." Indeed, one of
the club founders was James Duff, a Scotsman who represented the London-based Colorado
Mortgage & Investment Company, which sunk millions of pounds into Colorado. The Denver
Club dominated Denvers club scene for almost a hundred years. Decline set in after
the club demolished its grand old mansion at 17th and Glenarm Streets in 1953 to build a
high-rise office building with the club in the top three floors.
"If only we had kept that old mansion," lamented
former club president Richard H. Shaw in 1992, "wed probably have a five-year
waiting list today." Instead, the club is struggling to stay alive in a lackluster
edifice overshadowed by many newer, taller towers.
Wealthy young men of the 1880s also flocked to the Denver
Athletic Club, which promoted sports of all sorts. Founded in 1884, the DAC grew rapidly,
claiming 1,000 members by 1892, when it completed the $250,000 red-brick and sandstone
clubhouse at 1325 Glenarm Place. In 1890, the DAC introduced football to Denver as the DAC
humiliated the University of Colorado, 34 to 0. The DAC team continued to whip collegians
until 1906, when it dropped the game after newspapers reported that it was paying
"amateurs" recruited from top college teams.
The DAC also rode the bicycle craze of the 1890s after
development of the safety bicycle and pneumatic tire led to safer, more comfortable
machines than the original "bonebreakers." Denvers generally flat terrain
and dry, sunny climate made it ideal for cyclists. The DAC bicycle division captain
promised that an "enjoyable and health-giving run with the Bicycle Division"
would do wonders for working men: "His mind will be relieved of the cares and
anxieties of his business affairs, his digestive organs improved, his appetite
strengthened, his nerves relaxed, his brain cleared up.... He will be in a much better
humor, better condition to attend to his duties, will be enabled to accomplish more work
with better results."
Society maidens and matrons followed Denvers dashing
young sports into the DAC. Womenfolk soon transformed the DAC into a haven for fine
dining, dancing, and socializing. DAC athletes grumbled that the gym was often closed for
banquets, balls and bridge parties. Despite recent additions that fall stylistically short
of Varian and Sterners fine original landmark, the DAC remains energetic on its full
block site between 13th and 14th Streets, Glenarm to Tremont Places.
Sporting men also founded the Denver Country Club in 1901,
converting a wheat field straddling Cherry Creek between Downing Street and University
Boulevard into a golf course for the upper crust. Crawford Hill took to the greens with
lawyer Henry Wolcott, brother of U. S. senator Edward O. Wolcott, and James Duff of the
Denver Club. As at the DAC, women followed men into the DCC and soon joined men in golf,
tennis, swimming, and ice-skating.
Chamber of Commerce
Denvers power-elite had broad ambitions. They
regarded all of Colorado as their hinterland, as manifested in the Chamber of
Commerces founding goal, "to promote general prosperity in all the varied
interests of Colorado and Denver." With imperialistic aspirations, Denver boosters
claimed to speak for the whole state.
The chamber manned many fronts: it proposed creation of the
Denver Museum of Natural History and housed the original collection on its shelves in the
old, chamber building that stood at 14th and Lawrence Streets. Looking to the future as
well as the past, the chamber anticipated Denvers emergence as an international port
of entry. Overlooking the fact that Denver lay hundreds of miles from any national border,
boosters persistently lobbied Washington to designate Denver an official port of entry.
Washington succumbed in 1882 and awarded Denver a customs house. Ever since, Denver has
aspired to be an international hub for transportation and business.
By 1890, Denvers population had soared to 106,713,
third in the West behind San Francisco and Omaha, but larger than Los Angeles or any town
in Texas. After Colorado men approved full womens suffrage in 1893, Denver became
the largest city in the world where women could vote. Carolyn Churchill, editor of
Denvers Queen Bee proclaimed Denver not only politically enlightened but also
a pure, curative atmosphere for asthmatics, tuberculars and other invalids.
Colorados climate cure might turn even the proverbial 98-pound weakling into a
robust mountain manor mountain woman.
The Switzerland of America
Denvers boosters energetically promoted a relatively
recession-proof businesstourism. Railroads joined the crusade. Setting a tone for
many subsequent railroad appeals, the Kansas Pacifics 1873 booklet, Colorado: Its
Resorts and Attractions for the Pleasure Seeker, Tourist and Invalid proclaimed:
"Denver, the political capital and commercial center,
an aristocratic little burg, romantically situated at the foot of the Shining
Mountains is without doubt one of the most beautiful cities of the world.... Many
persons on first arriving in Denver have started from their hotels to walk to the
mountains before breakfast."
The Denver & Rio Grande, which had carried farm crops
and gold and silver ores, adopted the slogan "The Scenic Line of the World" and
began catering to sightseers. The D&RG hired photographer William Henry Jackson to
produce seductive images for calendars, postcards, and booklets which were mass produced
for national distribution. The D&RGs in-house "Literary Department"
cranked out poetry and fiction, as well as travel books and brochures. Other railroads
also pushed tourism, generating an endless supply of publicity to lure sightseers and
pleasure seekers to the highest state.
Coloradans looked to the worlds pace-setting tourist
destination, Switzerland, as a model. As Colorado had comparable climate and alpine
scenery, boosters decided to market the highest state as "The Switzerland of
America." Samuel Bowles, in his 1869 guide to Colorado entitled The Switzerland of
America, marveled: "I who have seen the Alps from Berne join in the judgement
that no grand mountain view exists that surpasses this as seen from the high roll of the
prairie just out of Denver."
Emma Abbott Gauge reaffirmed the theme in her 1900 book, Western
Wanderings & Summer Sauntering through Picturesque Colorado: "The Alps have
long since become the synonym for grandeur, but they cannot rival these grand old Rockies,
with their sublime magnificence."
Winter sports, a key to Switzerlands hardy tourist
industry, inspired Coloradans to capitalize on their "white gold." Soon after
1900, the Denver Mountain Parks Department, the Colorado Mountain Club, and the Denver
Chamber of Commerce began promoting skiing and erected warming huts and ski lifts. The
first mass-market publication to push winter tourism in Colorado, the Union Pacifics
1925 brochure, Colorado Mountain Playground, promoted ski areas and
"tobaggoning, skiing, skating and snow shoe trips."
Winter and summer, railroads brought tourists into Denver,
and street railways carried them to various attractions in and about the Mile High City.
By the 1890s, sightseers could board "Seeing Denver" streetcar excursions at the
Brown Palace Hotel. For 25 cents, rubberneckers were promised 25 miles of sightseeing
aboard the open cars which "Seeing Denver" leased from the Denver Tramway
Company.
Jollier tourists were even taught Gus Brohms
"Seeing Denver" song:
Theres a city out west and it outshines the rest
Where the sun shines the whole year round.
With its air fresh and light, breathe to your delight.
Just jump on a car and take in the sights with me.
Seeing Denver is my delight either by day or by night.
Nocturnal tourism became a thrust of the Chamber of
Commerces "City of Lights" campaign. Although hardly an original
ideamany other cities also had big, bright ideas for light bulbsDenverites
illuminated their town energetically. The Curtis Street Theater District shone most
radiantly. The 1910 Chamber of Commerce Building at 1726 Champa Street, the 1910 Denver
Gas and Electric Building at Fifteenth and Champa Streets and the 1908 Municipal
Auditorium at 14th and Curtis Streets were all outlined in electric light bulbs. A related
tradition begun about the same time was Christmas lighting of Civic Center. Denvers
nocturnal sparkle could be seen for miles around, beckoning all to the citys shops,
theaters, restaurants and nightclubs.
Boosters fancied bright lights and tourism, which not only
brought in visitors and their dollars but also pumped up civic pride. By 1940, tourists
constituted Colorados third-largest source of income, after agriculture and
manufacturing.
Making the Great American Desert Bloom
The Denver Chamber of Commerce touted the South Platte
Valley, the former "Great American Desert," as a Garden of Eden. Twenty-thousand
people began farming in Colorado between 1910 and 1920. Cattle sales doubled, and sheep
sales increased by 600 percent between 1900 and 1920. As both farm products and ranch
livestock rode the rails to market, railroads readily promoted Colorado as an agricultural
paradise.
Denverites embraced their country cousins, knowing that
cattle and sheep, hogs and chickens, winter wheat and other grains flowed into Denver for
food processing, storage and wholesaling. In the Queen City, Colorados farm bounty
was transformed into beer and bread, into canned and bottled foods, into hamburger and
steaks.
Westerners grew up on beef, as well as gold and silver.
After many investors found mines to be bottomless holes that swallowed money, easterners
and Englishmen began to sink their teethand capitalinto cattle.
Europeans accustomed to plodding, Old World farmers
marveled at the wild adolescents who herded American cattle. The "cow servant,"
sniffed Lady Rose Pender in A Ladys Experiences in the Wild West in 1883
(London: 1888), is "a strange creature, quite unlike any of his fellow men, and all
he does must be done with swagger and noise.... utterly devoid of manners or good
feeling."
Kinder accounts of cowboys came from Dr. William A. Bell,
Jr., the son of an English society doctor. The good doctors, father and son, persuaded
their wealthy London patients to invest in their American toythe Denver and Rio
Grande Railroadand in Colorado cattle ranching. Ultimately, young Dr. Willie Bell
moved to Colorado Springs as vice president of the D&RG. When mining traffic sank, the
D&RG began transporting cattle.
On his 1868 visit to Colorado with a railroad survey crew,
Dr. Bell was astonished to find cattle grazing on the open prairie. Although "they
had been out all winter, without shelter or hay" as Bell noted in New Tracks in
North America (London: 1870), they, like buffalo, emerged in the spring, fat and
juicy.
Bell and others found they could buy wild Texas longhorns
for $5 or $10 and raise them free on the open range, where naturally cured gramma and
buffalo grasses served as fodder year around. Fattened cattle could be sold for $30 to $50
a head at stockyards in Denver, Kansas City, or Chicago.
Promoters in the 1870s and 1880s promised 30 to 40 percent
annual profits in the Western cattle industry. One of the propagandists, Baron Water von
Richthofen, dabbled in cattle and wrote Cattle-Raising on the Plains of North America
(N.Y.: 1885). The book proclaimed that "this former Great American Desert is the
largest and richest grass and pasture region in the world, and it will probably soon
become the most important beef-producing country of the globe."
Despite the barons claim that "profit of 25 per
cent per annum is the minimum the cattle business will yield," he himself failed in
the cattle industry. So did many others during the blizzards of 1885-86 and the subsequent
federal crackdown on unrestrained use of public lands by cow punchers.
Baron von Richthofens book, however, sold well, and
he built his Colorado castle as a show home for his new suburban townMontclair.
There the German adventurer constructed the Molkerei (milk house) on East 12th Avenue
between Oneida and Newport Streets and promised tuberculosis victims a sure cure. They
could drink fresh milk from cows stabled below, then lie out on the decks of the Molkerei
in Colorados salubrious sunshine, breathing champagne air that only the angels had
sipped before.
Best of all, the "lungers" could inhale, through
grates in the milkhouse floor, the barnyard effluvium rising from the cattle stabled
below. These pungent fumes were a sure cure for lung disorders, according to the Baron von
Richthofen. Nowadays, the dairy cows are gone but the Molkerei and the Richthofen Castle
linger as centerpieces of the Montclair Historic District in what is now a sedate East
Denver neighborhood.
The cattle industry changed not only the West but all of
America. Cheap Western beef transformed the U. S. diet. Before the 1880s, few Americans
could afford fresh beef. But cowpokes, feed lots, stockyards, meat processing, and
refrigeration changed all that. Fresh beef in refrigerated railroad cars flooded Eastern
grocery stores. Americans became beef-eaters. Steak and hamburgers became the all-American
meals.
Nothing, not even beef, sweetened Denvers economy in
the early 1900s like sugar beets. After the federal government placed the Dingly Tariff on
sugar and other imports from foreign countries in 1897, the Denver Chamber of Commerce
began preaching the glories of these big, ugly beets. The chamber distributed seeds to
anyone who would try growing them, offering $50 cash prizes for the sweetest beets. Such
booster campaigns helped sugar beets become the number-one crop in Colorado by the 1920s.
By then, agriculture had eclipsed mining as Colorados premier industry. Denver
started out as a mining supply and ore processing center, but its role as an agricultural
hub sustained the city after 1900 as mining lost its glitter.
Denver Needed Dandelions
Despite the boasting of the Denver Chamber of Commerce and
promoters such as Baron von Richthofen, Denver remained a dusty, drab-looking place.
Another Capitol Hill resident, Dr. Frederick G. Bancroft, a pioneer physician, came up
with a solution. Why not introduce dandelions to the Great American Desert?
Like other English romantics fond of natural gardens, he
celebrated the dandelion as "a tramp with a golden crown." His granddaughter,
the late Caroline Bancroft, delighted in telling the story: "When grandfather
arrived, he was aghast. Colorado was so dusty, barren, and ugly. He declared that Denver
needed a dandelion."
Dandelions are not the only things Dr. Bancroft gave to
Denver. He helped found the Colorado Historical Society and the Denver Medical Society. He
first researched Market Streets Nymphs du Pave and called public attention to
local outbreaks of sexually transmitted diseases.
A wonderful, old-fashioned kind of doctor, Bancroft was
legendary for eating and drinking double portions of red meat and red wine. This was
followed, presumably, by brandy and cigars. He weighed over 250 pounds, and may have told
his patients that they were underweight.
Dr. Bancroft even knew the dandelions Latin name: Taraxacum
officinale. It is a stemless herb of the composite family, with leaves in spear-shaped
rosettes, and flat, solitary, bright-yellow disc flowers. In some eyes, the dandelion is
just another of the scourges with which Euro-Americans cursed Native Americans in their
Garden of Eden. Europeans cultivated dandelions for salad "greens," and
developed special strains with very large, curly leaves. The root has medicinal uses and
the flower can be used to make wine.
The dandelion has one of the worlds most exotic,
delicate and perfectly shaped seed headsa globe of silvery, lacy ecstasy. The
dandelion seeds rapidly, is hardy, and will growlike the proverbial weedin
almost any kind of soil. Despite the dandelions merits, The Denver Post, ever
vigilant in weeding out public enemies, took an unflinching stand against them.
"It is conceded through the world that Denver lawns
are the most beautiful and perfect existing anywhere on earth," explained a
front-page story, April 29, 1926. "But the dandelion pest is sweeping over the city
and unless immediate steps are taken our lawns will be seriously marred, so let everybody
get busy nowdont wait. There is only one way to exterminate the
dandelionhuman laborjust bend your backs and dig them out."
The Post offered "to furnish men and women who
know how to clear lawns of this nuisance." All unemployed persons were urged "to
come to our office and let us register you as willing to work on lawns, destroying the
dandelions, at $3 for eight hours work. There are a number of very deserving people who
are not employed at the present time who will be glad to get jobs of this kind....let no
guilty dandelion escape! They mar your own property and harm your neighbors
property. Join in this dandelion crusade for the mutual benefit of all citizens. THE
DANDELION MUST GO."
Dandelions backfired as beautification in a city of avid
gardenersincluding many former Midwestern farmersor their offspring. These
folks relish their grassy lawns, their vegetable patches, their shrubs and border gardens,
and their street trees. Indeed Denvers avid gardeners have led some to suggest that
the garden hose should be on the city seal. For such citizenry, dandelions are not to be
abided. Denver, the jewel on the bosom of the desert, would have to look elsewhere for
City Beautiful solutions.
SOURCES:
Bowles, Samuel. The Switzerland of America: A Summer
Vacation in the Parks and Mountains of Colorado. Springfield, Mass.: Samuel Bowles
& Co., 1869.
Ekstrand, Margaret E. & Thomas J. Noel. The
University Club of Denver: The First Hundred Years. Denver: The University Club
of Denver, 1991.
Gauge, Emma Abbott, Western Wanderings and Summer
Sauntering Through Picturesque Colorado. Baltimore: The Lord Baltimore Press, 1900.
Hunt, Corinne. The Brown Palace Story. Denver: Rocky
Mountain Writers Guild, 1982.
Noel, Thomas J. The Denver Athletic Club, 1884-1984.
Denver: The Denver Athletic Club, 1983.
Simms, Willard E. Ten Days Every January: A History of
the National Western Stock Show. Denver: The Western Stock Show Association, 1980.
Thompson, Phyllis T. The Use of Mountain Recreation
Resources: A Comparison of Recreation and Tourism in the Colorado Rockies and The Swiss
Alps. Boulder: University of Colorado Ph.D. Dissertation, 1970.
Whitacre, Christine. The Denver Club. Denver:
University of Colorado at Denver M. A. History Thesis, 1994.
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