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Breckenridge History

Downtown Breckenridge has one of Colorado's largest historic districts, with about 250 buildings in the National Register of Historic Places. The district is about 12 square blocks, bounded by Main, High, and Washington streets and Wellington Road. There are some 171 buildings with points of historical interest. Information about the district is available at the historical society publishes walking tours that take you past many prominent structures, from simple log cabins to Victorians with lacy gingerbread trim.

Summit Historical Society

ADDRESS: 309 N. Main St.
TEL: 970/453-9022
WEB SITE: www.summithistorical.org

Significant Dates in Breckenridge History

  • 1859 – BreckINridge founded – gold discovered along the Blue River
  • 1860 – Breckinridge built a post office & town population reached 75-100. The town’s first stagecoach arrived
  • 1861 – Town changed its spelling to BreckENridge after former U.S. Vice President namesake became a Confederate Brigadier General in the Civil War
  • 1870 – Hydraulic Placer Mine introduced
  • 1879 – Father Dyer “The Itinerant Preacher” started his church
  • 1880 – Gold mining boom time & Breckenridge established its historic fire department during a raging forest fire that threatened to destroy the town
  • 1882 – South Park & Pacific Railroads constructed a Breckenridge depot with rail service to Breckenridge over Boreas Pass
  • 1887 – “Tom’s Baby,” a 13.5-pound gold nugget discovered near Breckenridge
  • 1889 – Breckenridge population exploded to number in the 1000’s
  • 1898 – Pug Ryan and his gang held up Breckenridge’s elaborate Denver Hotel. It snowed in Breckenridge for 79 days straight, forcing townspeople to build snow tunnels to get around town
  • 1900 – Phones and electricity introduced to town. The Denver Times described Breckenridge as “a camp that has turned out more gold with less work than any camp in Colorado.”
  • 1936 – “Kingdom of Breckenridge” first included in U.S. Map
  • 1942 – World War II forced the end of the dredging industry
  • 1960 – Breckenridge population dwindled to 393
  • 1961 – Breckenridge Ski Area opened on Peak 8
  • 1963 – First “Ullr Dag” festival celebrated in Breckenridge, now known as Ullr Fest
  • 1971 – Peak 9 opened
  • 1973 – Eisenhower Tunnel completed on I-70
  • 1981 – Historic structures entered as a National Register Historic District
  • 1985 – Peak 10 opened
  • 1990 – Breckenridge population reached 1,285
  • 1993 – Riverwalk Center and Peak 7 opened
  • 1999 – Breckenridge population reached 2,399
  • 2001 – Breckenridge Golf Club opened 9 new holes for a total of 27-holes – all Jack Nicklaus-designed
  • 2003 – Breckenridge population reached 3,182
  • 2004 – Barney Ford House Museum opened

Breckenridge History Details


In 1859, as the Gold Rush moved West, an industrious individual by the name of General George E. Spencer, future U.S. Senator, journeyed to Denver with many others in hopes of finding gold. Twenty-nine men and a lone woman departed Denver and eventually descended into the Blue Valley, where they pitched a tent alongside the Blue River. The discovery party erected a small fort and named it “Fort Mary B” in honor of the first woman to cross the range. The boisterous mining camp filled the once-quiet mountain air with the sounds of progress. Wanting a post office, the camp named itself after 15th President James Buchanan’s Vice President, John Cabell Breckinridge. Spencer’s plan worked and the flattered Vice President arranged for the “town” of BreckINridge to gain a post office on January 18, 1860. A month later the town became part of a newly formed, Colorado Territory.

A few years later, when Abraham Lincoln sat in the Oval Office and Breckinridge represented Kentucky in the Senate, the Civil War fractured the nation. Breckinridge, in opposition to Lincoln’s war plan, left the Senate and became a Brigadier General in the Confederate Army. The Town of BreckINridge, a Union-allied Colorado Territory, changed the spelling of its name to the current day BreckENridge.

In the 1860s, Father John Lewis Dyer, an itinerant Methodist minister who embraced mountain life, traveled to Breckenridge. He regularly skied across the Continental Divide on 12-foot, wooden skis to deliver sacks of gold, mail and the Gospel. He founded a Methodist Church in 1879 which remains active today in its original structure.

Another founder of the town, Naturalist Edwin Carter, came to Colorado during the 1859 Gold Rush. After witnessing the destruction that mining and a growing population wreaked on local wildlife, he changed his goals and embarked on a career as a naturalist. During his lifetime, Carter assembled over 15,000 specimens, many of which launched the Denver Museum of Natural History. The Carter Museum in Breckenridge displays many of these pieces currently.

In 1879, Ford’s Chophouse opened in the heart of town. Barney Lancelot Ford, Colorado’s first great leader of African American Heritage, became Breckenridge’s first black businessman when he opened his restaurant. He owned several businesses in Breckenridge and, at one time, the finest house in Breckenridge, now preserved as the Barney Ford House Museum. Highlights of Ford’s life story include his escape from slavery, work on the Underground Railroad in Chicago, far-flung business endeavors and initiating the first adult education program in the state. Immortalized in stained glass in the rotunda dome of the Colorado Capitol, along with Father John Lewis Dyer, Ford earned recognition as one of the state’s 16 Founding Fathers.

In 1882, the railroad arrived in Breckenridge. The Denver, South Park & Pacific Railroad wound its way across Boreas Pass from Denver to Como and made Breckenridge a main thoroughfare in the Rocky Mountains, especially due to its post office. On Nov. 27, 1898, it began to snow in Breckenridge and continued to fall until Feb. 20, 1899. The railroad could not battle the winds and the 40-foot snow drifts. Snow rose to rooftop levels causing businessmen to dig tunnels across Main Street to provide foot access. Breckenridge remained isolated from the outside world for 79 days.

Any mining town worth mentioning has a tale of the “big strike.” On July 23, 1887, Tom Groves discovered the largest gold nuggest ever found in Colorado. He trudged in to town cradling a blanket-wrapped bundle that gained the name, Tom’s Baby, and weighed 13.5 pounds. Three days later, he put the nugget on a train to Denver. No one reported its whereabouts for 85 years until, in 1972, the Colorado State Historical Museum investigated gold specimens deposited in 1926 in a Denver bank. They found Tom’s Baby, but it had shed over five pounds during its disappearance. Unfounded rumors surrounding the nugget’s location between 1887 and 1926 include a display at the Smithsonian, the Peabody Museum, Harvard University and Chicago’s Field Museum.

Mining continued to support Breckenridge as the 20th century dawned. The need for soldiers during World War II caused the massive dredge boats that had chewed their way up and down the valley waterways to halt after decades of activity. Then, for more than 20 years, Breckenridge sat quietly, waiting for its next big boom.

That boom arrived and has proved as historically monumental as any other chapter ever written in the annals of Breckenridge. The discovery of “white gold,” or snow skiing, put the town on international maps.

For more information view the www.summithistorical.org Web site.

 

For Reservations and Information call Pete Deininger | 970-389-7101 | book@bookbreck.com

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