Colorado Genealogy Trails


Genealogy Trails is an all-volunteer group whose goal is to help you track your ancestors through time by transcribing genealogical and historical data and placing it online for the free use of all researchers.


Volunteers Dedicated to Free Genealogy

This website is available for adoption!

If you are interested in joining our group to become the County webmaster for this site, read our volunteer information page and email Kim.
(The Know-how to make a basic webpage and a desire to transcribe data is needed)

Until we get a dedicated volunteer to maintain this site, we'll do the best we can to add data as we come across it. You can send your family's raw data (birth/marriage/death, cemetery, census, biography records) to us and we'll include it on this site.

WE REGRET THAT WE ARE UNABLE TO DO PERSONAL RESEARCH FOR YOU
All data we come across will be added to this website, so please keep checking back.

 


County History
Denver was founded in the Kansas Territory in 1858. That summer a group from Lawrence, Kansas, arrived and established Montana City on the banks of the South Platte River. This was the first settlement in what was later to become the city of Denver. The site faded quickly, however, and was abandoned in favor of Auraria and St. Charles City by the summer of 1859. The site is now Grant-Frontier Park and includes mining equipment and a log cabin replica.

On November 22 of 1858, General William Larimer, a land speculator from eastern Kansas, placed cottonwood logs to stake a square-mile claim on the hill overlooking the confluence of the South Platte River and Cherry Creek, across the creek from the existing mining settlement of Auraria. The location was accessible to existing trails and was across the South Platte River from the site of seasonal encampments of the Cheyenne and Arapaho. The site of these first towns is now the site of Confluence Park in downtown Denver. Larimer, along with associates in the St. Charles City Land Company, sold parcels in the town to merchants and miners, with the intention of creating a major city that would cater to new emigrants. St Charles City and Auraria, after a catastrophic flood of the Cherry Creek, joined forces to form a new town, named "Denver City" to honor Kansas territorial governor James W. Denver, in order to ensure that the city would become the county seat of then Arapaho County, Kansas. Ironically, when Larimer named it after Denver, he was unaware that the latter had already resigned as governor. After statehood, Denver remained the seat of Arapahoe County until the creation of the City and County of Denver 1902

In 1865, Denver became the capital of the Colorado Territory

The mid 1880s saw a huge rise in city corruption, as crime bosses, such as Soapy Smith, worked side-by-side with elected officials and the police, to control the elections, gambling, and the bunko gangs. By 1890, Denver had grown to be the second largest city west of Omaha, Nebraska, second only to San Francisco. It would lose the title at the turn of the century to Los Angeles.

Denver has 79 neighborhoods that the city and community groups use for planning and administration.
View Map.

 


About Denver

Denver is the county seat of, and shares the same borders with, Denver County.
It used to be part of
Arapahoe and Adams Counties, so check those sites for data as well.


Nicknames:

Denver is nicknamed "The Mile-High City" because its official elevation, engraved on the fifteenth step of the state capitol building, is one statute mile (5,280 feet or 1,609 m) above sea level

Denver has also been known historically as the
Queen City of the Plains because of its important role in the agricultural industry of the plains regions along the foothills of the Front Range.

Other nicknames that Denver has had include
The Rail City, for the city's importance as a North American rail hub, and Capital of the Rocky Mountain Empire, for the city's pre-eminence in the Rocky Mountain region

 

Cowboys


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Miscellaneous Data

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Website Updates
Apr 2012: Boiler explosion news story
Feb 2012: MARBLE bio
Jan 2012: JACKSON, JOHNSON death notices; BILLS obit
Nov 2011: bio for BALDWIN
Oct 2011: Crime news about murder of CARTER
Aug 2011: Crime news story about the hanging of Cattle thieves
July 2011: Snow Slide kills 5 (under newspaper events)
June 2011: Murder story of BANNER; miscellaneous news story on GRAVES; obit for SMYTHE
Apr 2011: Death notice for LEARY, McKenna; Bio for BENT

View Previous Updates



Surrounding Counties:

Arapahoe -- Adams -- Douglas -- Jefferson


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Genealogy Trails Website


Offsite Links

Official City Website
Denver Public Library

The Denver Post Newspaper

The Rocky Mountain News
(Colorado's oldest newspaper AND continuously operated business, first printed on April 23, 1859 )

 

 

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Since October 26, 2006

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