Ruxton Park is a park in Manitou Springs, El Paso County, Colorado at 9,078 feet (2,767 m) in elevation.[1] The Manitou and Pike's Peak Railway, which departs from the depot at 6,570 feet (2,000 m) in elevation, climbs into Englemann Canyon along Ruxton Creek. It passes by the site of the Halfway Hotel and then Ruxton Park at mile marker 3 on the 8.9 mile trip to Pikes Peak summit.[2][3]
In the late 19th century and early 20th century, it was a small town established along Ruxton Creek near Iron Springs, Colorado (now Manitou Springs). Since 1925, it has been the site of a hydroelectric plant owned by the city of Colorado Springs and a weather station. Ruxton Park was only inhabited by a caretaker for the plant from 1930 to 2008, when the plant was fully automated.
History
editIn 1884, Thomas Palsgrove and his family lived in a cabin that was on a trail to the summit of Pike's Peak. They provided coffee and doughnuts as refreshments for hikers.[4] He then began expansion of the cabin along Ruxton Creek that eventually was the Halfway Hotel with 22 rooms[5] and was run by John Palsgrove by 1903.[6]
Thomas and his brothers developed the site and in 1890 platted the streets for a town named Ruxton Park[5] below the timber line[7] where Ruxton and Sheep Creeks meet.[8][9] Cabins were built on several sold lots.[5]
The Manitou and Pike's Peak Railway was built in 1890, which brought tourists to the top of Pike's Peak[10][11] beginning June 30, 1891. The first third of the trip is alongside Ruxton Creek.[12] A stop was made at Ruxton Park where tourists could eat a meal at the "pleasant" Halfway Hotel.[11]
Halfway House, "far from half way to the summit,... is a rustic mountain hotel surrounded by a grove of stately pines, and towering above it, the pinnacled rocks of Hell[s] Gate, through whose portal the train then passes."[13]
Ruxton Park was described as an area of aspen trees, pine trees and flowers—surrounded by Pike's Peak, Mt. Rosa, Cameron's Cone and other peaks.[10][14] Wealthy families from the western states had houses in the town where they sought the cooler mountain temperatures during the summers.[15] The town had a "fancy tourist hotel", water tower, and post office.[7]
In 1925, a water utility power plant was built for $16,866 equivalent to $293,027 in 2023[16] and opened in Ruxton Park by the city of Colorado Springs.[5] The stone hydroelectric plant generates electricity as Ruxton Creek flows into Manitou Springs from the mountain.[a] A caretakers house was built in 1930 and from that time to 2008, nine Colorado Springs Utilities employees have lived there six months of the year, running the Ruxton Hydroelectric Plant and taking measurements for the National Weather Service. In 2008, the plant was fully automated.[16] The city bought some of the town lots and maintained several houses, a garage, and storage buildings in Ruxton Park. The cabins are now part of the "rusted weather-beaten ruins" that remain. Although the power plant continues to operate, there is no longer a caretaker that lives in Ruxton Park.[5] There are sometimes caretakers who oversee the reservoir who may stay in the house in Ruxton Park. It can be accessed via a hike or a 72 miles (116 km) automobile trip over rough back roads.[16][b]
Notes
edit- ^ In 1957, it generated up to 1,250 kilowatts and the Manitou Hydroelectric Plant produced up to 5,000 kilowatts. The two plants supplied up to 4% of the Pikes Peak Region's electricity. The majority of the region's electricity was supplied by two steam plants in Colorado Springs. When the water levels rise, though, the plants can supply more electricity. During the Memorial Day 1935 flood, the two plants supplied electricity for two weeks to the Pikes Peak region.[17]
- ^ The trip (calculated at 69.6 miles on Google Maps) is made over Colorado Springs Water Department Roads, Forest Service Road 376 to Victor, through Cripple Creek and Woodland Park to Colorado Springs.[18]
References
edit- ^ "Ruxton Park". Geographic Names Information System, US Geological Survey, US Department of the Interior. October 13, 1978. Retrieved January 13, 2015.
- ^ "Ride the Cog Rail to the Summit of Pikes Peak: The Trip to the Summit of Pikes Peak". Pike's Peak - America's Mountain. Retrieved January 13, 2015.
- ^ "Along the Route". Manitou and Pike's Peak Railway. Retrieved January 14, 2015.
- ^ Bettie Marie Sharpton Daniels; Virginia McConnell Simmons (1964). The Springs of Manitou. Denver: Sage books. p. 46. OCLC 3549056.
- ^ a b c d e Mel McFarland, Historian (December 8, 2014). "Cobweb Corners: The old Half Way House in Ruxton Park". Westside Pioneer. Colorado Springs, CO. Retrieved January 14, 2015.
- ^ The Giles City Directory of Colorado Springs and Manitou (PDF) (almanac). The Giles Directory Company. May 1903. p. 747. Retrieved January 14, 2015.
- ^ a b Jon Mark (August 18, 1985). "Cog Railway Fine Way To Climb Pike's Peak". The Oklahoman (NewsOK). Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. Retrieved January 14, 2015.
- ^ Morris W. Abbott (1972). The Pike's Peak Cog Road. San Marino, California: Golden West Books. p. 79. ISBN 0870950398.
- ^ "Palsgroves plats town site of Ruxton Park (order text)". The Gazette. July 15, 1890. p. 6. Retrieved January 14, 2015.
- ^ a b Salvatore Pannizzi (1898). "Mountain Railways". The Wide World Magazine: An Illustrated Monthly of True Narrative, Adventure, Travel, Customs, and Sport. Vol. I - April to September 1898. London: George Newness. p. 300.
- ^ a b James Fullarton Muirhead (1893). "Excursions from Colorado Springs: Pike's Peak". In Karl Baedeker (ed.). The United States, with an excursion into Mexico: handbook for travellers. Leipsic: Karl Baedeker; New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. p. 417.
- ^ "Pikes Peak Cog Railway". Colorado Springs Convention & Visitors Bureau. Retrieved January 14, 2015.
- ^ Manitou and Cog Wheel Route Pike's Peak Railway, The Committee of One Hundred (1915). Stop at Pike's Peak on your Way to or from the Expositions (for 1915 Panama-Pacific International Exposition). Retrieved January 14, 2015.
- ^ "Extracts From Letters Written During a Summer Holiday Trip". The Friend: A Religious and Literary Journal. Vol. LXVI. Philadelphia: William H. Pile's Sons. 1893. p. 203.
- ^ League of American Wheelmen (1897). "A Trip Up Pike's Peak". Good Roads: Devoted to the Construction and Maintenance of Roads and Streets. Vol. XXV. Boston: Burton Publishing Company. p. 222.
- ^ a b c R. Scott Rappold (November 1, 2008). "The Power of Privacy". The Gazette. Retrieved January 14, 2015.
- ^ "Harry Kliewer Has run Manitou hydro plant for last 30 years" (PDF). Colorado Springs Free Press. Colorado Springs, Colorado. February 8, 1957. p. 8 – via Pikes Peak Library District: Pikes Peak NewsFinder.
- ^ "Directions: Ruxton Park, Forest Service Road 376, Colorado Springs". google maps. Retrieved January 14, 2015.
External links
editMedia related to Pikes Peak at Wikimedia Commons