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Rico
Town History
The
Dolores River Valley deepens as it climbs nearly 1,800 feet in elevation
to Rico. Not far below Rico the peaks begin closing in and the valley
becomes a canyon, widening briefly to allow room for a town before
narrowing into a shadowy gorge above which the land levels into
rolling meadows atop Lizard Head Pass. Today much of the valley
floor between Dolores and Rico is occupied by historic cattle ranches.
Until the ratification of the Brunot Agreement in 1874, it was a
pristine wilderness deep in Ute territory.
In
1869, three prospectors trespassing on the Ute Reservation
began removing small amounts of ore from the slopes above
Rico. In 1872, more ore was illegally removed from the mountain
sides overlooking the Dolores River. As it did everywhere,
the discovery of gold and silver changed history. The wilderness
would soon be transformed.
The slopes surrounding Rico were soon covered with a patchwork
of claims and small mining operations. In 1881 work began
on a shaft at the Enterprise Mine high above the town to the
south. The mine's owner, David Swickheimer, hoped the shaft
would intercept the rich Swansea vein that surfaced not far
away. In 1883 he ran out of money before reaching the vein.
He tried again in 1887 but quickly ran out of money. His wife
spent a dollar on a lottery ticket and won $4,000. She invested
it in her husband's hopes. He went back to work on the Enterprise
shaft and in October, 1887, struck the rich Swansea vein 262
feet below the top of the shaft. The Enterprise would take
its place in Colorado history as one of the richer mines in
the state.
The
Rio Grande Southern Railroad would soon scale a dizzying, vertical
landscape to reach the rich new mines of Rico. The first train rolled
into Telluride on Thanksgiving Day, 1890, on a branch line from
the Rio Grande Southern's main route. Ten months later the first
train rolled into Rico on September 30, 1891.
The
cost of hauling ore out of Rico, Telluride, and surrounding
mines dropped as much as ninety percent. Rio Grande Southern
trains ran around the clock hauling silver bearing ore down
out of the mountains and supplies up into the mountains. Two
passenger trains a day made round trips between Rico and Ridgway
and Rico and Durango. Rico boomed.
The
mines, mills, and railroad operated twenty four hours a day.
Rico never slept. Mining and railroad fortunes grew with each
passing hour. Surely there were no limits to Rico's growth
and prosperity, to the economic boom touched off by the coming
of the railroad.
Fifty
years later Rico was home to the woman, State Representative
Elizabeth Pellet, who would lead the battle to keep the by
then beleaguered Rio Grande Southern Railroad alive.
-Text
and Photos, Courtesy of A
Historical Touring Guide to the San Juan Skyway
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