Tracking Colorado's Historic Railroad Stations
Eastern Plains
Mike Butler(Author)
Sutton Publishing
Will be published approx. on 15. August 2026
Book
Paperback/Softback
112 pages
978-1-63499-629-7 (ISBN)
Description
Before Colorado became a state in 1876, the railroad had already made inroads into the Territory. In fact, the first rails were laid in Colorado in 1867 when the Union Pacific Railroad, building its transcontinental line, put down nine miles of track in the very northeastern corner of Colorado Territory near what became the town of Julesburg. With Denver and Colorado Springs booming from gold discoveries in nearby streams and in the mountains, railroad companies were anxious to reach this bonanza. Competing rail lines were built rapidly across Colorado's eastern plains to Denver, Colorado Springs, Pueblo, and Trinidad. Train stations were constructed every ten to twenty miles to control traffic on the rails by means of telegraphers at the stations. Most early stations in eastern Colorado were simple wooden structures. Brick and stone stations followed later in larger towns. This volume examines the eastern stations, while a subsequent volume will track the stations in Colorado's western mountains.
More details
Language
English
Product notice
Paperback (trade)
Unsewn / adhesive bound
ISBN-13
978-1-63499-629-7 (9781634996297)
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Since retiring as an administrative manager in the Denver Parks & Recreation Department, Mike Butler has been traveling and researching local histories in Colorado and New Mexico. He has written five books for Arcadia Publishing's Images of America series, including Around the Spanish Peaks; Great Sand Dunes National Park; Southern Colorado: O.T. Davis Collection; Littleton; and High Road to Taos. He has also written four books for Fonthill Media, including Tracking The Chili Line Railroad To Santa Fe; Tracking The Narrow Gauge From Chama to Durango; Tracking Rocky Mountain Railroad Club Excursions 1987-1990; and Getting Around in Glacier National Park.