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Florence & Cripple Creek
Railroad
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Last updated: 15.03.2010 16:14
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The Cripple Creek Times New Year
1903
(page 37-38)
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THE FLORENCE AND CRIPPLE CREEK RAILROAD
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The first line to
enter the great mining district, and it Has been a
powerful factor in the development of the wonderfully rich
mines. |

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When
Cripple Creek was discovered, in 1891, and development
began to disclose the magnitude of its importance in 1892,
the problem was how to get the ore down to the smelters at
Pueblo and Denver.
The
Florence & Cripple Creek railroad was the solution of
that problem.
The
Denver & Rio Grande Grande railroad follows the
Arkansas from Pueblo westward. To make an outlet for the
camp and give it extensive railroad connections, it was,
therefore, only necessary to build a line connecting it
with the Denver & Rio Grande system on the Arkansas.
But
this was a great undertaking, for the camp is a mile
higher than the river, and one of the roughest and most
broken mountain countries on earth intervening.
But
the thing was done, and the Florence & Cripple Creek
entered the camp in July, 1894.
A
few miles south of the camp there heads a little stream
called Eight-Mile. It is often only a dry gorge, and often
again a raging, resistless torrent that would sweep the
Pyramids before it with a whiff.
It
traverses this abysmal geological rift, called Eight-Mile
canon, so deep and crooked that it would make an eagle
dizzy to look down into it.
The
difficulties that were overcome to get the road up through
that deep, narrow gorge, springing from wall to wall and
clinging with tooth and nail to its often perpendicular
sides, and keeping out of the way of torrential floods -
all that would make a book - but the book wouldn't
interest anybody but civil engineers, and, since the job
is finished, we don't care to interest them.
The
road is frequently called the beautiful Florence line, and
that the name is appropriate may be well understood from
even the following short and inadequate description:
"We
enter the neat and pleasant little train at the Florence
union station, where the platforms are always crowded with
passengers and their baggage, en route to the camp.
"We
have forty miles to go onward and one mile to go upward to
reach our destination.
"We
move out of the town through orchards bending with fruit—or
perhaps only aflame with fragrant blossoms, as the season
happens. "We cross the Arkansas on a level rail, and
then we strike the upward grade.
"We
pass Cyanide, the station of the great chemical extraction
plant, where the side tracks are filled with miles of ore
cars.
"We
go on over the rolling prairie, up toward the foot-hills,
up toward the abysmal Eight-Mile canon, that we must
traverse through all its deep and narrow sinuosities, as
we push onward and upward.
"Now
we are entering the foothills. The scenery is becoming
enchanting - enchanting is the word, the only word. These
grassy glades of the foothills - little flower-starred
prairie parks, fringed and dotted with pinon trees and
walled about by high ridges of rocks - furnish the most
really enchanting scenes in Colorado all along the
mountains.
They
are lovely, pensive, delightful little natural parks.
"These
little sheltered spots, caressed by the sun and favored by
the showers, are the home of the wild flowers and beloved
of old by the game - when game there was, but now fled in
terror from the steam whistle (all but the saucy,
inquisitive prairie dogs), to remoter haunts.
"Here
we are at Oro Junta (Gold Junction in English). (Here
connection is made with the Canon City & Cripple Creek
railroad, an auxiliary of the Florence & Cripple
Creek).
"We
double up with the Canon City train and put their engine
ahead of ours, and the two buckle down to their task and
we glide onward, through glade after glade, toward the
Eight-Mile and the mouth of the narrow, abysmal canon.
"On
we speed and - yes, here we are in the bare, grassless
gravel, the torrential wash of the Eight-Mile, belched out
of the canon's raging month when the wild little stream
was on the rampage, and carried down the glade a mile from
the usual bed of the current, by the gathered impulse of
rage, through long and steep miles of confinement, between
so deep and narrow walls, when betimes the laden clouds
burst and drop their watery burden among the mountain
peaks around its head - as summer clouds are wont to do
when they drift upon mountain peaks.
"Some
electrical secret in this sudden bursting of rain clouds
amidst mountain peaks, and connected with the long history
of mountain sculpture and canon making - such resistless
force! The gouging out of heavy rock-work, its merest
pastime - and thus the canon is formed through some
original rift, and thus the forming of it goes on from
century to century.
"But
here we are! This is it! This is the mouth of the canon!
No time for talking, now; only for looking with all our
eyes and gasping out our amazement in briefest exclamatory
vocables.

Picturesque Phantom Canon, Colorado |
"There
is a little tunnel. We are through it in a jiffy and out
on the other side - and the other side is still worse, for
we are not only down in the depths, but up on a trestle.
They call this side Rocky Point, but that name doesn't
distinguish it from a hundred other points, for the whole
business is rocks all the way up - rocks, rocks; nothing
but rocks - oh, yes, and a few trees, as the pictures show
- and wild flowers! |
Just
look! - in every smallest crevice in those towering walls,
a flower seed has been planted by the wind, and the dust
has covered it and the mists have watered it. and now it
is flaunting its luxuriance of beautiful bloom up there
where only the eagles can reach it.

The Narrows in Phantom Canon on the
F&CC Railroad |
"Look
at that deep crack in the rocks ahead! They call it The
Narrows. Why, a sunbeam is too broad to get through there,
but you can see the light beyond through it; and—oh,
Heavens! they are actually going to try to drag the train
through that crooked crack! - mercy, we'll all be crushed!
"Here
we go, squeezing through another one of those deep,
narrow, crooked cracks and now! - now, we are are out on
Phantom Curve. Don't jump off here or you will be a
haggard phantom yourself in the whisk of a lamb's tail -
we're on a steel trestle and it's 100 feet straight down
to that innocent-looking, treacherous brook that's only
longing to swallow you if you step off. |
"From
here, on the climb is steep, steeper, steepest, but the
canon widens out into a narrow valley and the rocks are
lower and partly covered with soil and shrubbery - more
picturesque than farther down, but not so gaspingly awful
and menacing.
"But
here we are at Alta Vista (High View), where we obtain our
first glimpse of the great Cripple Creek gold mining
district. |

Rock Point near Wilbur Loop on the
F&CC |
"With
this panorama spread out before us, we wend our way on to
Victor, thence around and up the north side of Big Bull
hill, through Goldfield and Independence, to the summit of
the Golden Circle Railroad, and the highest point in the
Cripple Creek district, passing en route, near the summit,
the town of Altman, the highest incorporated town on the
face of the globe - in sight of all the Cripple Creek camp
- in sight of most everything within a radius of a hundred
miles - oh, such a sight!!!
The
picture gives you only a faint conception of its matchless
glories.
"The
pretty station on the summit is called - and properly
called - Vista Grande, which is straight Quackenbass
Spanish for grand view, and you'll never see anything
grander if you live a thousand years.
There
are the golden hills of the Cripple Creek district in full
view - Battle mountain, Squaw mountain, Bull hill, Raven
hill, Gold hill, Beacon hill, Globe hill and Tenderfoot
hill, all dotted over with bustling towns, and freckled
with the dumps of mining pits - with all of these we are
on a level.
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But
beyond these - ah, there it is! Pike's Peak! glorious in
its grand repose, with the morning sun dashing itself into
splinters on the crystalline snows that cover the summit -
and looking so near, in its Titanic hugeness, through this
limpid, flawless atmosphere, yet really twenty-five miles
distant. |
"And
then to the westward - far and far away - eighty miles -
across a rugged ocean of volcanic hills, the white
sky-line of the main range, the Sangre de Cristo, lying
against the mellow blue of the horizon - a serrated,
limitless wall of glistening white, with scores of
towering peaks blazing in the morning sunlight.
And
below - away and away below - the valley of the Arkansas,
ribboned with its green line of cottonwoods. And beyond
this, southward still, the smaller range of the Sierra
Mojada (Wet Mountain) and the Cuerna Verde (Green Horn)
and the two cones of the Spanish Peaks, matchless in
symmetrical grandeur as they stand out, hooded in
crystalline snow - ah, such a scene, this well-named Vista
Grande, such a deathless memory of Titanic grandeurs - and
that name, Sangre de Cristo (Blood of Christ), what an
insistent clutch it takes upon the imagination!"
The
Florence & Cripple Creek was incorporated in 1893, by
William E. Johnson, Eben Smith, D.H. Moffat, et al. It was
opened to Cripple Creek in July, 1894. The company owns a
narrow-gauge line from Florence to Cripple Creek.
The
Golden Circle Railroad was incorporated by the owners of
the Florence & Cripple Creek. This property comprises
a circle railroad from Victor, passing through Goldfield,
thence around Battle mountain to a point very near Altman,
on Bull hill.
It
was opened for traffic in 1896.
The
Canon City & Cripple Creek Railroad runs from Canon
City to Oro Junta, where it connects with the main line of
the Florence & Cripple Creek. It was opened for
traffic in March, 1900.
Both
the Florence & Cripple Creek and Canon City &
Cripple Creek railroads connect with the Denver & Rio
Grande at Florence and Canon City.
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