Calcite, Colorado

Ghost town in Colorado, US From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Calcite is an extinct town located in Fremont County, Colorado, United States. It served as a company coal mining town for Colorado Fuel & Iron. It is located along Howard Creek roughly six miles from the census-designated place of Howard.[5]

Quick facts Country, State ...
Calcite, Coloado
Men's club constructed in 1914 by Colorado Fuel & Iron
Men's club constructed in 1914 by Colorado Fuel & Iron[1]
Calcite is located in the United States
Calcite
Calcite
Location of Calcite, Colorado.
Calcite is located in Colorado
Calcite
Calcite
Calcite (Colorado)
Coordinates: 38.4361°N 105.8872°W / 38.4361; -105.8872 (Calcite, Colorado)[2]
CountryUnited States
StateColorado
CountyFremont[3]
Government
  TypeUnincorporated community
  BodyFremont County[3]
Elevation7,602 ft (2,317 m)
Time zoneUTC−07:00 (MST)
  Summer (DST)UTC−06:00 (MDT)
ZIP code[4]
81233
GNIS pop ID191720
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Description

Calcite's name come from the carbonate mineral calcite, which was quarried in significant quantities in the valleys near the settlement.[6] Located near the base of Hunts Peak, a 13,071-foot-tall (3,984 m) mountain in the Sangre de Cristo Range, it was composed of a set of three Upper, Middle, and Lower camps.[5][7] The Calcite, Colorado, post office operated from June 29, 1904, until April 30, 1930.[8] At its height, 200 people lived in Calcite, though there is no cemetery.[5]

The site is currently composed of several abandoned structures and has signs delineating the separate camps. Basements of homes, portions of mining buildings, and pathways from the initial settlement are scattered through the site.[9]

History

The site was initially founded in 1903 by CF&I to serve as a residence for miners working at the newly constructed Howard's Quarry, which began operation in 1904.[5][9] The post office opened in 1904. A school and a men's club were constructed in 1914, part of the CF&I efforts to improve its standing among miners after a strike in their Southern Colorado coalfields turned deadly and resulted in the Ludlow Massacre.[1] The school continued operation for several years, graduating students through the eighth grade. The town also had sports clubs and a local chapter of company union established as part of John D. Rockefeller Jr. and William Lyon Mackenzie King's strategy to reduce discontent among the miners.[10] The community was abandoned in 1930.[5]

See also

References

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