Glenwood Springs Timeline
1880-1889

1880
Carbonate, on the Flat Tops, was settled by miners looking for silver.

1880
Defiance camp was set up at Grand Springs, now Glenwood Springs.

1881, September 4
Ute Indians were moved to reservation lands in Utah. Western Colorado was opened to entry and settlement by the white man.

1882
Isaac Cooper came to the area by way of Aspen. Cooper dreamed of a resort for the hot springs.

1883, February 10
Garfield County was established and Carbonate was named county seat.

1883, November 6
Voters approved changing the Garfield County seat from Carbonate to Glenwood Springs when it became apparent that winters were too harsh in Carbonate.

1884
Hotel Glenwood opens to guests.

1885, August 25
Glenwood Springs was platted and incorporated. Isaac Cooper or his wife Sarah renamed Defiance "Glenwood Springs" for their hometown of Glenwood, Iowa.

1885
First Presbyterian Church was established. The church building was constructed on Cooper Avenue and is still in use today.

1885
Ute Chief and Glenwood Echo newspapers were established.

1886
Glenwood Light & Water Company was organized by Walter B. Devereux with British investors and a hydro-electric plant was built near where the bathhouse for the Hot Springs Pool currently sits.

1887
First National Bank was established.

1887, October 5
Denver and Rio Grande Railroad came to Glenwood Springs on a narrow-gauge bed through Glenwood Canyon.

1887, November 8
John Henry "Doc" Holliday died of tuberculosis in the Hotel Glenwood. He was buried in Linwood Cemetery but the exact location of his gravesite is unknown.

1887, December 12
Colorado Midland Railroad came to Glenwood Springs via the Roaring Fork and Frying Pan River valleys.

1887
Cardiff townsite was established south of Glenwood Springs.

1887
Weekend "Laundry Trains" came from Leadville and Aspen bringing miners down to bathe and do laundry in the hot springs and enjoy Glenwood's bawdy pleasures.

1888
The Natatorium and Pool, fed by the Yampah Hot Springs, were completed.

1888
The new Glenwood Light and Water Company hydro-electric plant was built and still stands today, currently housing the Glenwood Springs Center for the Arts.

1860-1869

1870-1879

1880-1889

1890-1899

1900-1909

1910-1919

1920-1929

1930-1939

1940-1949

1950-1959

1960-1969

1970-1979

1980-1989

1990-1999


Frontier Historical Society | 1001 Colorado Avenue | Glenwood Springs, Colorado 81601
970.945.4448 | FAX 970.384.2477 |
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