Cimarrón and PhilmontSituated where the High Plains meet the Rocky Mountains and where the Santa Fe Trail crosses the Cimarron River, the village of Cimarrón has a richly varied history. Spectacular rock columns, thick seams of coal, dinosaur footprints, pit houses, and petroglyphs echo an early geologic and human presence. Spanish explorers encountered area Native American settlements in the 1700s, and by the 1820s, mountain men roamed these Rockies while eastern merchants followed Indian trails to Santa Fe. By the 1860s, Cimarrón was the headquarters of a vast Mexican land grant managed by Lucien Maxwell and Kit Carson. A gristmill supplied local soldiers and Indians, and the discovery of gold attracted thousands. The Colfax County War erupted after speculators purchased the grant in 1870. When the railroad arrived in 1906, a "New Town" was built on the north side of the river. Today, through tourism and the Philmont Scout Ranch, the Cimarrón area offers a unique window into the history and growth of the West. |
Contents
Acknowledgments | 6 |
The Colfax County War | 27 |
The Railroad Era | 41 |
New Town | 55 |
Neighboring Communities | 75 |
Ranching | 91 |
Philmont | 105 |
Bibliography | 127 |
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Common terms and phrases
Abreu acres adobe Arthur Johnson Memorial Audrey Alpers Collection Authors backcountry Baldy Mountain Baldy Town Boy Scouts building built burros camp Carson cattle Charles Springer Chase Ranch Cimarron Canyon Cimarron River Cimarroncito coal Colfax County Colfax County War Colorado constructed Dawson Eagle Nest east Elizabethtown Fred Lambert George Seward gold Hickman family Highway 64 Indian James Hotel Johnson Memorial Library known Lambert family Land Grant Company later Louis Lucien Mary Matkin Maxwell Land Grant Maxwell's Mesa Mexico miles Moreno Valley Mountain & Pacific nearby Ninth Street Old Mill Old Town operated orchard Palisades Phillips's Philmont Scout Ranch Philmont Training Center photograph shows Ponil Creek postcard purchased railroad Raton Museum Rayado road Rocky Mountain saloon Santa Fe Trail served sold staff StLRM&P Taos Tolby track Troutman Studio photograph Urraca Ranch Ute Park Vermejo Villa Philmonte wagon Waite Phillips Washington Avenue