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・ Old Colony House
・ Old Colony Housing Project
・ Old Colony Iron Works-Nemasket Mills Complex
・ Old Colony Library Network
・ Old Colony Lines
・ Old Colony Lines (MBTA)
・ Old Colony Memorial (newspaper)
・ Old Colony Mennonites
・ Old Colony Rail Trail
・ Old Colony Railroad
・ Old Colony Railroad Station
・ Old Colony Railroad Station (North Easton, Massachusetts)
・ Old Colony Railroad Station (Taunton, Massachusetts)
・ Old Colony Regional Vocational Technical High School
・ Old Colony Trust Co. v. Commissioner
Old Colorado City
・ Old Colorado City Branch Carnegie Library
・ Old Columbine, Arizona
・ Old Colwyn
・ Old Colwyn railway station
・ Old Comedy
・ Old Common Council of Castropol
・ Old Compton Street
・ Old Concord, Pennsylvania
・ Old Conemaugh Borough Historic District
・ Old Congregational Church
・ Old Congregational Church (North Scituate, Rhode Island)
・ Old Connaught House
・ Old Connecticut Path
・ Old Constitution House


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Old Colorado City : ウィキペディア英語版
Old Colorado City

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Old Colorado City, formerly Colorado City, is a national historic district in the city of Colorado Springs. Its approximate boundaries are U.S. Highway 24 to the south, 32nd Street to the west, 13th Street to the east and Uintah Street to the north, with the town square restructured as Bancroft Park.
==History==
Colorado City was founded on May 22, 1859, when the Colorado Town Company, a group mainly from Denver and Auraria, laid claim to two square miles of land. They envisioned that Colorado City would be a major supply hub via Ute Pass for the new gold mines in South Park and the Blue River, where major strikes in the Pike's Peak Gold Rush had recently been made. The name ''Colorado'' was chosen (the area was still part of Kansas Territory) because the Blue River mines were supposed to be on the headwaters of the Colorado River. The town prospered in late 1859 and early 1860.〔Jerome C. Smiley, ''Semi-Centennial History of Colorado'', (Chicago: Lewis, 1913) 267-268.〕
However, by the summer of 1860, newly built roads from Denver to South Park and the Blue River had diverted most of the traffic to and from the mines, and Colorado City commerce instead shifted towards serving the agriculture of Colorado's eastern plains. (Eventually the Denver, South Park and Pacific Railroad would snake from Denver into the South Park.)
Colorado City was the county seat of El Paso County until 1873, when the courthouse moved to Colorado Springs.
By an act passed on November 5, 1861, the first Colorado territorial legislature, meeting in Denver, named Colorado City as the territorial capital. However, Colorado City effectively functioned as the capital for only five days. When the second territorial legislature met at Colorado City on July 7, 1862, in a log cabin that still stands on Colorado Avenue, they found the accommodations so inadequate that they voted to adjourn on July 11 and reconvene in Denver on July 16.〔Jerome C. Smiley, ''Semi-Centennial History of Colorado'', (Chicago: Lewis, 1913) 367-369.〕 Colorado City was never recognized by the Federal government as the territorial capital.
In 1891, major gold strikes were made in Cripple Creek and Victor, on the other side of Pikes Peak from Colorado City, and suddenly supplies were needed for this last major phase of the Colorado Gold Rush and the town's big boom was on. Eventually Colorado City was processing much of the gold ore at the Golden Cycle Mill using Palmer's railroads. Colorado City was the location of a 1903 strike that spread to Cripple Creek and eventually led to the Colorado Labor Wars.
Irving Howbert, one of the founders of Colorado Springs, lived briefly in Old Colorado City prior to 1864.
Colorado City was incorporated into Colorado Springs in 1917.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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