| ONE OF THE LONGEST
HIGHWAYS in the United States is Highway 50, which stretches from Ocean
City, Maryland, to Sacramento, California, and passes through Washington
D.C., Cincinnati, St. Louis, Kansas City, Carson City, Lake Tahoe, and
Central Colorado. A sign at Ocean City declares this coast-to-coast
highway is 3,073 miles long.
Before 1972 legislation shortened
Highway 50, the highway went from Sacramento to San Francisco by way of
Stockton and Oakland. Yet despite this act of belittlement in
California, Highway 50 is still regarded as one of the last
coast-to-coast highways that remains intact -- since the road to San
Francisco was merely replaced with Interstate names.
Time Magazine (July 7, 1997) called
Highway 50 "the backbone of America". But one could also call
it "the backbone of Colorado" since it has had a major
historic role in the development of our state.
The primitive beginnings of the
Highway 50 route through Colorado began in 1821 with Captain William
Becknell's Santa Fé Trail.
A debt-ridden Kentuckian -- no doubt
influenced by stories of Zebulon Pike and a host of courageous mountain
men -- Becknell left Missouri in '21 and headed west with a small pack
train, and three companions. As luck would have it, the party made it to
Santa Fé, where they garnered a generous profit on their trade goods.
Therefore, Becknell returned the next
year with a much larger company. But on his second trip, he avoided the
treacherous crossing of Raton pass he had endured on his first journey
by swinging south out of Kansas and heading across the arid countryside
toward the Cimarron River.
The Cimarron route proved so dry,
however, that the men had to kill their dogs and drink water from the
stomach of a buffalo and blood from the ears of their mules, just to
survive. But once again, they made it.
And thus, two routes of the Santa Fé
trail were founded. The mountain route went past Bent's fort and over
Raton Pass, and the Cimarron Route cut through northern New Mexico.
Before road improvements, however, the steep, narrow, brush-clogged
paths up Raton could be negotiated only if wagons were disassembled,
carried over, and reassembled on the other side. So in spite of its
treacherous nature, the Cimarron Cutoff was often favored over the
Mountain Branch during the early days of the Santa Fé trade.
Today, Highway 50 basically follows
Becknell's mountain route from Independence, Missouri, to present-day La
Junta.
In the 1830s and '40s, thousands of
traders ferried millions of dollars worth of goods over the Santa Fé
Trail. Then in 1846 and '47 the Mexican War brought not only an increase
in usage, but a new government interest in the trail. By 1852, the Santa
Fé Trail had a branch that run up the Arkansas River toward the future
townsite of Cañon City.
Originally created for the purpose of
reaching the trapping stations along the Arkansas River, that branch
acquired an outpost in 1859, when Cañon City was established as a
supply town for those heading into the mountains seeking gold.
In 1860, the future route of Highway
50 was once again extended (but not yet followed), when entrepreneur
Joseph Lamb started a pack train of ten burros to carry goods from Cañon
City to the placer mines of the Upper Arkansas Valley. Since no roads
existed, Lamb had to follow old Indian trails up Copper Gulch and down
Texas Creek and then up the Arkansas River. In some places along this
route, he had to fight his way through heavy brush.
Finally, in 1874, a wagon road was
officially built on Lamb's Copper Gulch route, and that same year
stagecoaches began running between Cañon City and the agricultural
community called Centerville (in the present-day Mesa Antero area).
Stagecoaches did not run past Granite,
however, until the silver rush to Leadville in 1877. Like a virus,
though, the Leadville rush led prospectors to search for silver
elsewhere. On what was then known as Limestone Mountain (renamed Monarch
Hill), Nicholas C. Creede (for whom Creede, Colorado, is named)
discovered silver in what he called the Monarch and Little Charm claims.
Creede welcomed the Boone brothers
(Hugh and Sam) as partners in his mining venture. The Boone brothers are
said to have later constructed the Monarch Pass Toll Road in 1880. By
May 1881, a stagecoach could also cross the pass to the Tomichi and
White Pine mining camps in the Gunnison Country.
THE COMING OF THE RAILROAD to the
Upper Arkansas Valley in 1880, however, would eventually spell the end
to the stagecoach era. But by 1900 the automobile era had begun in
Colorado, and automobiles brought a renewed interest in road
construction.
In 1905, Col. W.H. Moore of the
National Good Roads Association offered to come to Colorado to assist in
holding a good roads convention if the sum of $750 was sent to him in
St. Louis. Money for Moore was raised through the Denver Chamber of
Commerce, and Governor Jesse F. McDonald issued the call for a state
convention to be held in Denver in July of 1905.
Each city and county was asked to send
accredited delegates, and sixty-five delegates attended this inception
of an organized lobbying effort for "highways" in Colorado.
Although people with wagons would have
benefited from better roads, there was a widely held belief that the
good roads movement would benefit only people who could afford
automobiles. Therefore, the good roads movement did not secure a bill
for the creation of a state highway commission until 1909.
At a meeting in February 1911 at the
Elks' Hall in Salida, all the prominent men in road building, including
the well-known Otto Mears, were reported to have been present to examine
plans for a proposed "Rainbow Route" highway between Pueblo
and Montrose that was to be a continuation of the old Santa Fé Trail.
In 1883, Otto Mears had constructed a
road in the San Juans called the "Rainbow Route" between Ouray
and Silverton, but in 1926 this Red Mountain Pass road had become the
first section of the Million Dollar Highway to Durango. Although the
newspaper never said it, the Montrose to Pueblo road might have been
named in honor of Otto Mears's famous San Juan road. The Salida Record,
however, reported that the visitors were treated at the Monte Cristo
Hotel to "delicious rainbow trout for which the highway has been
named."
All present at that 1911 meeting
promised their support of a bill that would ask for the appropriation of
$50,000 to assist in building this new Rainbow Highway. And in April of
1913, the county commissioners of Montrose, Hinsdale, Chaffee, Gunnison,
and Frémont counties received $88,000 in state funds to build "the
Rainbow Route."
But the task of finishing the road in
the canyon between Salida and Cañon City and extending it on over
Monarch Pass presented some big and expensive problems.
On Monarch Pass the existing wagon
road had to be straightened and widened to help eliminate dangerous
curves, especially between Garfield and Monarch. Though the 1880 Monarch
Pass went through the area now occupied by Monarch Ski & Snowboard
Resort, it was decided that a new, shorter route to Gunnison should be
located.
Likewise, the existing wagon road
between Salida and Cañon City still went up Copper Gulch to Road Gulch
and on to Cotopaxi. Thus, a shorter route was sought through what the
Denver & Rio Grande Railroad called "the Grand Cañon of the
Arkansas" (officially renamed Bighorn Sheep Canyon in May 1990).
Naturally the creation of shorter
routes ended up costing much more than the appropriated $88,000 in state
funds.
The work on the Salida-Cañon City
cutoff started in July 1913 and was completed in September 1915 with a
celebration and dedication at the convict construction camp at Echo (18
miles west of Cañon City). The canyon highway ended up costing Frémont
County about $50,000 and the state $100,000. The cut-off was 21 miles
long, which was 11 miles shorter than the Copper Gulch road. Ten miles
of the road was built with free labor, and the rest was built with
convict labor.
Work for a new route over Monarch Pass
did not begin until July 1919. During this highway work, a campground
complete with ovens and shelter houses was built at Monarch Park in
1920, and the new Monarch Pass was opened for auto travel in September
1921 with a celebration and dedication at Monarch Park. This 22-mile
road was reported to cost about $10,000 per mile. The 1919 pathway taken
over the Divide is today known as Old Monarch Pass, a pleasant gravel
road in the summer and a favorite cross-country ski route in the winter.
The 1880 route is called Old Old Monarch Pass.
ON THE WESTERN SLOPE, Gunnison and
Montrose counties imposed a tax costing four dollars per person to help
pay for their part of the "Rainbow Route." The people of
Montrose and Gunnison counties even built a rest stop, west of Blue
Mesa, known as the Halfway House. This large 22'x66' log house had three
large rooms on the main floor and was said to have had several bedrooms
above. The one and a half story house was dedicated on October 19, 1915,
with several people from both counties present as well as several
photographers from the press. People came to the celebration on horse
back, buggies, wagons, and in autos. The dedication included food,
games, and several speakers just as did the celebrations at Monarch Park
and Echo.
Besides cooperation between counties
in building highways, cooperation between states was also needed in
building highways. On July 11, 1916 the Congress of the United States
passed the Federal-Aid Road Act, which served to promote the improvement
of an interstate system of through roads so that a traveler's progress
would not be impeded by a state's reluctance to improve its roads.
But it soon became necessary for the
United States Congress to get further involved in highway building.
Thus, in 1925, Congress passed a bill calling for the creation of
uniform danger and informational signs to help speed the interstate
tourist on his way.
This also meant that interstate
connecting highways had to have the same number. Therefore, a committee
of federal and state officials signed an agreement at Pinehurst, North
Carolina, on November 11, 1926 that designated names for all federal
highways in all 48 states. Highways going east to west were given even
numbers and highways going north and south were given odd numbers. Major
coast-to-coast highways were assigned numbers ending with zero.
IN MARCH 1931, the state highway
commissioners of Kansas announced their plan to inaugurate a
hard-surfaced Highway 50 through their state to connect the Santa Fé
Trail at the Colorado-Kansas state line. They called on Colorado to
likewise establish Highway 50 in their state. And in June the Highway 50
Association was organized in Salida.
Composed of representatives of civic
organizations in Montrose, Gunnison, Delta, Saguache, and Chaffee
counties, and their respective county commissioners, the association's
principal purpose was to see to it that Highway 50 received a standard
hard-oiled surface. It was decided that two obstacles to a good highway
lay in their way -- the lack of a good route through the Royal Gorge
area and the lack of a non-torturous route across the Continental
Divide.
A minor rerouting of Highway 50 took
place in December 1934 when the city council of Salida succeeded in
getting Highway 50 routed through downtown Salida, which already had
been paved in June 1930. At this time, the old Rainbow Route followed
the river through the old townsite of Cleora before connecting to the
road to Poncha Springs. That route did not veer off from following the
river through Cleora to cut across pasture land as it does now to
connect to the Poncha bound road. Highway crews made changes in the
signs to direct traffic along East First to F Street. Highway 50 traffic
then went up F Street to the Poncha-bound road. This route was used for
about 20 years.
The erection of a four-way stop sign
at the corner of First and F streets eventually became the site of many
accidents and traffic snarls. So a traffic light was placed at this
intersection in June of 1949. Despite the traffic light, though, the
present Highway 50 route that bypasses downtown took shape with some
protest by downtown merchants.
Highway 50's reconstruction and oiling
for a hard smooth surface began in 1935. The highway through Pleasant
Valley had paralleled the railroad through the towns of Cotopaxi and
Howard on the north side of the river. The new highway route was
constructed south of the river (possibly during the summer of 1935).
Eventually businesses for these towns made a move across the river.
THE ROAD BETWEEN Parkdale and Texas
Creek was closed the entire winter of 1936-37 by construction work. Many
of the curves were removed and many of the highway grades were reduced
to help make the highway more pleasant to travel. Some oiling and
re-oiling was done during the summer of 1937. During the winter of
1937-38 a $300,000 overpass was constructed at Parkdale so that the
highway would no longer cross railroad tracks there at grade. The
construction of the Salida-Cañon City road was completed by the end of
March 1938.
As for the rerouting of Monarch Pass,
three plans were being examined in the 1930s. The plan that the city
council of Salida and the Highway 50 Association supported was for
Highway 50 to go over Marshall Pass (elevation 10,846 feet and then also
the route of the narrow-gauge rail line). The argument was that it was
lower in elevation than Monarch (11,375), and thus received less snow.
Monarch Pass was closed for most of the winter, and it was thought
Marshall Pass could stay open all winter. A highway, it was argued,
built on Marshall would have the added advantage of not having to cross
the railroad switchbacks that were on the eastern slope of Monarch Pass,
part of the spur line that served the limestone quarry.
THE PLAN THAT SALIDA'S city council
was most opposed to was for Highway 50 to take off at Coaldale and go
over Hayden (10,780) and Cochetopa (10,067) passes, thus bypassing
Salida. Truckers seemed to be the only ones in favor of the Hayden-Cochetopa
Pass plan. Both Hayden and Cochetopa passes were lower than Marshall and
an improved Hayden Pass would be shorter than the truckers usual
Poncha-Cochetopa route.
The plan that was chosen by State
Engineer Charles D. Vail in September 1938 was to have the highway take
a somewhat detoured Monarch Pass route over what was being called
Monarch-Agate Pass (11,312). The plan was to build this new highway with
no grades in excess of six percent and to have no curves more than 16
degrees. Much of the new pass would be located high up on the sunny
slopes of the mountains to aid in keeping the pass open year round.
Surveys showed this route would be 1.8 miles shorter than Marshall Pass.
The Monarch-Agate Pass road was built
with some protest from citizens on the eastern slope of the pass. The
highway engineers had decided that the highway had to be built above the
towns of Arbourville and Garfield to catch more of the sun's rays. This
meant the highway had to be built over and through their cemeteries.
Frank Gimlett, a former proprietor of
the Salida Opera House and writer of a series of paperback books called
Over The Trails Of Yesterday, was greatly disturbed about the highway
department's decision. He claimed in one of his books (Book Six) that
the highway department with "fiendish glee" dug up and crushed
the bones of departed pioneers in the middle of the night. The highway
department, Gimlett claimed, did not want to bother with careful removal
and relocation of the cemeteries. Gimlett proclaimed the Monarch-Agate
Pass highway to be "The Ghost Highway Of The Rockies."
Except for the paving, the
Monarch-Agate Pass road was completed in November 1939. Just before the
pass was completed, there was talk about renaming the pass after highway
engineer Vail. Area residents protested renaming the pass "Vail
Pass," and some Vail Pass signs erected by the highway department
were either torn down or painted over. Governor Ralph Carr in early
December 1939 officially designated the new Highway 50 pass
"Monarch Pass." About a day or two after Carr's proclamation,
Eagle County demanded that a pass there be named "Vail Pass."
IN CONJUNCTION WITH the building of
the new Monarch Pass, a ski area was created at the Continental Divide
crossing of the original Monarch Pass. The ski area was constructed by
the city of Salida under the Works Project Administration (WPA), a
President Franklin Roosevelt unemployment program. The construction of
the ski course was completed in December 1939, and the Monarch Winter
Sports Area was dedicated in February 1940. The new Monarch Pass was
oiled in the summer of 1940, and it was decided in April 1941 that Old
Monarch Pass would be kept open in the summer for tourists.
In January 1948, two Colorado
organizations that were promoting Highway 50 merged into one group
called the Colorado Highway 50 Association with Pueblo being the central
point. The organization was divided into two sections, one east of
Pueblo and one west. The group proposed to publicize the highway with
the theme "On the romance trail through the treasure chest of the
west."
Parts of the highway continued to be
rerouted and reconstructed to try and make Highway 50 the main road
through Colorado and not just a side road. A new route was constructed
east of Cañon City to shorten the distance between Cañon City and
Pueblo by nearly seven miles. The new route was also made to feed into
the Colorado Springs highway and lessen that route by two miles.
Hazardous and time-consuming curves were eliminated and the new highway
bypassed both Florence and Portland. The new highway involved the
construction of three new bridges: Four Mile Creek, Six Mile Creek, and
Beaver Creek.
CAÑON CITY'S SECTION of Highway 50
ran along Main Street until the 1950s, when the highway department
decided to move traffic to a parallel street one block south -- River
Street, which is now a four-lane thoroughfare called Royal Gorge
Boulevard. Gradually many of the houses along Royal Gorge Boulevard were
torn down for the erection of businesses along the new highway route.
Salida's Highway 50 downtown route was
also bypassed. But in May 1955, the downtown merchants succeeded in
getting Highway 50 divided with signs giving travelers a choice of
taking the Poncha route or the inter-city business route. Seven parking
meters were removed to aid visibility at the F and First Street
intersection. It is unknown when or why signs for a choice of Highway 50
routes were removed, and replaced with just a downtown area direction
sign.
In June 1957 Mark U. Waltrous, chief
engineer of the Colorado State Highway Department, told 34 members of
the Colorado Highway 50 Association that Highway 50 "is the best
route over the Continental Divide." He talked at the annual meeting
in Salida telling the Association's members of plans for future
improvements that included three-laning the highway at the Parkdale
Hill, west of Cañon City, and three-laning sections of Monarch Pass.
In July 1968, a "safety"
$250,000 project took place on top of Monarch Pass that involved the
creation of five lanes of traffic as well as parking lanes on both sides
of the highway for trucks. Fill created by the cutting away of the
embankment for the .4 mile highway expansion was used to double the size
of the Monarch Crest parking lot. Although the turn and entry lanes made
turning into the Monarch Crest parking lot safer for tourists, the
numerous lanes caused some confusion as to which lane was a parking
lane, turn lane, or traffic lane. Large billboard-size signs were then
erected explaining which lane was for what.
Another highway five-lane widening
project occurred on Salida's Rainbow Boulevard during the summer of 1973
to aid travelers and shoppers in going on and off the highway. During
the summer of 1974, the five-lane widening project extended between
Salida and Poncha Springs.
FUTURE PLANS for Highway 50 include
four-laning the highway from Pueblo to the Kansas state line. This
long-term construction plan will take several years in designing and in
right-of-way acquisitions. The reason given for the widening project is
to make it safer for travelers to pass slow-moving farm equipment.
The Colorado Highway 50 Association
basically disbanded in the 1970s, because they saw that tourists
preferred to travel the "safer" divided four-lane Interstates
that by-pass small towns. The national U.S. 50 Federation is said to
still exist in the Federation's president, Doyle Davidson of La Junta.
Another Highway 50 promoter is Wulf Berg who maintains a website at
http://www.route50.com. His book is available at the Salida Regional
Library. One can also find references on the web to Highway 50 as
"the backbone of America."
Alvin Edlund, Jr., grew up in Salida,
went off to Alamosa for a degree in journalism, and now works at the
Salida Regional Library.
Colorado Central Magazine's email
address: cozine@chaffee.net
Subscriptions are $20 per year (12 issues) from Colorado Central, P.O.
Box 946, Salida CO 81201
The two photos of open old cars are
from the Josephine Sankup collection in the Salida Regional Library; the
first was taken in the canyon east of Salida; the second past the
Hutchinson Ranch between Salida and Poncha Springs. All other photos and
graphics are from the Donna Nevens Collection.
Hardship and Survival
Sixty miles southwest of Gunnison CO
is the town of Lake City. One of the early explorers was a man
named Alferd Packer. He lead a group of five would be miners to
the Lake City area. Winter snow trapped them. Packer
survived by eating his companions. Later the University of
Colorado named their Student Union Cafeteria after Alferd Packer.
Elwood J Ensor <EJENSOR@prodigy.net>
Old Timers Remember
Route 50
I was born in D.C. in
1930, and moved to Arlington County, Va. in 1931. This was before
Route 50, as we know it now, existed.
We lived until '36 in Arlington, on Barton Street, just a block from the
current path of Route 50. One of my early memories of the new road
was when my father took my sister and I out on the new Route 50 to teach
her to drive, in a Model A Ford. This was in about '34 or '35.
I can still picture the road... an unpaved dirt road, under
construction.
Until that time, to get to Washington from Arlington, you had to go
through Fort Myer, using Pershing Drive. I don't imagine there are
many people left who remember that. For you youngsters, you must
remember that the automobile was still fairly NEW at the time, and major
roads were few in number.
I have fond memories of the Cavalry from Fort Myer going out in the
early AM on the new road, practicing their formations, exercising the
horses, and enjoying the scenery.
I'll buy a coffee for anybody who can tell me the name of the watering
hole at the intersection of Pershing Drive and Route 50. It was a joint
for the soldiers, just after prohibition.
Good Luck to all,
William B. Eddy
eddy_b1@ix.netcom.com
I have read story upon story of the
loneliest highway and they all seem to follow the adage of Horace
Greeley whose advice "Go West, Young Man" seems to predominate
the thinking of America. I propose to drive Highway 50 from West to
East, starting in or near San Francisco and proceeding easterly to
Washington, D.C. It is my plan to drive my Messerschmitte KR200 over
this route and to prove to myself that the trip can be made for under a
hundred dollars on fuel. No other car can equal that today.
In 1940 my father left Tulsa, Oklahoma
with twenty dollars and sixty-five cents and a full tank of gas in a
1936 Chevrolet and arrived in McGill Nevada with thirty cents! Along the
way, in a place called "Joe City", Arizona the timing chain on
the engine broke and repair and replacement took all day for a 'shade
tree mechanic' with a heart as big as the Grand Canyon to do the job and
get us on our way. By the way, we had but to drive the car out of the
front yard of that man and turn right on Highway 40 and proceed on our
way to Nevada. The memory of that man and his wonderful family has stuck
with me for more than sixty years and not a day has passed that I
haven't paused to wish that I could return the favor and consideration
in grand fashion to that wonderful family.
It seems that our Highway 40 has now
become Highway 50, but I will never think of the road as inhospitable.
When our timing chain broke about twenty miles before reaching Joe City,
traffic as not what one would call 'heavy' and as I recall it we waited
for two or three hours for another car to come by heading West. The car,
upon approaching us speeded up as did many others in the next twelve
hours. A freight train passed going East about a half mile across the
way and it may have been the Southern Pacific. We spent the night
"camped out" in the car on the side of the road. The next day
a westbound freight train came chugging along and stopped. One of the
train crew walked the half mile up to where we were stranded,
ascertained our predicament and promised to send help. That very
afternoon a Spanish-looking man came driving up in an old pick-up truck
and towed us to his home in Joe City. From his home he called Winslow,
Arizona and ordered the new timing chain and then called a friend to
pick it up and bring it to Joe City. The telephone cost no doubt
exceeded the price of the belt. I can honestly say that the road through
Joe City Arizona may be the 'loneliest' road but I found it to be
friendly.
by Alvin Edlund, Jr.
from the January,
1999, edition of Colorado Central Magazine, Page 16
Copyright ©1999 by
Alvin Edlund, Jr., and Central Colorado Publishing Co., Inc. All rights
reserved.
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