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DENVER

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V08, Page 55 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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DENVER  , the

capital of
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Colorado, U.S.A., the county-seat of Denver county, and the largest city between Kansas City,
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Missouri, and the Pacific coast, sometimes called the " Queen City of the Plains." Pop . (1870) 4759; (188o) 35,629; (189o) 106,713; (1900), 133,859, of whom 25,301 were
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foreign-born and 3923 were negroes; (1910 census) 213,381 . Of the 25,301 foreign-born in 'goo, 5114 were Germans; 3485, Irish; 3376, Swedes; 3344,
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English; 2623, English-
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Canadian; 1338, Russians; and 1033, Scots . Denver is an important railway centre, being served by nine
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railways, of which the chief are the
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Atchison,
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Topeka &
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Santa Fe; ' the Chicago,
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Burlington & Quincy; the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific; the Denver & Rio Grande; the Union Pacific; and the Denver, North-Western & Pacific . Denver lies on the South Platte
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river, at an altitude exactly 1 m. above the sea, about 15 m. from the E.
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base of the Rocky mountains, which stretch along the W. horizon from N. to S. in an unbroken chain of some 175 M . Excursions may be made in all directions into the mountains, affording beautiful scenery and interesting views of the
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mining camps . Various peaks are readily accessible from Denver: Long's
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Peak (14,271 ft.), Gray's Peak (14,341 ft.),'Torrey Peak (14,336 ft.), Mt . Evans (14,330 ft.), Pike's Peak (14,108 ft.), and many others of only slightly less altitudes . The streets are excellent, broad and
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regular . The parks are a
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fine feature of the city; by its charter a fixed percentage of all expenditures for public improvements must be used to
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purchase park
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land . Architectural variety and solidity are favoured in the buildings of the city by a
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wealth of beautiful
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building stones of varied colours (limestones, sandstones, lavas, granites and
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marbles), in addition to which bricks and
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Roman tiles are employed . The State Capitol, built of native granite and marble (1887–1895, cost $2,500,000), is an imposing building .

Noteworthy also are the Denver county

court house; the hand-some East Denver high school; the Federal building, containing the
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United States custom house and
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post office; the United States mint; the large Auditorium, in which the Democratic
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National convention met in 1908; a Carnegie library (1908) and the Mining
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Exchange; and there are various excellent business blocks, theatres, clubs and churches . Denver has an
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art museum and a zoological museum . The
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libraries of the city contain an aggregate of some 300,000 volumes . Denver is the seat of the Jesuit college of the Sacred Heart (1888; in the suburbs) ; and the university of Denver (Methodist, 1889), a co-educational institution, succeeding the Colorado Seminary (founded in 1864 by John Evans), and consisting of a college of liberal arts, a graduate school, Chamberlin astronomical
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observatory and a preparatory school—these have buildings in University Park—and (near the centre of the city) the Denver and
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Gross College of
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Medicine, the Denver law school, a college of
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music in the building of the old Colorado Seminary, and a Saturday college (with classes specially for professional men) . DENVER The prosperity of the city depends on that of the rich mining country about it, on a very extensive wholesale trade, for which its situation and railway facilities admirably
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fit it, and on its large manufacturing and farming interests . The value of manufactures produced in 1900 was $41,368,698 (increase 1890-1900, 41.5 %) . The value of the factory product for 1905, however, was 3.3 % less than that for 1900, though it represented 36.6 % of the product of the state as a whole . The
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principal industry is the smelting and refining of lead, and the smelting
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works are among the most interesting
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sights of the city . The value of the ore reduced annually is about $1o,000,000 . Denver has also large foundries and machine shops,
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flour and grist mills, and slaughtering and
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meat-packing establishments . Denver is the central live-stock market of the Rocky Mountain states . The
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beet
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sugar, fruit and other agricultural products of the surrounding and tributary section were valued in 1906 at about $20,000,000 .

The assessed valuation of

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property in the city in 1905 was $115,338,920 (about the true value), and the bonded debt $1,079,595 . At Denver the South Platte is joined by
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Cherry Creek, and here in
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October 1858 were established on opposite sides of the creek two bitterly
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rival settlements, St Charles and Auraria; the former was renamed almost immediately Denver, after General J . W . Denver (1818-1892), ex-governor of Kansas (which then included Colorado), and Auraria was absorbed . Denver had already been incorporated by a provisional
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local (extra legal) " legislature," and the Kansas legislature gave a charter to a rival
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company which the Denver
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people bought out . A city government was organized in December 1859; and continued under a reincorporation effected by the first territorial legislature of 1861 . This
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body adjourned from Colorado City, nominally the capital, to Denver, and in 1862
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Golden was made the seat of government . In 1868 Denver became the capital, but feeling in the
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southern counties was then so strong against Denver that provision was made for a popular
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vote on the situation of the capital five years after Colorado should become a state . This popular vote confirmed Denver in 1881 . Until 187o, when it secured a branch railway from the Union Pacific
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line at Cheyenne (
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Wyoming), the city was on one side of the transcontinental travel-routes . The first road was quickly followed by the Kansas Pacific from Kansas City (187o, now also
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part of the Union Pacific), the Denver & Rio Grande (1871), the Burlington
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system (1882), the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe (1887), and other roads which have made Denver's fortune . In
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April 1859 appeared the first number of The Rocky Mountain
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News .

The same

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year a postal express to Leavenworth, Kansas (ro days, letters 25 cents an
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ounce) was established; and telegraph connexion with Boston and New York ($9 for Io words) in 1863 . A private mint was established in ,86o . In the 'seventies all the facilities of a
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modern city—gas, street-cars,
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water-works, telephones—were introduced . Much the same might be said of a score of cities in the new West, but none is a more striking example than Denver of marvellous growth . The city throve on the freighting trade of the mines . In 1864 a tremendous flood almost ruined it, and another flood in 1878, and a famous strike in Denver and
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Leadville in 1879–188o were further, but only momentary, checks to its prosperity . As in every western city, particularly those in mining regions whose sites attained speculative values, Denver had
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grave problems with " squatters " or " land-jumpers "in her early years; and there was the usual gambling and
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outlawry, sometimes extra-legally repressed by vigilantes . Settled social conditions, however, soon established themselves . In 188o there was a memorable election riot under the guise of an anti-Chinese demonstration . In the decade 1870—1880 the population increased 648-7% . The 'eighties were notable for
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great real estate activity, and the population of the city increased 199.5% from 188o to 189o . In 1882–1884 three successive
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annual exhibits of a National Mining and
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Industrial Exposition were held .

After 1890 growth was slower but continuous . In 1902 a city-and-county of Denver was created with extensive

powers of framing its own charter, and in 1904 a charter was adopted . The constitution of the state was framed by a convention that sat at Denver from December 1875 to March 1876; various territorial conventions met here; and here W . J . Bryan was nominated in 1908 for the
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presidency .

End of Article: DENVER
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