
Colorado Facts, State Trivia & Information
- "Beulah red" is the name of the red marble that gives the Colorado
State Capitol its distinctive splendor. Cutting, polishing, and
installing the marble in the Capitol took six years, from 1894 to 1900.
All of the "Beulah red" marble in the world went into the Capitol. It
cannot be replaced, at any price.
- Colorado is the only state in history, to turn down the Olympics. In
1976 the Winter Olympics were planned to be held in Denver. 62% of all
state Voters choose at almost the last minute not to host the Olympics,
because of the cost, pollution and population boom it would have on the
State Of Colorado, and the City of Denver.
- The United States Air Force Academy is located in Colorado Springs.
- The world's largest flat-top mountain is in Grand Mesa.
- In Fruita, the town folk celebrate 'Mike the Headless Chicken Day'.
Seems that a farmer named L.A. Olsen cut off Mike's head on September
10, 1945 in anticipation of a chicken dinner - and Mike lived for
another 4 years without a head.
- The LoDo region of Denver stands for Lower Downtown.
- Denver, lays claim to the invention of the cheeseburger. The
trademark for the name Cheeseburger was awarded in 1935 to Louis
Ballast.
- The highest paved road in North America is the Road to Mt. Evans off
of I-70 from Idaho Springs. The Road climbs up to 14,258 Ft. above sea
level.
- Colorado means “colored red” and is known as the “Centennial State.”
- The Durango & Silverton Narrow Gauge Railroad continues to
provide year round train service operating a historical train with
rolling stock indigenous to the line. The line was constructed primarily
to haul mine ores, both gold and silver, from the San Juan Mountains.
- The United States federal government owns more than 1/3 of the land
in Colorado.
- Colorado contains 75% of the land area of the U.S. with an altitude
over 10,000 feet.
- Colorado has 222 state wildlife areas.
- Colfax Avenue in Denver is the longest continuous street in America.
- The 13th step of the state capital building in Denver is exactly 1
mile high above sea level.
- The Dwight Eisenhower Memorial Tunnel between Clear Creek &
Summit counties is the highest auto tunnel in the world. Bored at an
elevation of 11,000 feet under the Continental Divide it is 8,960 feet
long and the average daily traffic exceeds 26,000 vehicles.
- Leadville is the highest incorporated city in the United States at
10,430 feet elevation. Because there was lots of "silver" named towns at
the time, the founding fathers suggested Leadville.
- Katherine Lee Bates wrote “America the Beautiful” after being
inspired by the view from Pikes Peak.
- Hundreds of thousands of valentines are re-mailed each year from
Loveland.
- Fountain, has the distinction of being the United States' millennium
city because it best symbolizes the overall composition of America.
Fountain is the most accurate representation of the American "melting
pot." Fountain was chosen after a Queens College sociologist crunched
Census Bureau statistics in an effort to find the one city in the
country that best represented the population make-up of the United
States.
- Pueblo is the only city in America with four living recipients of
the Medal of Honor.
- The tallest building in Colorado is the Republic Plaza at 57 stories
high, in Denver.
- Every year Denver host the worlds largest Rodeo, the Western Stock
show.
- Denver has the largest city park system in the nation with 205 parks
in City limits and 20,000 Acres of parks in the nearby mountains.
- Dove Creek is the "Pinto Bean" capital of the world.
- The tallest sand dune in America is in Great Sand Dunes National
Monument outside of Alamosa. This bizarre 46,000-acre landscape of
700-foot sand peaks was the creation of ocean waters and wind more than
one million years ago.
- The World's First Rodeo was held on July 4th, 1869 in Deer Trail.
- Lieutenant Zebulon Montgomery Pike explored the southwest portion of
the Louisiana Territory in 1806 and though he never climbed the peak
that bears his name, he did publish a report that attracted a lot of
interest to the area.
- The slogan of "Pikes Peak or Bust," painted across many of the
prairie schooners, was born at a time as fortune hunters headed west.
Although only a handful of those who flocked to the region ever found
gold.
- At 14,110 feet above sea level over 400,000 people ascend Pikes Peak
each year.
- The aptly named town of Twin Lakes lays adjacent two natural lakes
at the foot of Colorado's highest Fourteener, Mt. Elbert.
- The Colorado Rockies are part of the North American Cordillera,
which stretches 3,000 miles from Alaska, through western Canada and the
United States, into northern Mexico. The centerpieces of this dramatic
uplift are the peaks over 14,000 feet, or "Fourteeners", as they are
affectionately referred to by climbers. There are 52 Fourteeners in
Colorado.
- Rocky Ford has been dubbed the "melon capital of the world."
- The Yampa River below the northwest town of Craig holds northern
pike in the 20-pound range, while the Roaring Fork and Frying Pan rivers
are prime spots for trout fishing.
- Colorado has the highest mean altitude of all the states.
- Mesa Verde features an elaborate four-story city carved in the
cliffs by the Ancestral Pueblo people between 600 and 1300 A.D. The
mystery surrounding this ancient cultural landmark is the sudden
disappearance of the thousands of inhabitants who created the more than
4,000 identified structures.
- Colorado has more microbreweries per capita than any other state.
- The Kit Carson County Carousel in Burlington dates back to 1905,
making it the oldest wooden merry-go-round in the United States. It is
the only wooden carousel in America still with its original paint.
- The Durango and Silverton Narrow Gauge Railroad has been in
continuous operation since 1881 and has appeared in more than a dozen
movies including How the West Was Won (1963) and Butch Cassidy and the
Sundance Kid (1969).
- The highest suspension bridge in the world is over the Royal Gorge
near Canon City. The Royal Gorge Bridge spans the Arkansas River at a
height of 1,053 feet.
- The world's largest natural hot springs pool located in Glenwood
Springs. The two-block long pool is across the street from the historic
Hotel Colorado, a favorite stop of former president Teddy Roosevelt.
- Built in 1867 by Seth Lake, the Astor House in Golden was the first
stone hotel built west of the Mississippi River.
- Colorado's southwest corner borders Arizona, New Mexico and Utah the
only place in America where the corners of four states meet.
- There are nearly 20 rivers whose headwaters begin in Colorado, with
the Continental Divide directing each river's course.
- The Colorado Rockies play at the 50,000 seat Coors Field, located in
downtown Denver.
- In 1859, John Gregory discovered "The Gregory Lode" in a gulch near
Central City. Within two weeks, the gold rush was on and within two
months the population grew to 10,000 people in search of their fortune.
It came to be known as "The Richest Square Mile on Earth".
- Colorado's first and oldest military post, Fort Garland was
established in 1858 and commanded by the legendary frontiersman Kit
Carson.
- Abundant nesting and migrating birds and other native animals
provide a "world-class" watchable wildlife experience. Bald eagles and
other raptors, sandhill cranes, shore birds and water birds can be seen
seasonally at San Luis Lakes near Alamosa.
- Florissant Fossil Beds National Monument near Cripple Creek is a
lesson in history set in the one-time shadow of the Guffey Volcano. The
volcano erupted millions of years ago, creating fossils and leaving the
valley filled with petrified trees.
- John Henry "Doc" Holliday's brief and tumultuous existence led him
to Glenwood Springs where he succumbed to tuberculosis and died at the
Hotel Glenwood on November 8, 1887.
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