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Dear Dynasty fans, look at the snowy tops of the Rocky Mountains, look
at this city of skyscrapers that brought us closer. Do the memories of our
favorite, show, characters and events, come back to you?
All roads lead to Denver, to the
Carringtons!
Denver:
The Rocky Mountain Metropolis History
Denver, the capital
of Colorado, was established by a party of prospectors on November
22, 1858, after a gold discovery at the confluence of Cherry Creek
and the South Platte River. Town founders named the dusty crossroads
for James W. Denver, Governor of Kansas Territory, of which eastern
Colorado was then a part. Other gold discoveries sparked a mass
migration of some 100,000 in 1859-60, leading the federal government
to establish Colorado Territory in 1861.
Before the great
Colorado gold rush, the Rocky Mountains offered little to attract
settlers, except "hairy bank notes," the beaver pelts
prized by fur trappers, traders and fashionably hatted gentlemen in
Eastern America and Europe. The gold rush changed that, as the
rudely dispossessed Cheyenne and Arapaho soon discovered.
The Mile High
City’s aggressive leadership, spearheaded by William N. Byers,
founding editor of the Rocky Mountain News, and Territorial Governor
John Evans, insisted that the Indians must go. After dispossessing
the natives, Denverites built a network of railroads that made their
town the banking, minting, supply and processing center not only for
Colorado, but for neighboring states. Between 1870 when the first
railroads arrived and 1890, Denver grew from 4,759 to 106,713. In a
single generation, it became the second most populous city in the
West, second only to San Francisco.
Although founded as
the main supply town for Rocky Mountain mining camps, Denver also
emerged as a hub for high plains agriculture. Denver’s breweries,
bakeries, meat packing and other food-processing plants made it the
regional agricultural center, as well as a manufacturing hub for
farm and ranch equipment, barbed wire, windmills, seed, feed and
harnesses.
The depression of
1893 and repeal of the Sherman Silver Purchase Act abruptly ended
Denver’s first boom. Civic leaders began promoting economic
diversity—growing wheat and sugar beets, manufacturing, tourism
and service industries. The Denver Livestock Exchange and National
Western Stock Show confirmed the city’s role as the "cow
town" of the Rockies. Denver began growing again after 1900,
but at a slower rate. Stockyards, brickyards, canneries, flour
mills, leather and rubber goods nourished the city. Of many
Denver-area breweries, only Coors has survived, becoming the
nation’s third largest sudsmaker.
Regional or national
headquarters of many oil and gas firms in the Mile High City fueled
much of Denver’s post-World War II growth and an eruption of 40-
and 50-story high-rise buildings downtown, during the 1970s.
Denver’s economic base has come to include skiing and tourism,
electronics, computers, aviation and the nation’s largest
telecommunications center. As the regional center of a vast mountain
and plain hinterland, Denver boasts more federal employees than any
city besides Washington, D. C. Since the 1940s, the large federal
center, augmented by state and local government jobs, has somewhat
stabilized the city’s boom-and-bust cycle.
Sited on high plains
at the eastern base of the Rocky Mountains, Denver has a sunny,
cool, dry climate, averaging 13 inches of precipitation a year. The
sun shines 300 days a year, and the usually benign climate and
nearby Rocky Mountain playground have made tourism one of the Mile
High City’s economic mainstays. Warm chinook winds warm the
winters between snowstorms.
Visually, Denver is
notable for it predominance of single-family housing and its brick
buildings. Good brick clay underlies much of the area, while local
lumber is soft, scarce and inferior. Even in the poorest residential
neighborhoods, single-family, detached housing prevails, reflecting
the Western interest in "elbow room" and a spacious,
relatively flat, high plains site, where sprawling growth is
unimpeded by any large body of water or geographic obstacle.
Denver’s 1970s
energy boom spurred a proliferation of suburban subdivisions,
shopping malls and a second office core in the suburban Denver Tech
Center. Denver’s traditional dependence on non-renewable natural
resources returned to haunt the city during the 1980s oil bust. When
the price of crude oil dropped from $39 to $9 a barrel, Denver sank
into a depression, losing population and experiencing the highest
office vacancy rate in the nation.
Notable institutions
include the Denver Museum of Natural History, the Denver Public
Library, the Colorado History Museum, the Denver Art Museum and the
Denver Center for the Performing Arts, as well as the U. S. Mint and
major league baseball, basketball, football, hockey and soccer
teams. Gun violence and crime, as well as smog, and traffic
congestion are among the principal problems.
As one of the most
isolated major cities in the United States, Denver always has been
obsessed with transportation systems. Fear of being bypassed began
early when railroads and later, airlines, originally avoided Denver
because of the 14,000-foot-high Rocky Mountain barrier just west of
town. To secure Denver’s place on national transportation maps,
the city opened a new $5 billion airport in 1995. The 55-square-mile
Denver International Airport is the nation’s largest in terms of
area and capacity for growth, prompting boosters to call it the
world’s largest.
Denver is a
sprawling city in a state of long distances and mountainous
obstacles. To tackle long distances and tough terrain, Coloradans
have become auto-dependent. Denver has one of the highest per-capita
motor vehicle ownership rates in the country—with an average of
one licensed vehicle for every man, woman and child. In the 1990s,
Denver built an outer ring of freeways that immediately became
over-congested. Even after the Regional Transportation District
began building a light-rail system, highway congestion remained the
number-one complaint of many Denverites.
In 2000, the metro
area reached a population of 2.1 million, three-fourths of whom live
in the suburban counties—Adams, Arapahoe, Boulder, Denver, Douglas
and Jefferson. Roughly 20 percent of the core city population is
Spanish-surnamed, 13 percent African-American, two percent Asian and
one percent Native American. Denver has elected Hispanic (Federico
Peña, 1983-91) and African-American (Wellington Webb, 1991-2001)
mayors in recent years and has enjoyed relatively smooth race
relations.
The Rocky Mountain
metropolis boomed during the 1990s, as the eastern suburb of Aurora
became Colorado’s third-largest city and the western suburb of
Lakewood became the fourth-largest. Even the core City and County of
Denver gained population in the 1990s for the first time since the
1970s, climbing once again beyond the 500,000 mark. Thanks to
landmark districts preserving venerable business and residential
areas, as well as the 1990s opening in the core South Platte River
Valley of Coors Baseball Field, Elitch Gardens Amusement Park, Ocean
Journey Aquarium, Pepsi Athletic Center and many new housing
projects, downtown Denver is booming as well as its suburban fringe,
at the dawn of the 21st century.
The
Denver Facts Guide
| Date
Founded |
November
17, 1858 |
| Date
Incorporated |
November
7, 1861 |
| Population |
554,636 |
| Land Area |
154.63
square miles |
| Elevation |
5,280
feet |
| Average
Annual Rainfall |
15.4
inches |
| Average
Annual Snowfall |
55.4
inches |
| Average
February Temperature |
33
degrees F |
| Average
August Temperature |
72
degrees F |
| Average
Sunshine Days |
300+ |
| Major
Industries |
Communications,
Utilities, Transportation |
Facts &
Figures
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Denver nicknames:
The Mile High City; Queen City of the Plains.
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Denver is
the largest metro city in a 600 mile radius -- an area almost
the size of Europe.
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Denver has the
nation's largest city park system, with more than 200 parks
within city limits and 20,000 acres of parks in the nearby
mountains -- an area larger than all of Manhattan Island.
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Denver has 300
days of bright sunshine a year -- more annual hours of sun than
San Diego or Miami Beach.
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Denver
International Airport is the nation's largest -- 53 square
miles, an area so large it could hold the Dallas-Fort Worth
Airport and Chicago O'Hare Airport combined.
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Denver is a
"sports capital," with all four Major League sports
(NHL Colorado Avalanche, NBA Denver Nuggets, NFL Denver Broncos,
Major League Baseball's Colorado Rockies), as well as two
professional soccer teams. |
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