Laserfiche WebLink
TchilL Al <br />• 1986 Gtrtrral Retuarcu Rtport. Jrmao.Haun:an rrml Conur~caan. in-heuu rpor.pr;a:ed for Eureau a['und Sfarugemeno-tifor._~,e <br />District. <br />HISTORIC BACI:GROC1-D <br />Since the only cultural resource site encountered during the Class II inventory was historc in <br />nature i[ is Eating to provide a more detailed background context for the history and land <br />ownership of the area. <br />The plateau lands of Delta and Gunnison Counties developed into stock raising a_*eas dune; he <br />1880s and 1390s. Even berore the cattlemen occupied these lands the azea's potential for <br />grazing was known. However, this meant little until the early 1880s when significant obstacles, <br />especially the Ute Reservation, were removed. Af[er the ;Vfeeker Massacre and removal of the <br />Ute from most of the Western Slope, the lands around Delta, Paonia and other locales opened <br />for settlement. The agricultural settlement pattern developed into a dichotomy with farmers and <br />orchardists occupying the river valleys and other lower elevation areas where water was <br />available while ranchers utilized higher elevation areas that were more difficult to irrigate <br />(O'Rourke 1980: 79, 86-8, 121-3). <br />Water, or lack thereof, controlled cattle raising, as well as other activities in the Delta-Gunnison <br />Counties region. Cattle, crops and orchazds all needed water to survive and prosper. As more <br />and more settlers arrived the pressures on the available water supply grew, leading to the <br />appropriation and development of many springs. <br />The presence of high country springs further defined the seasonal rotations of herds of livestock. <br />~ By the 1890s the habit of range rotation from summer to winter ranges constituted a well <br />developed cycle for all of Colorado's Western Slope and appropriation of the flow of springs <br />continued into the twentieth century (Husband 1984: 10-20, and see Table 3 below specific to <br />~ the study area). <br />The native grasses of the area, and much of Colorado, provided high nutritional levels for cattle <br />and other livestock. At first Anglo-americans, prejudiced by their heritage of'.ush green grasses <br />of the Fast and iVfidwest, felt that the brawn dry appearance of the western grasses, including <br />blue gramma, meant that the grass would not be adequate for forage. Quite by accident settlers, <br />some on their way to Oregon and others on Colorado's eastern plains, discovered that cattle <br />could not only survive, but could gain weight and thrive, on a diet of the native forage (Steinel <br />1926: 109-110). From those pre-Civil War discoveries into the late 1860s and eazly 1870s both <br />private and Federal explorers examined the Western Slope looking for travel routes and <br />economic uses for the region. <br />One of the most derailed inventories of west-central Colorado came after the Civil War as <br />Americans re-focussed their attentions on the West. During the 1870s Ferdinand V. Hayden <br />conducted a series of explorations of Colorado for the Federal government. Hayden's 1876 <br />8 <br />