History of Creede, Colorado
Travelers to this area appeared
in the early 1800s. Tom Boggs, a brother-in-law of Kit Carson , farmed at Wagon Wheel
Gap in the summer of 1840. Ranchers and homesteaders moved in
when stagecoach stations (linking the mining operations over the
Divide with the east) were built in the 1870s, but the great Boom
Days started with the discovery of rich minerals in Willow Creek
Canyon in 1889.
Creede is located near the headwaters of the
Rio Grande River, which flows through
the San Juan Mountains and the San Luis Valley
on its way to New Mexico, Texas, and eventually
into the Gulf of Mexico. The river has played a critical role
in the development of farming and ranching in the
Valley.
Creede was the last silver boom town in Colorado in the
1800s. At its peak there were 10,000 people in the area.
Thats hard for us to imagine these days. The Creede mines
were in continuous operation from 1890 until 1985.
The
original townsite of Creede was located on East Willow Creek just
above its junction with West Willow Creek. Below Creede were
Stringtown, Jimtown, and Amethyst. The Willow Creek site was
soon renamed Creede after Nicholas C. Creede who discovered the Holy
Moses Mine. Soon the entire town area from East Willow to
Amethyst was called Creede.
As the people poured in, more new
towns sprang up in the area. Spar City, Bachelor, Stumptown,
and Weaver became thriving communities. Today Spar City is a
private resort. There are no buildings left in Stumptown or
Weaver and only ghostly remains of a few cabins may be seen in
Bachelor.
The town of Creede was incorporated on June 13,
1892. The incorporation brought an end to much of the
lawlessness which had existed prior to June of 1892. Camp
bosses, such as Jefferson R. (Soapy) Smith and Bob Ford, were no
longer in power.
Creedes boom lasted until 1893, when the
Silver Panic hit all of the silver mining towns in
Colorado. The price of silver plummeted and most of the silver
mines were closed. Creede was one of the few silver towns to
have enough other minerals to stay alive it never became a ghost
town, although the boom was over and its population
declined.
Mining remained the primary base of the local
economy until 1985, when the Homestake Mining Company closed down
their Bull Dog operation. There remains a plentiful supply of
silver waiting to be mined when the price gets high enough for it to
be profitable.
Today, Creede is an
old mining tourist town with many interesting sites to see,
including the town itself. The Creede Repertory Theater has
plays all summer long. The town boasts two museums, the Creede Historical
Museum, located in the old Denver and Rio Grande Railroad Depot
(which has historical designation) and the Underground Mining
Museum , located up Willow Creek Canyon. Visitors have a
choice of many restaurants, art galleries, gift shops and sundry
shops to visit. The Bachelor
Loop Tour
will take interested person
through Creedes mining past and by some breathtaking scenery.
|