Garfield County Colorado Real Estate

Garfield County is located in the scenic plateau and canyon country of western Colorado.
Covering 3000 square miles, it is 110 miles long and extends to the Utah border.
It was carved out of Summit County on February 10, 1883.
In historical times, the earliest inhabitants were the Ute Indians, and the land was theirs by treaty until
April 12, 1880, when they were removed to reservations after the "Meeker Massacre" of 1879.
Although explorers, missionaries, miners, and a few settlers had already visited the area of Garfield County,
the main influx of settlers began to arrive and towns were founded beginning in 1880.
The towns in Garfield County are located along the Colorado and Roaring Fork rivers in the eastern end of the
county, while much of the western portion has only a few roads and fewer inhabitants.
Carbonate, a town founded high on the Flattops, was the first county seat. It is now a ghost
town.
The town of Defiance was founded in 1831 by Isaac Cooper who hoped to develop the natural hot springs
into a resort.
Unfortunately he died before his dream could be realized.
It became the county seat in 1883 and was incorporated and renamed in 1885 as Glenwood Springs, which remains
the county seat and largest city today.
In 1887 a coal tycoon, Walter Devereaux purchased the hot springs and vapor caves for $125,000 and began to
build the famous pool and spa resort.
This was the same year that the Denver and Rio Grande Railroad extended it's tracks through the difficult
Glenwood Canyon and into Glenwood Springs, Aspen and beyond.
1887 was also the year that the notorious gambler, gunslinger and dentist, Doc Holliday, died of tuberculosis
in Glenwood Springs.
He died in bed and is buried in Linwood Cemetery although the exact burial location in the cemetery is
unknown.
Carbondale was incorporated in 1888, and has been both an agricultural center and a transportation
center for the marble mined at Marble and the coal mined at Redstone.
Carbondale's October festival is "Potato Days" which celebrates the agricultural heritage of the
area.
The Colorado Fuel and Iron Company built a series of coke ovens at Cardiff, a town formerly located near
Glenwood Springs, to produce coke from coal for smelters.
A few of these coke ovens survive.
New Castle, incorporated in 1888, was originally a coal mining town.
In the 1890s a series of methane gas explosions over several years killed dozens of
miners.
The part of the Grand Hogback where the explosions took place is still burning today, and we call it Burning
Mountain.
Silt, 7 miles west of New Castle, was historically a farming/ranching community.
It is named after a major byproduct of the Colorado River, a river which flows from the county line east
of Glenwood Springs along the interstate into Mesa County (and into Utah and Arizona).
Silt was first settled in 1885 and was incorporated in 1915.
Rifle, 7 miles west of Silt, is another community that was historically a farming/ranching
community.
It was founded in 1882 and incorporated in 1905.
Rifle lies in a valley surrounded by mesas and mountains.
Teddy Roosevelt came hunting here in 1901 for bears.
The bears are gone, but wildlife, especially mule deer and elk, abounds.
Rifle Falls State Park
is located 14 miles north of Rifle.
The falls spill over a limestone cliff.
In 1910 the town of Rifle built the Rifle Hydroelectric Plant at the falls (the first one in Colorado) which
changed the creek's natural flow from one wide waterfall into the three falls seen today.
There are 3 theories on the town's unique name.
One story relates that it was named so when an early explorer left his rifle leaning against a tree and later
returned for it.
The second story claims that it was named for the custom of firing one's rifle to signal others.
The third story states that an 1880 group of soldiers were working on the road between Rifle and
Meeker.
One man left his rifle at camp along a stream bank.
In returning for it he named the creek Rifle Creek and the town took it's name from the creek.
Parachute, was named for the parachute-like appearance of the feeder canyons that flowed into the main
valley. It was settled in 1882 and renamed Grand Valley in 1904.
In 1980 the town reverted to the name Parachute after continuing confusion with the Grand River Valley and
Grand Junction.
On June 7, 1905 Kid Curry (of Hole-in-the-Wall Gang fame), also known as Harvey Logan, stopped and robbed the
westbound Denver & Rio Grande Railroad.
After boarding the train at Parachute, the train was stopped on Streit Flats, 3 miles west of town, where he
was joined by 2 accomplices.
They blew the safe open with dynamite and then escaped on horseback.
Historians differ on whether or not the safe contained money.
Battlement Mesa (which is unincorporated) lies west of Rifle.
Rifle and Parachute are nestled at the base of a vast mountain complex which we call the Bookcliffs, but which
are officially called the Roan Cliffs.
The Bookcliffs are composed of oil shale, which is a shale which actually burns because of the high oil
content.
Battlement Mesa was founded by Exxon during the 1980s during the most recent oil shale boom that went
bust.
The area between Rifle and Parachute is dotted with natural gas wells.
In the 1970s, the federal government set off two small underground nuclear explosions near the unincorporated
community of Rulison.
This was an experiment to see if the tight porespaces in the rock formations could be fractured so that oil and
gas could migrate further distances into existing wellbores.
This would reduce the necessity of drilling more wells and lessen the impact on the enviroment.
Although the experiment was a technical success, no further use of this technology has been utilized due to
public concern.
While the county retains part of its ranching and farming heritage, and tourism is important, every town from
Carbondale to Parachute has become a bedroom community to provide workers to the ever-booming and ever-expanding Aspen skiing
economy.
People commute to Aspen, 86 miles from Battlement Mesa, as well as to Grand Junction, 63 miles from
Rifle.
Hunting and fishing are big business in Colorado. Along the Roaring Fork and Colorado Rivers it's easy to spot
fishermen nearly year round.
And when the air cools and the leaves turn in the fall, hunters from far and wide converge on Garfield
County.
It's pretty obvious why hunters and fishermen are attracted to the area, said Colorado Division of Wildlife
spokesman Randy Hampton.
It's a beautiful area, rich with game and fishing opportunities.
Statewide, hunting and fishing combined bring in more than $1.5 billion each year; in comparison the ski
industry brings in approximately $1.7 billion annually.

Garfield County sees more than $30 million in direct expenditures, and close to $53 million through indirect expenditures, from
hunting and fishing each year, Hampton said.
"Statewide, hunting and fishing rivals the ski industry in terms of tourist dollars for the state," Hampton said.
"Sometimes we go back and forth."
Hampton said that the DOW issued around 300,000 hunting licenses this year statewide.
Of that number he estimated approximately 15,000 bull-elk over-the-counter licenses issued with another 24,320 cow tags and more
than 38,000 deer tags for three hunting areas that converge in Garfield County.
Those numbers may seem high, but Hampton remind us that the area covers part of the Grand Mesa units to the south of Rifle, the
Piceance units to the northwest and the White River units to the Northeast, which is home to the largest elk heard in North America,
Hampton said.
"People come here from all over the nation to hunt because of the resources and the abundant wildlife," Hampton said.
"There is a lot of land out there, and there are six hunting seasons, including four rifle seasons in the fall.
So, though a large number of licenses are issued, they are spread out over a large area."
A 2002 economic impact analysis of hunting in Colorado done by Denver based BBC Research and Consulting, the most recent study
completed, showed hunting alone contributed $340 million in direct revenues statewide.
Garfield County receives $7.2 million per year in direct expenditures from Colorado residents who participate in hunting and
fishing within the county.
Another $20.8 million in revenue comes from nonresident hunters and fishermen that venture to Garfield County to recreate, Hampton
said.
The report indicated that 20,200 jobs statewide were supported through the hunting and fishing industry.
About 690 of those jobs were in Garfield County, Hampton said.
Hunting and fishing numbers have decreased nationwide in the past couple of years, but that is not the case so much here in
western Colorado.
Statistics indicate that the number of Colorado residents who participate remains steady, though the state's population is
increasing.
That declining percentage gives the impression that hunting and fishing are not robust, but in terms of license sales, the DOW has
only seen an increase if anything at all.
"In Colorado the sales stay relatively level," Hampton said.
"We haven't seen a dramatic increase or decrease.
Any increase or decrease in licenses is more due to management of herds by us."
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