|
In the late 1870's,
before there was a Durango, heavily traversed trails connected
the boom towns of Parrott City, Rico, Ouray, Silverton and Lake
City. Freighters, stage coach drivers and miners, with horses,
mules and oxen used these dangerously narrow trails and precipitous
one lane roads - all involved in the wild excitement to extract
the riches of silver from the San Juans.
In 1877, 113 pounds of ore from the Osceola Mine in Ophir was
brought to the George Greene Smelter in Silverton and sold for
$500. Finds like this fueled the frenzy. Boom towns had blacksmith
shops, stables, bakeries, barber shops, boot and shoe stores,
breweries, cigar factories, clothing houses, drug stores, furniture
stores, general merchandise and hardware stores, hotels, jewelry
stores, Chinese laundries, meat markets, restaurants, saloons,
sawmills and banks. These businesses clamored for an endless steady
stream of supplies and their transport required tens of thousands
of oxen, mules and horses. Great quantities of large equipment
for sawmills and mining was shipped using heavy wagons of all
kinds.
Here, within the heaviest precipitation district of the U.S.,
over countless river crossings, up and down the roughest, snakelike
trails of the highest mountains in Colorado this zealous transport
took place. On a single day, a local freight company would handle
500,000 pounds. When a trail was wide enough, freighters drove
mules five abreast, twenty mules to the team. An average day's
travel was 10 to fifteen miles a day. When crossing rivers, a
wagon was often pulled by two sets of oxen or horses. The first
set of animals - called a strong team would be hitched to the
front of the wagon. A long log chain would be fastened to the
front of the wagon and at the end of the long chain, in front
of the first set of animals, there would be another set of horses
or oxen which would cross the river to the other bank in time
to pull the strong team and the wagon across the turbulent stream.
In this manner, the equipment for the first sawmill in Silverton
made its way from Colorado Springs in 1872. The machinery weighed
6,000 pounds and took 7 yoke of oxen crossing the Rio Grande 53
times. Likewise, the boiler for the sawmill in Parrott City crossed
the Animas weighing 7,000 pounds in 1875; ten yoke of oxen were
used. Rico was serviced as well by these "bull trains;" heavy
wagons drawn by several yoke of oxen until 1892. The machinery
for the Grand View Smelter arrived this way into Rico in July,
1880 from Alamosa. The trip took 60 days. Once the railroad came,
high sided ore wagons were loaded 4 - 5 tons and hauled to the
railroad cars. Six to eight Belgium horses pulled these wagons.
From the Camp Bird Mine to Ouray for instance, 30 six horse teams
worked 7 days a week. Men were hired to keep water in the muddy
ruts of the road which was the only thing keeping the wheels and
the wagons from sliding down the mountain. Only Belgium horses
(which are larger than Clydesdales) were capable of the required
strength.
On holidays, livery stables would supply hundreds of horses to
fetch the miners into town and to return them thereafter. Towns
like Ouray, with 33 saloons, were known for providing a good time.
Strings of horses could be seen going in all directions, either
returning from having taken men to the mines or going after men
to bring them to town. Most of the horses would return themselves
to the livery stables but the wiley ones "had to be gone after."
On steep hills and gulches three or four logs would be tied to
the rear of the wagons serving as brakes on the uphill, giving
the animals a break when they stopped. "Rough locking" was placing
blocks or beams in front of the wheels so that the wagons would
stop before rolling into the teams. The earliest pioneers traversing
the mountain passes would let their wagons down the cliffs with
ropes tied to trees, called snubbing. When rounding a curve on
a narrow shaley mountain trail, all available men would ride or
hang off the high mountain side of the wagon to keep the wagon
from turning over and pitching down the cliff. More often than
not, in a split second the entire stage or wagon could be turned
upside down in a cacophonous turmoil; all passengers and freight
uprooted, wheels spinning in the air, horses kicking and tangled
up in the harnesses.
Along these narrow trails, when two teams came upon one another,
the men would unhook the horses and take two wheels off the smaller
wagon and set the bed partly on the hillside until the other wagon
passed. In the winter a sled would be tipped on its side to let
a loaded sled pass. In July, 1875, when the earliest homesteaders
in the Animas Valley numbered 15, the road to Silverton was but
a deer trail. Travel was tediously slow; the trip over the 40
mile trail took 2 days. As mail could only be brought in by snowshoes
in the winter (via Del Norte then Silverton), it was delivered
only twice to these early pioneers during the winter of 1875-76.
In the winters when the snow was deep, flour sold for as much
as $125 for a 100 pounds, hay could go for $120 a ton, eggs were
a dollar apiece and butter $1.25 a pound - but usually there was
no butter or eggs to be had. These extreme
prices were often determined by the winning bid at an auction
at the railroad terminus.
Within a short time, a regular stage line connected Silverton
and Animas City over which there were three stage stops each keeping
up to 20 horses in the stables. Horses were changed at each stop:
ten miles south of Silverton where the first toll gate was located
was the first stop, the second change was made at Cascade Hill
and the third at Rockwood. After crossing the toll gate at Baker's
Bridge, the stage made its way into Animas City. The passenger
fare including baggage one way was $6. Twenty to thirty horses
might be used to make this trip according to size of load and
road conditions. In the winter, this route was reduced to dog
sleds pulled by four big Newfoundland dogs. The costliest toll
charged was at Bear Creek Falls on the way from Silverton to Ouray,
a distance of 24 miles, $5 for a single span team and a charge
of $1 extra for each additional head of stock. This toll gate
operated until 1900 and originally consisted of only two large
beams, traversing the cavernous crevice over mid air consisting
merely of two large beams, over which the wagons wheel would go
over.
In 1881 the Pagosa to Durango Stage line took 2 days. In 1902
it took two days to haul a load of lumber from the Bartholomew
Sawmill on the upper Pine from the Frank Wommer Ranch to Ignacio
with two four horse teams. From Ignacio, the lumber was shipped
by rail. Before the railroad, transferring money between banks
was a hazardous matter. On one occasion, when a $5,000 transfer
was needed from Alamosa to Animas City, greenbacks were stitched
into a traveler's clothing. Sometimes this wasn't always successful
especially when traversing alone. Sometimes, when travelers came
around a bend in the trail there would be a man hung from a tree,
a note pinned on his coat which might say: "hung for killin' a
man." More likely he had some money on him and he was strung up
for that. Just another reason why the arrival of the train represented
such a magnificent new mode of transport to any town in the San
Juans in the 1880's - and why its arrival was so zealously celebrated.
|