Pikeview, Colorado
Pikeview (Pike View, Pike's View) is a neighborhood of Colorado Springs, annexed to the city as the "Pike View Addition" on August 1, 1962.[1][2] In 1896 there was a Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad station in Pikeview, and miners had begun digging a shaft for the Pikeview Coal Mine. Pikeview also had a quarry beginning 1905 for the mining of limestone for concrete. Coal mining ended in 1957, but the Pikeview Quarry continues to operate. Quarry operations, though, have created a gash or scar in the landscape and efforts have been made since the late 1980s to reclaim the hillside landscape. The Greg Francis Bighorn Sheep Habitat in what had been Queens Canyon Quarry was founded in 2003 in recognition of the individuals and organizations that have worked to create a nature hillside habitat.
Railroad station
The town of Pikeview, which began as a Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad station[3][4] by 1896.[5]:16 It was named for the scenic view of Pikes Peak 10 miles (16 km) away.[6] The Denver and Rio Grande Railroad station was situated at a confluence on Monument Creek, north of the Roswell junction and south from the 1875 Husted station.
Colorado Springs water system
Two Pike View Reservoirs, which were part of the extension of Colorado Springs Irrigation System to Monument Creek, were constructed in 1894.[7]:105, 107, 240
Town
A school house was built in Pikeview 1 mi (1.6 km) north of the station by 1903. The Pikes View Coal Mine was the same distance from the station. The post office was 4 mi (6.4 km) south of the station.[8] By 1906, the station included a depot, a pond, and a road intersection of the north-south Monument Valley Highway (now Interstate 25) with a road west[9] to Rampart Range.
Pikeview Coal Mine
A shaft was sunk in late 1896 and the main coal was discovered at what would be the Pikeview Mine, also called the Carlton Mine, on January 1, 1897. The Pikeview Mine is a slope mine, which uses the room-and-pillar method to extract coal.[10][11][lower-alpha 1]
In the early 1900s, there was a mass exodus of people from Southern Europe. Many immigrants to the United States headed for the mining towns of Colorado—like Pikeview, Papeton, and Franceville—directly after having entered the country.[5]:7 Many of the mine workers were Greek, and when the men went on strike in 1913 a man named Louis Tikas who worked for the United Mine Workers went to the mine to work undercover and take affidavits of workers regarding working conditions. The workers may have been prompted to return to work and await a coordinated union walkout because most of the Pikeview miners returned to work after a few days at the same pay rate.[13]:70–72
In a letter dated August 28, 1913, Tikas summarized that there were 350 Greek men working in the Southern Fields, which included Pikeview, Las Animas County and Huerfano County mines. There had been 13 men killed on the job and many more that had been injured since January 1, 1913. Affidavits taken by a Greek-speaking individual was important, otherwise information about the immigrants was often overlooked by government and company reports. They also paid very high prices for goods from the company stores, had seen the scales that weighed coal significantly under-report the mined coal per coal car, did not receive good medical treatment, and were dissuaded from seeing attorneys while in the hospital.[13]:72–73
Tikas reported of the Greek mine workers of Southern Colorado,
They are ready at any time unless conditions improve to engage in an industrial war and to fight, just as their fathers and brothers in the fatherland had fought the Turks until their freedom had been obtained, so these men are ready even at the sacrifice of their lives to fight until their industrial freedom had been obtained.— Louis Tikas, United Mine Workers[13]:73
The Pikes Peak Consolidated Fuel Company, a subsidiary of Golden Cycle Mining and Reduction Company, was located in Pikeview in 1920. Harvey McGarry of Colorado Springs was the president and Robert O'Neil of Pikeview was the superintendent.[14] In 1922, Pikeview's economy was nearly entirely based upon mining.[6]
The mine was owned by Golden Cycle Mining when it closed operations July 1, 1957. At that time, there were 30 miners who lived in company housing on the site who were affected. Management personnel were transferred to other Golden Cycle operations.[12]
Pikeview Quarry
Quarry scar
Pikeview Quarry has operated since 1905 and Queens Canyon Quarry has been mined for limestone since 1958. The extraction of the stone by Castle Concrete created a noticeable gash or scar in the Queens Canyon Quarry, north of Garden of the Gods, which closed in 1990.[15]
Reclamation
There is some mining that occurs at Pikeview Quarry, but that effort is being moved to another side of the hill. As the shift occurs, the terrain will cut back the quarry into the mountain, a plan devised by Greg Francis who worked for Castle Concrete for 30 years and spent 15 of those years working on reclamation of the quarried landscape. He started with Pikeview Quarry, about one mile north of Queen's Quarry. After failed reclamation attempts, he devised the plan to cut back the hill so that it can be "resculpted" into a terrain that will better support planted trees and landscaping. "Time and moisture will blend the quarry into the surrounding hillsides," states Colorado Mountain Reclamation Foundation (formed 1992) project manager, Wanda Reaves. By fall of 2003, 2,000 trees had been planted. An additional 800 trees were to be planted on the Pikeview Quarry in 2004. Castle Concrete intended to mine Pikeview Quarry until 2013, so the reclamation efforts were intended to continue throughout that timeframe.[15]
Greg Francis Bighorn Sheep Habitat
On August 1, 2003, the hillside was renamed Greg Francis Bighorn Sheep Habitat in honor of Francis, who died October 2002. A statue of a bighorn sheep stands on Greg Francis Bighorn Sheep Habitat in recognition of the herd of 65 bighorns (in 2003) and Greg Francis, 100s of volunteers, and efforts by Castle Concrete to reintroduce Rocky Mountain juniper trees, native graces, and small pion to the hills.[15]
See also
- Burgess cabin, nearby on the United States Air Force Academy
- Cragmor Sanatorium, the 19th century tuberculosis sanatorium, was located within what is now the United States Geological Survey's "Pikeview" quadrangle.[16]
- Nichols Field was an air strip near Pikeview
Notes
References
- ↑ "Pikeview (193347)". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey. Retrieved 2013-10-27. "38.9152705 -104.8221988"
- ↑ annexdata.xls (spreadsheet), SpringsGov.com, retrieved 2013-10-27,
Pike View Addition 84.19 6319 19620801
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at position 19 (help) - ↑ "Denver to Southern California". Goodrich Route Book. B. F. Goodrich Company. 1915. p. 307. Retrieved January 26, 2015.
- ↑ Edmond C. (Cornelius) van Diest Papers, Ms0233 (abstracts), Colorado College Tutt Library, retrieved January 26, 2015 (lists numerous maps with Colorado Springs annexations/additions)
- 1 2 Angela Thaden Hahn (February 24, 2014). Security-Widefield. Images of America. Charleston, South Carolina: Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4671-3092-9.
- 1 2 Marius Robinson Campbell (1922). "The Denver & Rio Grande Western Route: Pikeview". Guidebook of the Western United States: Part E. The Denver & Rio Grande Western Route. U.S. Government Printing Office. pp. 33–34.
- ↑ Town incorporation, city organization and reorganization. City Council. 1902. Retrieved 2013-11-02.
- ↑ The Giles City Directory of Colorado Springs and Manitou (PDF) (almanac), The Giles Directory Company, May 1903, pp. 33, 353, retrieved January 26, 2015
- ↑ Tourists guide to Colorado Springs, Manitou, Colorado City and the Pike's Peak Region (Map). "Geo. S. Clason, Denver, Colo.". 1906. Retrieved 2013-11-01.
- ↑ Marius Robinson Campbell (1910). "Colorado Springs Coal Field, Colorado: Development and Markets". Contributions to Economic Geology, 1908: Mineral fuels. U.S. Government Printing Office. p. 340.
- ↑ "Analysis of Coal and Car Samples Collected in the Fiscal Years 1911 to 1913". Washington, D.C.: US Department of the Interior,printed by the Government Printing Office. 1914. p. 166. Retrieved January 13, 2015.
- 1 2 "Pikeview Coal Mine Will Cease Operations July 1" (PDF). The Gazette. June 4, 1957. p. 1:6. Retrieved January 25, 2015.
- 1 2 3 Zeese Papanikolas (1991). "Organizing the Southern Field". Buried Unsung: Louis Tikas and the Ludlow Massacre. U of Nebraska Press. ISBN 0-8032-8727-5.
- ↑ "Colorado". American Mining & Metallurgical Manual. Chicago: The Mining Manual Company. 1920. pp. 170–.
- 1 2 3 Bill McKeown (August 2, 2003). "Scar start to heal: Damaged mountainside is well on its way to recovery thanks to hard work of dedicated leader, volunteers". The Gazette. Colorado Springs, Colorado. Retrieved January 25, 2015 – via HighBeam Research. (subscription required (help)).
- ↑ "Cragmor Sanatorium (193349)". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey. Retrieved 2013-10-27.
Further reading
- R.A. Philips; D.V. Holmquist (1986), "Backfilling of the Pikeview Mine Manway", in J.L. Hynes, Proceedings of the 1985 Conference on Coal Mine Subsidence in the Rocky Mountain Region: Colorado Geological Survey Special Publication 31, pp. 39–80
- J.P. Thorson; C.J. Carroll & M.L. Morgan (2001), "Geologic map of the Pikeview quadrangle", Open-File Report 01-03, scale 1:24,000, El Paso County, Colorado: Colorado Geological Survey
External links
- Greg Francis Bighorn Sheep Habitat, Queens Canyon (aka the Scar), Colorado Springs Trails
Pikeview, including mine buildings, Pike's Peak in the background, 1938, Pikes Peak Library District | |
Pike View Coal Mine, 1934, Pikes Peak Library District | |
Pikeview Quarry scar |
Coordinates: 38°54′55″N 104°49′20″W / 38.91527°N 104.82220°W