Wednesday, June 22, 2011

The Earliest Burials in Fairview Cemetery, with a little genealogy thrown in

This article identifies some of the earliest burials at Fairview Cemetery, but it also shows how the census and other records can help you track families, one piece of evidence at a time.

Florence Faith was the daughter of Samuel John Liston and Hulda Mable Imes.  She was born in Colorado and died there are at the age of 9 months in 1875.  Her father Samuel appears on the 1870 census in Fountain as a farmer, with $2000 in land and $750 in personal property.  He was single and seems to be living south of the Lock family along Fountain Creek.  Samuel was born in Ohio in about 1833.  By 1880, he had married and then moved his family back onto the plains of Sedgwick County, Kansas.  

From the Mormon website, http://www.familysearch.org/ we learn that Samuel and Hulda married in Fountain in September 1871.  Hulda was the daughter of Moses Imes and Mary Davis, and was born in Iowa in 1852. Hulda's son Willie was born in Colorado in July 1872, and Pearl was born there in 1876.  Between these two children, they lost Florence. 

Friday, June 17, 2011

Fountain - Main Street

 

The Sears House: 11190 Old Pueblo Road

As you drive south on Old Pueblo Road, the newish Ventana subdivision is on the east side of the road, and a very unique "kit house" is on the west side. Built by Joe Wilson in about 1919, he ordered the "Westly" model for about $1000, and the pieces and parts were delivered in a railroad car (s). Joe was in the concrete business, so he is probably responsible for the sturdy foundation. The Wilsons only lived here for about 2 years. His father, SA Wilson, was a early resident of Security/ Widefield.

The Fountain Valley Preservation Association, defunct circa 2020, did background research on the home and presented documentation to the state to have it placed on the State Register of Historic Places in 2010.

When a terrible hail storm hit Fountain in the summer of 2018, the owners used some of the insurance damage settlement to restore the house closer to its original form. The vinyl siding was removed, and a greenish paint scheme adopted, based on old photos.

 https://p.rdcpix.com/v01/l7e14e344-m1xd-w1020_h770_q80.jpg
 

The home was owned by Toby Wells in 2010. He passed along information that the Wilson family lived in the tiny single room "bunkhouse" behind the main house while it was being built. The Wells family had owned the Sears house wince 1958. 

Juan Flores told the Fountain Valley News that this was the first house in the Fountain Valley to have modern indoor plumbing. There is a bathroom upstairs, and since this was built before the area was electrified, the water would have been transported to the house, and upstairs, by gravity.  A windmill once stood across Old Pueblo Road from the house.

 1916 Sears Modern Home 264B206 - Swiss Chalet - Craftsman-style Bungalow - Westly1916
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Of the many older houses along Main Street, a number were built by LA Toothman.  The county assessor [ land.elpasoco.com ] dates these between about 1910 and the mid-1920s.  The owners of each house over time are not known.  Other houses in town attributed to him, based on interviews, include 214 S Fountain, 316 N Main and 316 W Illinois.












Nettie Toothman's Home Cafe, Fountain
ca. 1920-30s




Pioneer Essay July 1976, Security Advertiser & Fountain Valley News
by Clarissa W “Toots” Toothman Wilson

This essay is not, by any means, all in chronological order.  The events have come to my mind and, since I am not sure of all the dates, I have just written about them. 

My father, Louis A Toothman, came to Fountain from Mount Hope, Kansas, in 1895.  Since he was a carpenter, he built a few houses and then returned to get my mother, Nettie P (Haskins) Toothman, and my sister.  They came back to Fountain in the Spring of 1896.  My eldest sister, Mrs. Coral Miller of Colorado Springs, was six months old at the time.  In 1900, another sister, was born in Fountain, Mrs. Daisy Torbit.  My brother RB was born in 1902.  I was born August 3, 1910 at 310 W Illinois.  The cottonwood tree at the east corner of the yard was planted by the parents the day before I was born.
           

RB and Toots Toothman, 1914

Friday, June 3, 2011

The County Poor Farm

The El Paso County Poor Farm was built in 1900.  It was located where Bear Creek Park is today, north of the community garden.  I found additional information on this early social service on..
http://www.poorhousestory.com/poorhouses_in_colorado.htm


LG Niles served as the Poor Farm Superintendent for a time, and his wife Catherine was the matron.  She died at the county farm while they were working there, and her daughter completed the remainer of the term as the matron.  LG's granddaughter Donna Koop furnished these photographs of the county farm.  The family believes that he served two terms at the farm, during the 1930s and 1940s.

Grandma Niles

Thursday, June 2, 2011

Churches of Fountain, Colorado







The 1871 plat of the town of Fountain shows two churches, or at least the lots reserved for them.  One may have been a Society of Friends or Quaker meeting house.  More detail and the interesting 1871 diagram can be found on the About Town page.

These Daily Rocky Mountain News articles, found in an online historic newspaper index (ask your librarian how), show that a Friends meeting house had been built in Fountain by 1875.

Dec 5 1875

Jun 1 1875

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

The Last Run of the D&RG 638

Coal powered steam engines were phased out in the early 1960s.  This photo was taken in Fountain in December, 1962 and shows the last run of the D&RG 638, as it passed through town.  The engine was donated to the town of Trinidad.  Read more about this in the Dec 17, 1962 article in the Gazette, found on the Pikes Peak Newsfinder index at PPLD.org.

Friday, May 20, 2011

Why do so many people think Fountain is haunted?

The blogger service allows me to see what you are searching for when you query google or another site for information, and are directed to this website.  A number of searches each week are related to ghosts and murders.  Now historically there were not many murders here, but there were a number of tragic deaths.  These deaths can likely be attributed to the times and not the place, and with changes in modern medicine and safety, such events are less likely to occur.

In modern times, the number of murders in El Paso County is at an all time high, even when adjusting for the population growth.  

Regarding ghosts, its not something that you learn about from newspaper articles.  But when talking to people who live or used to live in Fountain, there is no lack of stories. I'll try to add some here...

Weekly Gazette Sep 26, 1901

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

What is a chivarii? and other fun photographs

"Back in the old days"... when a couple was married, their friends would host activities to celebrate the wedding.  True, these events were often planned to keep the new couple apart for the day, and the evening, but it was all meant in fun.  I've heard of grooms being kidnapped.  What other stories have you heard?

Here Tobie Wells pushes his new wife Jill down Main Street in a wheelbarrow.  With any luck, and a beautiful smile, well wishers gave her nicer gifts than the customary toilet paper!
[Fountain Valley News Aug 15, 1973]


Tuesday, May 17, 2011

The cause of all her troubles…

Anna K. Pettingill is buried in Fountain’s Fairview Cemetery.  A tall monument marks the family plot and bears the names of Anna, James Arthur Pettengill and Gertrude Lawrence.  Who was Anna?  The monument notes that she was born in 1859 and died in 1896.  James died in 1902 and Gertrude in 1950.

Anna Pettengill was not found on the federal census, though this is not surprising as she died before the 1900 census and may not have been married at the time of the 1880 census.  A review of historic newspaper indexes provides the details.  Anna had been married to AM Pettingill, and after several unhappy years, secured a divorce in early 1896.  She committed suicide, leaving four children. 


Denver Evening Post, (Denver, CO) Monday, March 23, 1896

An article published the same day in the Post’s rival, the Rocky Mountain News, relates that:

…since her divorce was finalized in January, Anna had plotted to take her life, but had been stopped by her friends.  Mrs. Steen, a boarder, had grown accustomed to these suicide threats.



The inquest into Pettingill’s death, reported in the Rocky Mountain News on March 27, 1896, reveals a more suspicious circumstance.

Friday, May 6, 2011

Fearful Wreck Narrowly Averted and other train deaths


Rocky Mountain News Dec 10, 1897

Weekly Rocky Mountain News
Sept 15, 1898

The Fountain Herald - 1888 and 1903


Rocky Mountain News 6-7-1888
 Soon after the great explosion of 1888 and the destruction of the AT&SF depot, the D&RG was petitioned to build a depot in Fountain. 

Note that person requesting this was Mr. Reed, secretery of the Fountain Town and Improvement Company.  If he could secure a depot northeast of town, he would be better about to sell his new town lots there.  








The Fountain Herald 1888

Although the source of these news items is not known, it is likely that an issue from 1888 was reprinted in a later newspaper (after 1936) and comments added.

Advertisements

Residential lots and garden tracts in Warren and Hop- a Fountain addition, were being sold for $100-200 each by FJ Warren in the Ames Bldg.

The Fountain City Investment Company has 400 lots, which sell for $50-75, and several 2-5 acre tracts.  Business lots are $100-250.  Offered by JC Denny.

Curtis and Patton of Colorado Springs were advertising lots in the Hutchins Addition.  Joseph Patton is the agent, with an office in Fountain just west of the Santa Fe tracks on Missouri.

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Pikes Peak News Finder

Did you know that the Pikes Peak Library has indexes of local newspapers, dating back to 1872, online?  The Security Advertiser and Fountain Valley News index currently includes 1958 to 1972.

Monday, April 18, 2011

Marguerite Spicer Bulkley

Marquerite's papers, which contain stories about Fountain and sketch maps of early residences, are housed in the Carnegie Library/ Special Collections Department at Penrose Library, Pikes Peak Library District.  These are being transcribed by a guest editor, who will also contribute stories here from time to time.  These will be posted on the Bulkley research page file.  For more information see:
http://sites.google.com/site/lifeandlegendofthelocks/

Thursday, April 14, 2011

Fountain vies for the honor of State Capital


1881 Denver newspaper article
 Since the 1970s, local newspaper articles have mentioned that Fountain was at one time in the running for state capital of Colorado.  It is said that in 1859, a meeting was held in Fountain to organize a state government in the Pikes Peak region, and that in 1888, Fountain vied for political prestige as capital city.  The explosion destroyed Fountain's chances of becoming a new state capital.

I have been unable to find any documents supporting this claim, but neither have I found any documents against it.  Since none of us were there, we may never know.  Here is what I learned in the process of researching this article.





Thursday, April 7, 2011

News from 1872

In the April 6, 1872 issue of Out West, appeared this article, meant to entice easterners to migrate to the Territory.  “Colorado: Pure air and healthful climate; no fevers, consumption, asthma, bronchitis, &c. yield to the influence of this climate, if not too deeply seated; Cattle may be fed and fattened exclusively on wild grass, but should have shelter and a month’s hay provided for each Winter; soil good, but requires irrigation; crops good where irrigated with a good home market at hand in the mines, which are steadily expanding; timber scarce; Coal abundant; probably the best location for Wool-growing on the Continent; daily communication by railroads with St. Louis on the one hand, Omaha and Chicago, Salt Lake and California on the other; settling rapidly.”

A week later, readers were met with this chilly description.  “One of the ‘worst storms ever known’ visited Colorado on Sunday last.  The amount of snow which fell was not very great, but it was so exceedingly fine and driven by such a resistless wind that it penetrated every crack and crevice which it could find, and was blown into huge drifts.  The storm gave nearly all the Railways much trouble.  It is hoped, however, that it was the closing storm of the Winter.”

It seems the Ute Indians had their own explanation for the heavy snows of that spring.  On April 20th it was reported in the same newspaper “The Ute Indians are strangely a superstitious people.  A few days ago a party of chiefs and sub-chiefs, headed by one called by the whites “Dutchman,” called at the house of Mr. Curtice, the Ute interpreter, and laid a case before him as follows:  The late snows of the spring have killed off a number of their ponies and caused them a great deal of inconvenience in various ways.  With their customary superstition they attribute it to the white man’s innovations, and beg the Indian Agent in Denver, Major Thompson, to have the whites stop sending up ‘their water-spouts and little red balls.’  This interpreted means a cessation of water-throwing by means of the Holly Water Works and the sailing of red rubber-balloons by the boys.  They have observed these things during visits to Denver, and are firm in their belief that they are storm-breeders, and thus responsible for the recent snow-storms.”

The next week, the paper published a warning regarding the effects of heavy snows in the mountains.  “Persons who have but lately returned from the mountains say that the snow fall there has been very heavy during the past winter, and the indications are that we shall have some heavy floods this spring.  The St. Charles is now on a ‘big bender;’ the Fontaine is making a move in the same direction, and pretty soon the old Arkansas will get too important for its banks, and swell out on a grand scale.  People residing on the banks of those streams should take time by the forelock, and prepare for flood.”

Thursday, March 31, 2011

Lincoln Trading Post, Barlow and Sanderson and ranches of the lower Fountain Valley

In the 1860s, there was a general store known as the Lincoln Trading Post on the stage coach road south of Fountain.  This stood near Little Buttes, where Old Pueblo Road forks either across Fountain Creek or east to Hanover.   

Andrew Lincoln and his business partner James C. Woodbury purchased land together near the Buttes, and in fact the Buttes railroad station on the Denver & Rio Grande line was on Lincoln's land in section 33 of T16SR65W, on the east bank of Fountain Creek.   [Today only the station foundation remains along the tracks.]  A Feb 2, 1878 Gazette article lists the transfer of their land in sections 32 and 33, and adjacent land to the south, from AG Lincoln to Alice Royce for $2500.  However in May 1881 this same land was sold back, from Phineas Royce to Sophie Lincoln, for $3000.  

This copy of the 1864 survey map from www.glorecords.blm.gov/ shows the trails in use, with the D&RG railroad line put in in 1872 (the straight line in sections 28 and 33), and land that was claimed prior to the survey by Owns (sic), Geiser and an unnamed party in section 33.  There also appears to be  a ditch in section 29 across Owns' land.