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UCSM currently serves the communities in the San Miguel Watershed:

Telluride, Mountain Village, Ophir, Sawpit, Placerville, Norwood, Redvale, Naturita, Nucla and Paradox

Telluride from a ski run view

San Miguel County Official Website

Where is Telluride?
Telluride is located on the scenic San Juan Skyway in the heart of southwest Colorado’s San Juan Mountains. It is located at latitude 37.94N, longitude 107.9W. In town, the elevation reaches 8640 feet.

What is Mountain Village?
Mountain Village is a community that has grown up around the ski resort, above the town of Telluride. It has a separate town government and HOA that provides many services to residents, including cable/internet, trash collection and business licensing.

Who lives here?
- Resident population of Telluride: 2,200 Approx.
- Resident population of Mountain Village: 1234 Approx.
- San Miguel County population: 6,594


Demographic profile of the community
Facts and figures
General information and statistics

Schools:
Information on public schools
Telluride R-1 School District
Telluride Mountain School
Directory of Preschools/Childcare

Civic Clubs/Organizations

Non-Profit Organization Directory via the Telluride Foundation

Norwood Chamber of Commerce

Who are my elected officials?

History of Telluride
Town of Telluride Local History

The Ute Indians first inhabited San Miguel Park. For Centuries every summer and fall they would live by the San Miguel River and fish. They hunted for deer, elk and mountain sheep in the surrounding mountains. In the winter when the climate was harsh they would head for the safer desert canyons.

Spanish explorers named the San Juan's in the latter 1700's. It wasn't until gold was found in the San Juan's that the San Miguel Valley started to prosper. The mountains were rich in zinc, lead, copper, iron, silver and gold. This began the mining boom. Telluride was founded in 1880 and was originally named "Columbia". Conflict with an already existing Columbia, California and for the town to have a local post office branch they changed the name to Telluride. The name "Telluride" is derived from tellurium, which was never found in the San Juan's, but is a non-metallic mineral deposit associated with gold.

In 1877, with the railroad, advertisements, pictures of the mountain ranges and the "gold rush" proved to bring many walks of life to the valley in search of mining and the like. Telluride's main street, Colorado Avenue had many first businesses; grocery stores, a law office, hardware stores, a general store, meat market, lodging house, post office, bakery and the American House to name a few. Even before churches were built, Telluride had many saloons and the famous red-light district from which those houses are still standing today.

Butch Cassidy and his gang robbed their first bank - the San Miguel County Bank in 1889. The Owner of the bank and his posse went in pursuit of Cassidy's gang. The thieves escaped en route via Trout Lake with around $24,000 and none of the stolen money was ever retrieved.

After the beginning of World War I, Telluride's mining came to a halt with prices of precious metals declining. Not until the 1970's did a new era come upon Telluride - skiing. The community came together to sculpt a ski area, which helped to revitalize Telluride's economy. Founder Joe Zoline installed the first chairlift in 1974 and in 1978, Ron Allred and his partner, Jim Wells formed the Telluride Company and bought the ski area.

The Telluride ski season operates from mid-November through mid-April. Average annual snowfall for the region is 300 inches. In November 1996 the Gondola opened, which was the first of its kind in the United States, providing both ski access and public transportation, taking tourists, commuters, skiers and bikers from the Town of Telluride to San Sophia Station to the Mountain Village in just a 12-minute ride. Summer, spring and fall are wonderful seasons with a wide range of festivals and celebrations.

 

 

 

 

Lone Cone - south east of West End communities

Montrose County Official Site

Montrose County - West End Services

Montrose County Demographics

Nucla - Naturita Chamber of Commerce

West End Map

Naturita Community Information via Colorado Rural Health Center

Nucla Community Information via Colorado Rural Health Center

West End Schools

School District Statistics

 

Paradox History:

By Marilyn Cox
Montrose Daily Press
Published/Last Modified on Monday, May 19, 2008 4:13 AM MDT
Editor’s Note: This is the seventh installment in a 17-part series looking at 125 years of history in Montrose County.

Stories of the Wild West are plentiful in the history of the Paradox Valley, which is situated in the extreme west end of Montrose County.

The valley was named in the 1870s by A.C. Peale, who worked with the Hayden Survey. The Dolores River runs across the valley, rather than parallel like most rivers do, creating what Peale felt was a true paradox. Few settled in the eastern two-thirds of the valley because it is desert, but the western one-third is fed by numerous springs from Paradox Creek, which flows into the valley from Utah’s La Sal Mountains.

Although the valley was part of the Ute Indian Reservation, white squatters were there as early as the 1870s. Due to its rugged terrain, being so remote and close to the Utah border, it became a haven for outlaws in addition to ranchers who were struggling to make a living. The lack of plentiful water and good land prompted violence that continued for several decades, causing some to call it the “Slaughterhouse of the West.”

Thomas Goshorn and Riley Watson were the first known settlers to arrive in the valley in the fall of 1877, coming from the Blue Mountains of Utah. Goshorn left after two years, but Watson and his family remained. Watson’s wife was appointed the first postmistress of the little settlement of Paradox in 1879. Mail arrived by pack mules from Ouray until the settlement of Montrose in 1881.

Fred Mayall was said to have brought the first herd of cattle to the Paradox Valley in 1878, but because he was trespassing on Ute Indian land, he was convinced by them to head out of the country as fast as he could—which he did, abandoning his herd.

Frank Steele arrived with his herd of cattle in 1879, partnering with Prescott Stevens to form the Stevens and Steele Cattle Company.

James C. Huff brought his family to Paradox in 1880, acquiring land along La Sal Creek, where the Cashin Copper Mine was later discovered.

When the Indians were removed in 1881, more settlers started to trickle in, including Shadrick Talbert and his family, along with the Nyswongers, Richard Netherly and Tom Ray. Netherly, fondly known as “Uncle Dick,” was a great horse lover who owned a race horse named “Sagebrush Jack.” Horse racing originated by Netherly became a valley tradition, producing many colorful stories.

In 1883, state Senator James P. Galloway decided to pull up stakes from his place on the Rio Grande River. With backing from Pueblo businessmen, he organized the Galloway Land, Cattle and Investment Co. with the intention of locating and patenting all the water in the Paradox valley and stocking the surrounding country with his cattle. He enticed his young nephew, Alva Galloway, to help herd the stock and move his family to the new settlement of Bedrock. The senator eventually acquired a 1,600-acre spread and a large impressive home that became a stopping place for people passing through. Alva Galloway ventured to Montrose, where he served as the county treasurer for many years.

The area where the town of Bedrock was established was first inhabited in 1881 by W.D. Hamilton, John W. Prentiss and Mrs. Lucy Cooper. A year or so later, Hamilton was bought out by an Englishman, Thomas Swain, who years later in 1895, started the first store in Paradox. It was around that time that Swain, a dabbling mineralogist, discovered copper in the future Cashin Mine.

The town of Bedrock started in 1898 when Milton Fraides built the first store. Due to the booming copper mine, the town grew to 500 residents, two saloons and two hotels.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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