Denver, CO


Denver, city and county, capital of Colorado, U.S., at the western edge of the Great Plains, just east of the Front Range of the Rocky Mountains. The city and county were consolidated as a single administrative unit in 1902. Denver lies at the junction of Cherry Creek and the South Platte River; its elevation (5,280 feet [1,609 meters] above sea level at the State Capitol), which gives it the nickname “Mile High City,” and a mild, sunny, dry climate are distinctive characteristics. Metropolitan growth after World War II created a ring of suburban communities, including Arvada, Aurora, Brighton, Broomfield, Cherry Hills Village, Englewood, Lakewood, Littleton, Northglenn, Thornton, Westminster, and Wheat Ridge; Golden, about 12 miles (19 km) west of Denver, and Boulder, about 25 miles (40 km) northwest, are also part of the metropolitan region. Greater Denver is at the centre of a string of urban areas that stretches along the Front Range from Fort Collins in the north to Pueblo in the south. Inc. 1885. Area city, 155 square miles (401 square km). Pop. (2000) 554,636; Denver-Aurora-Broomfield Metro Area, 2,179,240; (2010) 600,158; Denver-Aurora-Broomfield Metro Area, 2,543,482.

 

History

The site served as an early stopping place for Arapaho Indians, fur trappers, and traders. With the discovery of gold in June 1858, the rival towns of Auraria and St. Charles were founded on opposite sides of Cherry Creek. The claim of St. Charles was soon jumped by William Larimer, Jr., who in November 1858 renamed it Denver City for James W. Denver, governor of the Kansas Territory, of which the city was then a part. The site grew during the 1859 “Pikes Peak or bust” gold rush. Denver City and Auraria consolidated in 1860; the following year Colorado Territory was established and Denver City became Denver.


The city was devastated by fire in 1863, and a year later a flash flood swept away many buildings, including the city hall. Uprisings by Cheyenne and Arapaho Indians on the plains in the 1860s resulted in their forced removal from Colorado. Denver became the territorial capital in 1867. When the transcontinental railway was built through Wyoming, Denver’s citizens organized their own railway, completed in 1870, to connect with the Union Pacific at Cheyenne; the Kansas Pacific Railroad reached Denver shortly thereafter. The resulting economic boom increased the population from 4,759 in 1870 to 106,713 in 1890.


During the 1870s and ’80s, silver became more important economically than gold. Mining fortunes were created almost overnight, and an opera house was built. This period of opulence ended in 1893 with the crash of the silver markets. Banks failed, smelters shut down, and silver kings became paupers. New gold discoveries helped prevent a major decline, and farming, cattle and sheep ranching, and tourism began to provide a more stable economy. Railroads brought in sugar beets, wheat, cattle, and hogs, and Denver became a food processing centre. This industry was supported by waves of immigrants, including German brewers.


Military activities—defense contractors and other facilities related to the Cold War—contributed to an economic boom after World War II, but most of these activities ended in the 1990s. Another boost came with soaring oil production in the 1970s, and high-rise office buildings were constructed throughout the city. However, Denver’s population began declining after reaching a peak in about 1970, and a crash in oil prices in the mid-1980s led to economic bust. Increasing population and the growth of tourism brought back prosperity in the 1990s, the city’s population surpassing its 1970 level by 2000.



Source:

https://www.britannica.com/place/Denver

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