@_stephanie.castillo: 😍 we made it #fyp

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𝓈𝓉𝑒𝓅𝒽𝒶𝓃𝒾𝑒🇨🇺
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Friday 05 June 2026 11:49:08 GMT
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Only in Colorado can a city start with an illegal claim-jump on a crooked grid, elect a KKK leader to design its aviation hub, and aggressively annex a rival town for banning saloons. Hi, I'm Michael. I'm a Kentuckian learning a little bit more about the places I travel. And today, I'm learning about Denver, Colorado. As an aside, I consider this area of Colorado, the Front Range, to be my second home. Between friends, my old job, and just a general love for the area, I find myself coming back often. But until today, I haven't really bothered to learn much about the area's history. And if you’re new here, heads up: i regularly mispronounce names.   Long before the first white prospectors arrived on the High Plains, the confluence where the South Platte River meets Cherry Creek was a vital geographic anchor for nomadic Plains tribes, such as the Southern Arapaho and the Cheyenne. Under the terms of the 1851 Treaty of Fort Laramie, this region was recognized as native territory. The tribes moved across the grasslands seasonally to track bison migrations, but during the winter months, they established camps. The site provided protection from winter winds, a supply of cottonwood for fuel, and water, making it a regular location for indigenous trade and inter-tribal council. But in May 1858, a prospecting party led by Green Russell discovered flecks of placer gold in the creek beds near present-day 20th and Blake streets. The news spread rapidly across the United States, triggering the Pike's Peak Gold Rush and driving an immediate wave of thousands of fortune-seekers directly into tribal hunting grounds. The sudden loss of resources and rapid territorial encroachment caused regional conflicts, culminating in the historic Colorado War of 1864. This tension directly shaped Denver's early leadership, including Territorial Governor John Evans and Colonel John Chivington. In November 1864, Chivington led a regiment of Colorado volunteer cavalry, heavily recruited from the saloons and mining camps of Denver, 70 miles southeast of the city, to Sand Creek. They launched a dawn attack on a peaceful camp of Southern Cheyenne and Arapaho families who had been promised military protection, killing over 150 Native people. By 1867, subsequent federal treaties forced the surviving tribes entirely out of the territory onto distant reservations, clearing the region for permanent white development and leaving the indigenous footprint visible mainly in place names like Arapahoe County. The permanent city of Denver was born directly out of that initial 1858 gold rush chaos, starting as a collection of 3 separate, hostile frontier camps competing for survival across the water channels. On 22 November 1858, a land speculator from Pennsylvania named William Larimer Junior arrived at the confluence. Finding a townsite called St. Charles on the eastern bank of Cherry Creek, temporarily abandoned by its founders, Larimer illegally jumped the claim, laid down cottonwood logs to mark his territory, and formed the Denver City Town Company. Larimer chose the name to honor James W. Denver, who was then serving as the Governor of the Kansas Territory, which technically encompassed the region. This was a calculated political maneuver to secure federal favor; Larimer fully expected the governor to reward him by naming his camp the permanent county seat. He was completely unaware that Governor Denver, frustrated by frontier politics, had already resigned his office and left the territory by the time the town company was platted. #learningontiktok #TikTokLearningCampaign #LearnOnTikTok @Visit Denver @Visit Colorado
Only in Colorado can a city start with an illegal claim-jump on a crooked grid, elect a KKK leader to design its aviation hub, and aggressively annex a rival town for banning saloons. Hi, I'm Michael. I'm a Kentuckian learning a little bit more about the places I travel. And today, I'm learning about Denver, Colorado. As an aside, I consider this area of Colorado, the Front Range, to be my second home. Between friends, my old job, and just a general love for the area, I find myself coming back often. But until today, I haven't really bothered to learn much about the area's history. And if you’re new here, heads up: i regularly mispronounce names. Long before the first white prospectors arrived on the High Plains, the confluence where the South Platte River meets Cherry Creek was a vital geographic anchor for nomadic Plains tribes, such as the Southern Arapaho and the Cheyenne. Under the terms of the 1851 Treaty of Fort Laramie, this region was recognized as native territory. The tribes moved across the grasslands seasonally to track bison migrations, but during the winter months, they established camps. The site provided protection from winter winds, a supply of cottonwood for fuel, and water, making it a regular location for indigenous trade and inter-tribal council. But in May 1858, a prospecting party led by Green Russell discovered flecks of placer gold in the creek beds near present-day 20th and Blake streets. The news spread rapidly across the United States, triggering the Pike's Peak Gold Rush and driving an immediate wave of thousands of fortune-seekers directly into tribal hunting grounds. The sudden loss of resources and rapid territorial encroachment caused regional conflicts, culminating in the historic Colorado War of 1864. This tension directly shaped Denver's early leadership, including Territorial Governor John Evans and Colonel John Chivington. In November 1864, Chivington led a regiment of Colorado volunteer cavalry, heavily recruited from the saloons and mining camps of Denver, 70 miles southeast of the city, to Sand Creek. They launched a dawn attack on a peaceful camp of Southern Cheyenne and Arapaho families who had been promised military protection, killing over 150 Native people. By 1867, subsequent federal treaties forced the surviving tribes entirely out of the territory onto distant reservations, clearing the region for permanent white development and leaving the indigenous footprint visible mainly in place names like Arapahoe County. The permanent city of Denver was born directly out of that initial 1858 gold rush chaos, starting as a collection of 3 separate, hostile frontier camps competing for survival across the water channels. On 22 November 1858, a land speculator from Pennsylvania named William Larimer Junior arrived at the confluence. Finding a townsite called St. Charles on the eastern bank of Cherry Creek, temporarily abandoned by its founders, Larimer illegally jumped the claim, laid down cottonwood logs to mark his territory, and formed the Denver City Town Company. Larimer chose the name to honor James W. Denver, who was then serving as the Governor of the Kansas Territory, which technically encompassed the region. This was a calculated political maneuver to secure federal favor; Larimer fully expected the governor to reward him by naming his camp the permanent county seat. He was completely unaware that Governor Denver, frustrated by frontier politics, had already resigned his office and left the territory by the time the town company was platted. #learningontiktok #TikTokLearningCampaign #LearnOnTikTok @Visit Denver @Visit Colorado

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