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When Denver was booming but was still the Old West...



Item # 707859

September 07, 1881

DAILY DENVER TIMES, Colorado, Sept. 7, 1881  The Denver area, part of the Territory of Kansas, was sparsely settled until the late 1850s. In July, 1858, a small placer deposit yielded about 20 troy ounces of gold, the first significant gold discovery in the Rocky Mountain region.
News spread rapidly and by spring of 1859 teams of thousands of gold seekers arrived and the Pike's Peak Gold Rush was under way. In the following two years about 100,000 gold seekers flocked to the region.
The population of Denver increased from 4700 in 1870 to 35,000 in 1880, and ten years later swelled to 106,700.
This issue was published during the height of Denver's rapid growth & the content and advertisements are reflective of this. The front page includes: "The Apaches--Official Reports From General McDowell" and: "Raiding and Killing--Further From the Roving Apaches in Arizona".
Four pages, a bit irregular at the blank spine, good condition.

Item from our most recent catalog - #363, released for February, 2026

Category: The Old West