On County Highway 30, 1.5 miles east of County Highway 12, on the right when traveling west.
Burrows Park, Argentum, or Whitecross the name may have changed, yet the community and its place in history have remained the same. Situated within a five-mile long grassy meadow known as Burrows Park, clusters of hotels, blacksmith shops, . . . — — Map (db m177915) HM
On Highway 20, 4.5 miles west of Highway 24, on the right when traveling west.
The history of the Bonanza Empire Chief Mine and Mill mirrors the stories told of fleeting fortunes throughout the San Juan Mountains. The initial discovery of the Bonanza Lode was made on July 4, 1885. Little work was completed on the claim until . . . — — Map (db m177867) HM
On County Highway 20, 0.1 miles west of County Highway 24, on the right when traveling west.
George S. Lee arrived in Hinsdale County from Massachusetts in May, 1877 with ambitious plans for the newly formed Galena Mining District. Lee saw opportunities to invest in the future of Colorado. At the time, the two-hundred-acre town site known . . . — — Map (db m177868) HM
On County Highway 20, 4 miles west of County Highway 24, on the left when traveling west.
Rose Lime Kiln was built along the banks of Henson Creek in the spring of 1881 by local investor and businessman George S. Lee. At the time, Lee used rare technology that he believed would dramatically change construction material and development. . . . — — Map (db m176748) HM
On County Highway 30, 1.5 miles east of County Highway 12, on the right when traveling west.
Tellurium's history, like that of many mining camps, consisted of booms and busts. From its initial occupation in 1875, it boasted as having two groceries and a post office (1876), but in an unusual statement for a mining camp, it did not have a . . . — — Map (db m177910) HM
On Highway 20, 4 miles west of South Gunnison Avenue (Highway 149), on the left when traveling west.
Living conditions were often deplorable in the Galena Mining District. Miners often lived in company supplied boarding houses set up in close proximity to the mines. The houses were poorly built, drafty, and had leaky roofs. Although conditions at . . . — — Map (db m177890) HM
On County Highway 2 at County Highway 20, on the left when traveling north on County Highway 2.
The Ute Indians who inhabited what is now Colorado, Utah, and northern New Mexico were organized into small family bands. They migrated seasonally between the mountains and the deserts and foothills in search of game and wild plants and to . . . — — Map (db m177848) HM
On County Highway 20, on the left when traveling west.
As the primary impetus of Lake City's initial boom and the mainstay of its survival through the mid-1900s, the Ute-Ulay Mine and Mill Complex is linked to Hinsdale's county seat and only incorporated town emotionally and irrevocably. Architecture . . . — — Map (db m177908) HM
On County Highway 20, 4.5 miles west of Highway 24, on the right when traveling west.
At 2:14 AM on March 24, 1929, the Big Slide on the north side of Gravel Mountain tore loose and buried the Bonanza Empire Chief main office building, a dining hall/bunk house, and a five-room bunkhouse. Two cooks - Mrs. Mayme Watson and Mrs. E.L. . . . — — Map (db m177866) HM