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450 miles of the most spellbinding roads in Southwest Colorado were built largely due to the life's efforts of one man: miles of twisting narrow wagon roads through the most rugged terrain of the Rocky Mountains. The Million Dollar Highway, pictured to the left, is one of these awesome thoroughfares. |
In 1843 Otto Mears was a 3 year old orphan living in Russia. In 1849 (age 9) he was put on a sailing vessel to join an uncle in California. Arriving in San Francisco speaking only Russian, he learned his uncle had left for Australia. Otto Mears sold newspapers for a time, learned the tinsmith trade, milked cows and worked for a local store merchant. Though he had saved every penny he had earned, he was robbed while asleep one night sharing a hotel room with 12 other men. In 1859, he left to
work the gold fields of California and Nevada until he joined the
Civil War's First Regiment of California Volunteers in the Spring
of 1861. He served 3 years in the army - he fought
the Navajos under Kit Carson until he was discharged. While
in the army he assumed the extra duty of making bread and was paid
a pound of flour for every pound of bread he made. He sold the
extra flour to the Indians and by the time he was discharged, he'd
pocketed $1,500. Together with his discharge money of $400,
he opened a store in Saguache (pronounced sahWatch) in the San Luis
Valley. In order to enlarge the store, he constructed the first
lumber mill in SW Colorado. To satisfy the demand for flour, he planted
200 acres of wheat. Not satisfied with harvesting by hand and
threshing with sheep, he brought in the first mower, reaper and threshing
machine and built the first grist mill as well. By harvest,
the Government's purchase price had dropped from $20 per hundred pounds
to $5. He decided to freight his crop to the gold camp of California
Gulch (Leadville, Colorado) 100 miles north. There were no roads over
Poncha Pass and his wagons floundered in the mud and rough terrain,
spilling the wheat. A lone rider came by on horseback and suggested
that Mears build a toll road across the pass. Taking the suggestion
to heart, and after he sold the wheat for $12 a hundred, he continued
onto Denver and obtained the right to build a toll road. One had only
to specify the terminal points of the road, pay $5 for the charter
and a franchise was received for twenty years. Mears' first
road consisted of 50 miles over his "wheat wagon route"
from Saguache to Nathrop where it connected with the road that ran
from California Gulch to Denver. From collecting tolls and freighting
cargo for others, he recouped his road construction expense in a few
months. He then built a second road from Saguache to Lake City,
the site of the Meeker Massacre, Northeast of Silverton. He later
extended this road onto Silverton. In 1875, Mears was granted
the contract to deliver mail to Ouray. In the winter the mail
was transported by dogs pulling toboggans and the mailman on skiis.
"Mail" consisted of anything and everything: tobacco, coffee,
sugar, dry goods and ladies' hats and the mailman was under strict
orders not to ride atop the toboggans. |
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