Vacating Cleora
Brief by Central Staff
Local History - November 2006 - Colorado Central Magazine - No. 153 - Page 8
Copyright © 2006 by Central Colorado Publishing Co. All rights reserved.
Return to November 2006 table of contents.
ONCE UPON A TIME, there was a town named Cleora about two miles east
of Salida. It's been fading away for more than a century, and the most
recent step in the process came in October as Chaffee County prepared
to vacate the long unused streets and alleys of Cleora.
It began, more or less, with William Bale, whose first appearance in
local history was in 1866 as a rancher on Cottonwood Creek west of
Buena Vista. He was among the vigilantes on the Committee of Safety in
the Lake County War of 1875 that culminated in the July 3 murder of
Judge Elias Dyer (son of the famous preacher John Dyer) in his
courtroom in Granite, then the seat of Lake County.
At some point in the next three years, as Leadville began booming
with silver production, Bale moved to a spot a mile or two downstream
from the junction of the South Arkansas River with the main stream, and
built a two-story tavern and hotel which was a stop on the Barlow &
Sanderson stagecoach line.
At the time, two railroads -- the Denver & Rio Grande, and the
Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe -- had reached Cañon City. The stage
route up the Arkansas circumvented the Royal Gorge to reach Texas
Creek, then proceeded along the river to Bale's Station, where
passengers generally laid over for the night before heading to
Leadville the next day.
The two railroads were battling, in court and with hired gunmen on
the ground, for the Royal Gorge, which barely had enough room for one
railroad. Upriver from the Gorge, they had land agents securing rights
of way, as well as planning towns.
To quote from the History of Leadville and Lake County,
Colorado, by Don and Jean Griswold, "Cleora was laid out in
July or August [of 1878] a short distance above Bale's hotel by persons
associated with the AT&SF; and by fall was a growing community, not
only in anticipation of becoming a railroad town, but also as a supply
center for the mining districts at the head of the South Arkansas where
there was considerable excitement because the ores found in the Monarch
Mine were thought to be similar to the carbonate ores of the Leadville
district."