The View Hotel, Ashcroft, Colorado
by Catherine Sherman
Title
The View Hotel, Ashcroft, Colorado
Artist
Catherine Sherman
Medium
Photograph - Photography
Description
"The View Hotel, Ashcroft, Colorado, by Catherine Sherman.
The last guest checked out of The View Hotel in Ashcroft, Colorado, more than a hundred years ago. The hotel may no longer serve tourists as a place to rest but the grounds still provide a breathtaking view of the Elk Mountains section of the Rocky Mountain range. The beautiful golden colors of the aspens in Autumn add a glorious touch to the scenery.
The View Hotel is one of several buildings in various stages of restoration that remain in the mining ghost town of Ashcroft, which is now an open air museum.
Ashcroft, originally known as Castle Forks City then Chloride until 1882, was a mining town located ten miles (16 km) south of Aspen, Colorado. The remaining buildings are preserved as a an open air museum.The town was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1975.
Located on Castle Creek Road, the silver mining ghost town features the restored remains of several historic buildings, including the Blue Mirror Saloon, a post office, and the View Hotel. Guided tours and interpretive signage tell the stories of the former boom town in this mountain meadow at the headwaters of Castle Creek.
The town was established in 1880 with the discovery of silver. By 1885 the town was home to about 3,500 people and had six hotels and 20 saloons. In 1883, one of the mine owners reportedly bought rounds of drinks for everyone in each of the town's then 13 saloons.
However, the mines, which initially produced an impressive amount -- 14,000 ounces of silver to the ton -- were just shallow deposits. Promised rail links to Crested Butte never materialized. Major mineral strikes in Aspen, already the county seat, lured away investors and workers. Boom quickly lead to bust and after its peak of 1885, there soon were just 100 summer residents and $5.60 in the town’s coffers.
The town's last resident, Jack Leahy, died in 1939, making Ashcroft an official ghost town. The town has attracted interest throughout the years, despite having no official residents.
The television series Sergeant Preston of the Yukon was mainly filmed in Ashcroft and was telecast on CBS from September 29, 1955, to September 25, 1958. The ghost town was fitted with false fronts to imitate a Canadian set for the filming of the series.
DIGITAL DOWNLOAD: https://licensing.pixels.com/featured/the-view-hotel-ashcroft-colorado-catherine-sherman.html
CONTESTS: finished third place overall and second place among group members in the "Go Take a Hike" Photography Group’s "Rustic Buildings in Nature" photo contest 09/28/2020)
Featured in "Glimpses of Autumn" group (10/13/2019); "All COLORADO" group (10/30/2019); "Travel Art" group (11/07/2019); "500 Views Share Group" (11/18/2019); "500 Views - 1 Image a Day" group (01/25/2020); "Go Take a Hike Photography" group (09/20/2020); "Your Very Best Photography" group (10/21/2020); "Forgotten by Time" group (10/24/2020); "Roadside" group (04/22/2024)
Uploaded
October 12th, 2019
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Viewed 2,162 Times - Last Visitor from Norwalk, CT on 04/25/2024 at 11:59 PM
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Comments (16)
Ben Prepelka 3 Days Ago
Your work is now featured in the Roadside group! Please consider adding it to the “Featured work for March and April 2024 active discussion thread." (L/F 4-22-2024)
Larry Kniskern
Congratulations, Catherine – your stunning scene finished third place overall and second place among group members in the Go Take a Hike Photography Group’s Rustic Buildings in Nature photo contest! It will be placed on the group homepage as a special feature for the week, as well in the Contest Winners thread in the group discussion board for archive.
Jurgen Lorenzen
Beautiful composition and colors, Catherine, congratulations on your top finish in the RUSTIC BUILDINGS IN NATURE contest!
Andrew Wilson
Definitely not a 5 Star establishment.....but the scenery is spectacular, so maybe a future re-opening......!
Larry Kniskern
Congratulations, Catherine – your rustic buildings in nature scene has been featured by the Go Take a Hike Photography Group! Feel free to add it to the Featured Images thread in the group discussion board for archive.
Robyn King
Congratulations your beautiful work is being featured in 500 Views Share Group & Shared:-)
Morris Finkelstein
Beautiful photograph of a vintage deserted hotel in the Rocky Mountains, with great colors, scenery, and perspective, Catherine! F/L