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MILE HIGH CITY
by Thomas J. Noel4. IMMIGRANTS
In 1868, a 24-year-old German stowaway landed in Denver,
where he came to appreciate the frontier virtue of not questioning a mans past.
Orphaned at age 15, this youngster was running away from personal tragedies and long,
compulsoryand often deadlymilitary service in the Prussian army. Like some
50,000 other foreign-born immigrants reaching Denver before the 1920s, Adolph Kuhrs wanted
a chance to start anew in a new world.
Kuhrs changed the spelling of his name to Coors and
established what would become the worlds largest single brewery. America attracted
55,000 Germansand almost 500,000 immigrantsthe year Coors arrived in Denver.
Germans were the most numerous of many immigrants coming to Colorado between the 1860s and
the 1920s, when the U. S. began officially restricting immigration and the Ku Klux Klan
began unofficially making foreigners feel unwelcome.
On his 1880s visit to Denver, Oscar Wilde characterized it
as one of the few cities in the world where practically none of the adult residents were
native-born. From the beginning, Denver has been a city of newcomers. More people have
been residents by choice than by accident of birth. Many Denverites, including the pioneer
generation, came from New York, Ohio, Illinois, and Missouri. In more recent times, many
have also come from Texas and California.
Distance from the Atlantic and Pacific shores may have been
the main reason the foreign-born were always a minority. Denver never had the teeming
immigrant neighborhoods of New York, Boston, Philadelphia, or San Francisco. Between 1880
and 1920, during the high tide of immigration to the U. S., only one-fourth to one-fifth
of Denvers residents were foreign born. Among the immigrants in 19th century Denver,
Germans, Irish, English, Swedes, Scots, and Italians were most numerous.
Germans
Of Denvers immigrants, the most prominent, prosperous
and populous were the Germans. In 1870, according to the census calculations of historian
Stephen J. Leonard, Germans in Denver had more large fortunes (above $4,000) than the
English, Irish, Swedes and Scots combined, although the latter groups consolidated had a
far greater population. Typically Germans arrived with more money and earned and saved
more after arriving in the Mile High City.
Among the German movers and shakers were brewers Adolph
Coors and Adolph and Philip Zang; Charles Kountze and William Berger of Colorado National
Bank, developer Walter von Richthofen, capitalist William Barth, pickle and cannery czar
Max Kuner, hardware dealer George Tritch, carpenter and contractor Frank Kirchof, and
Mayor Wolfe Londoner. Second generation Germans included William Byers of the Rocky
Mountain News and Robert S. Roeschlaub, Denvers great pioneer architect.
One German immigrant, Charles Boettcher, developed the
mightiest and most successfully diversified financial empire in the Rockies. Rather than
sink his money into one industry, such as mining, Boettcher concentrated on hardware and
mining supplies. Moving into agriculture even before mining began to flounder, Boettcher
fathered the Great Western Sugar Company. To consruct his sugar beet plants, he organized
the Ideal Cement Company.
Boettcher and other German-born immigrants were joined by
Germans from Russia. The Volga-Deutsch, as they were sometimes called, had been enlisted
by Catherine the Great to settle in Russias Volga Valley. After the German-born
czarina died, other Russian rulers were less kind to these Teutons, forcing them to join
the Russian military and to otherwise become more Russian. Subsequently thousands fled
Russia. Many settled on the Great Plains of North America, including eastern
Colorados South Platte Valley.
All sorts of Germans, unified by a common language, joined
together to form ethnic clubs. As early as 1865, Germans organized a local branch of the
German Turnverein, an international organization dedicated to German culture, exercise and
sociability. "The German Temple of Art," as historian William B. Vickers called
it, built the largest hall in town, a popular place for calisthenics, games, dances,
balls, concerts, and political rallies. At the Turnverein, now Colorados oldest
ethnic club, Teutons could read German language newspapers, magazines and books, hear
German opera and music, and enjoy the Denver Mäennerchor, a singing group founded in
1872.
While other ethnic groups suffered varying degrees of
harassment in Denver, the well-organized Germans had enough political clout to discourage
discrimination and encourage deference. Such was the case in 1874, when a policeman tried
to arrest a patron in the Turnverein for drinking beer after midnight. Germans ejected the
officer and shot off a letter to city hall: "We want it clearly understood that we
want no policemen in our hall in any official capacity." Shortly thereafter, Mayor
Francis Chase promised to comply with this request.
Germans took a keen interest in public education,
persuading the Colorado legislature to pass a law in 1877 requiring the teaching of German
and of gymnastics in the public schools. The active German element led Colorado to print
its laws, from 1877 to 1889, in German, as well as in English and Spanish. Of several
German newspapers published in Denver, the longest lived was the Colorado Herald,
which championed German causes until it became a casualty of World War II.
By 1880, a third of Denvers 48 saloons were owned by
German or Austrian-born immigrants. Inside, customers spoke and sang in German, read
German newspapers and magazines, consumed sauerkraut and strudel, and quaffed beer. Denver
establishments such as the Bavarian House, Deutsches House, the Edelweiss, Germania Hall,
Heidelberg Cafe, Mozart Hall, Saxonia Hall and Walhalla Hall offered not only "Dutch
[Deutsche or German] lunches," but the customs and culture of the old country.
Baron Walter von Richthofen, one of the most exuberant
Germans, told his countrymen that "Denver is called the parlor city on
account of its cleanliness and beauty.... It is the center of science, art, intelligence,
and refinement of the West." Frederick Steinhauer, a founder of the Denver Turnverein
and a member of the territorial legislature, wrote to German newspapers extolling Colorado
as "a better place for a young man to secure his living and independence."
Germans built many of the citys first fine churches.
Jewish Germans erected Temple Emanuel; German Catholics built St. Elizabeths. German
Congregationalists, German Methodists, the German Reformed Church, and German Baptists all
constructed substantial early houses of worship, while German Lutherans filled two
congregations.
Coloradans benefitted from the Teutonic interest in music
and culture. In 1873, the Kaltenbach family ordered a thousand-dollar orchestrion from
Germany. When the elaborate instrument arrived a year later, the Kaltenbachs renamed their
tavern Orchestrion Hall. It took a week to assemble and tune the 11-foot high machine and
attach the reeds, horns, drums, and xylophone. To celebrate the instruments debut,
hundreds crowded into the hall. "No one," an observer recalled, "had ever
supposed there were so many Germans in the region and [all] were amazed that the beer held
out through the long night." As Germans drank and sang along, the largest musical
apparatus in the Rockies ground out "Die Wacht am Rhein," George
Schweitzers "Yodel Hi Lee Hi Loo," and Ludwig von Beethovens
"Moonlight Sonata."
Teutons also gave the Queen City one of its first annual
festivals. When the citys German brewers cleaned out their beer fermenting vats in
May, they made from the residue dark syrupy bock beer. Bock is the German word for for
goat and those who drank this spring beer were expected to act like youthful billy goats.
Editor Byers reported on May 21, 1874 that all nationalities joined in the spring beer
fest as large wagons, decorated with flags and laden with kegs of beer, rumbled through
the streets to the saloons. Otto Hienrichs Saloon at 16th and Larimer set the record
for Bock Beer Day 1874, serving some 3,000 glasses of beer, 50 loaves of bread and 125
pounds of meat.
Although Germans had a happier life in 19-century Denver
than most ethnic groups, the twentieth century changed that. The swelling prohibition
movement tended to blame all evil on drink. Breweries and saloons, according to nativists,
were un-American bastions where people spoke German and plotted against the established
order. Countering the attack of the "temperentzlers," Germans formed the
Citizens Protective Union, which defended the saloon as "the poor mans club
house." Saloons served as lodging halls and restaurants for many immigrants, places
where they could cash checks, borrow money and receive credit, find jobs, and meet with
their countrymen. Politically saloons were often the place for registering and organizing
new voters, havens for both front hall rallies and backroom deals.
Xenophobes hoping to crack down on foreigners and their
"un-American" activities joined Prohibitionists to vote for statewide
prohibition. The dry spell began for Coloradans on New Yearss Day, 1916. Many
Germans lost their jobs in the liquor business. The Zang Brewery, Neef Brothers Brewery
and dozens of distributors and bottlers closed their doors along with some 400 Denver
Saloons.
An even heavier blow came to the Teutonic community with
the outbreak of World War I. Germans became the target of a widespread hate campaigns.
Regardless of their professed and proven patriotism, Germans lost their jobs, and were
physically and verbally abused. The Denver Public School District outlawed German language
classes. Restaurants renamed sauerkraut "liberty cabbage" and hamburgers became
"liberty steaks." "Patriotic" places put up signs such as: "There
are two places to talk German. In hell and in Germany. Go there to speak it."
After the double-barreled blow of Prohibition and World War
I, this group that had contributed so much to Denvers cultural, educational and
social life never fully reemerged as a distinctive ethnic community.
Irish
Throughout the 19th century, the Irish comprised
Denvers second largest immigrant group. The Irish-born represented less than three
percent of the citys population, but were highly visible with their saloons, clubs,
churches, and political presence. In a predominantly non-Irish city, Irishmen served as
city councilmen, and occasionally as mayor, although the first Irish Catholic governor,
Stephen L. R. McNichols, would not be elected until 1957, three years before John F.
Kennedys election as president.
Despite prejudice against them and the highest arrest
record for any ethnic group, the Irish seemed irrepressible. Their political clout
revolved around saloonkeepers, policemen, and politicians, three groups attracting large
numbers of gregarious, power-seeking Irishmen. Early day police chiefs David J. Cook and
James B. Veatch were one-time saloonkeepers, as was the pioneer marshall, "Noisy
Tom" Pollock.
The Irish proved to be one of the most prolific immigrant
groups. Unlike Scandinavians, Italians, Greeks, Chinese, and most other groups, both sexes
of Irish came. Irish girls were in great demand as domestics and factory workers. Starving
times in Ireland due to the potato famine led many families, however reluctantly, to send
daughters as well as sons to America, their only hope for a decent life. With as many
Irish women as men in the new country, the Irish tended to marry each other and raise
large families. Many immigrants came to make their fortunes and then return to their
homelands and their sweethearts.
Denvers Irish, like the Germans, experienced little
trouble melting into the mainstream. "No Irish Need Apply" signs stayed back on
the Eastern Seaboard for several reasons. The presence of Indians, Hispanics, Asians and
Blacks at the bottom of society pushed the English-speaking, white Irish up a few notches
in western cities. If people could assert their superiority by treating red, brown,
yellow, and black men as inferior, they were less likely to discriminate against whites,
even if they were Irish.
Like the Germans, the Irish were generally acculturated by
the time they reached Denver. Unlike the impoverished, Gaelic speaking, just-off-the boat
Irish who flooded into Boston and New York, they usually arrived in Denver with job skills
and other assets, often including a spouse and family. Most had spent time in Boston, New
York, or elsewhere in North America, learning American English, American ways and
accumulating some capital. Many came via Canada, a large source of nineteenth-century
Denver immigrants. Most Canadians were of British, Scottish, Irish or French extraction.
Colorados great mineral rushes and the booming city of Denver attracted many
Canadians who might otherwise have settled the colder and poorer Canadian West.
Most Irish came to Colorado as miners or as
"terriers," as the Irish railroad construction crews called themselves. Like the
railroads themselves, many Irish made Denver their headquarters, settling into the working
class neighborhoods of northeast and northwest Denver. St. Leos church in Auraria
and St. Patricks in North Denver were rallying points, as were Irish saloons. Irish-
born saloonkeepers ran 10 percent of all Denver. Late into the night, strains of "My
Wild Irish Rose," "Wearing of the Green," "Danny Boy," and
"Where the River Shannon Flows" drifted out of tavern doors.
Not only in groggeries, but in numerous ethnic clubs, the
Irish fraternized. Denvers Fenian Brotherhood organized as early as 1865 to
celebrate July 4th, a holiday whose anti-English overtones delighted the Irish. That same
year, according to the Denver Times, October 18, 1873, one Irishmen
supposedly wrote home to his brother, "Dear Patrick come! A dollar a day for
ditching, no hanging for stalign, Irish Petaties a dollar a bushel, and whiskey the
same!"
Denvers Irish organized local chapters of the Ancient
Order of Hibernians, the Daughters of Erin, the Irish Progressive Society, the Land
League, a Ladies Land League, the St. Patricks Mutual Benevolent Association, and
the Shamrock Athletic Club. Denvers wealthiest Irishman and a major employer of his
countryman, John K. Mullen, presided over the St. Josephs Total Abstinence Society,
an effort to reform the citys hard-drinking Celts. Drinking no doubt contributed to
the astronomical arrest records for the Irish-born, which were often higher than those of
all other foreign-born groups combined in 19th-century Denver.
The Rocky Mountain Celt, the short-lived Western
Irishman, and the Colorado Catholic further promoted Irish solidarity.
Well-organized Irishmen elected one of their own, Robert Morris, mayor of Denver in 1881.
He defeated George Tritch, a favorite of the largier and wealthier German community. This
election, noted J. K. Mullen, "united the Irishmen as they have never been united
before." Although more than 75 percent of Denvers Irish were registered as
Democrats they crossed party lines en masse to elect their countryman, a Republican.
Morris rewarded his constituency by sanctioning the citys first St. Patricks
Day parade in 1883.
Mayor Robert W. Speer made the parade an official city
function in 1906, a practice continued until World War I. Anti-Catholic, anti-immigrant,
and anti-liquor interests help suppress St. Patricks Day parades until the 1960s
when the parade was revived. Since then, Denvers Irish parade has become one of
Americas largest, partly by welcoming any and all celebrantseven gays and
Englishmen.
English
Although the English were Denvers third-largest
foreign-born group after the Germans and the Irish, they were not as visible, blending
into the dominant Anglo society. Behind the scenes, the British reinforced an Anglophilic
culture underwritten by an estimated £50,000,000 which Britons invested in Colorado
before World War I.
Unlike non-English-speaking peoples, English-born
Denverites saw less need to organize ethnically. They, like U.S. born Anglo-Americans,
generally assumed they were the prevalent culture. Not only the language but English
capital prevailed, bankrolling Colorado mining, railroads, and ranching. By 1890, 25
British mining firms were digging for Colorado paydirt.
Railroads, which were first developed in England, began
criss-crossing Colorado with considerable financial support from the British Isles. The
Denver & Rio Grande Railroad, for instance, was a favorite of British investors. Dr.
William A. Bell, a London society doctor, became interested in the D&RG, invested, and
promoted it among his patients. His son, Dr. William A. Bell, Jr., became so intrigued
with this narrow gauge "toy" railroad, that he came to America, where he wound
up as the roads vice president. Young Bell wrote a book, New Tracks in North
America (London: 1870) explaining and promoting Colorado railroads to English readers
and capitalists.
Ranching also appealed to the English, who had no trouble
imagining the rewards of roast beef, milk, and fresh cream. The Scottish investor James
Duff steered English investors into the Colorado Ranch Company and other agricultural
schemes such as the High Line Canal, an 88-mile long diversion of South Platte Water to
turn south and east Denver into profitable agricultural land. The Highline Canal, or
"English Ditch," completed in 1882 at a cost of $550,000, nourished the
development of both Denver and its eastern suburb, Aurora.
Duff spearheaded the creation and activities of The
Colorado Mortgage and Investment Company, which shaped Denver as well as surrounding farms
and ranches. That firm erected the Windsor, Denvers first fine hotel, and the
adjacent office block, the Barclay. Duff and other Britons helped build the Denver Club
and erected fine residences, both personal and speculative, throughout the city.
The immensity of the prairies surrounding Denver astonished
Englishmen such as Richard B. Townshend. In his book, A Tenderfoot in Colorado,
Townshend describes the ranch life that lured many Englishmen, or at least their capital,
to the former "Great American Desert." Like many other Englishmen, Townshend
came with capital and letters of introduction, which gave him access to governors and
bankers, to the best clubs and families.
By the 1880s, the St. Georges Association and the
Albion Club were organizing cricket matches in Denver. Englishmen also belonged to the
Denver Club, the Denver Athletic Club, the University Club, and the Denver Country
Cluball exclusive enclaves more or less pursuing standards based on those of
Britains private clubs. Although Englishman G. W. Stevens pronounced the Queen City
of the Plains "more plain than Queenly," he and his countrymen did much to
transform the raw western crossroads into a handsome and prosperous metropolis with solid
Victorian churches, office buildings, hotels, clubs, and mansions. Unlike Colorado
Springs, Denver did not call itself "Little London." Yet visitors staying at the
Brown Place, Oxford and Windsor hotels, admiring St. Johns Episcopal Cathedral, and
touring Capitol Hills elegant Queen Anne and English Revival-style mansion districts
might conclude that the English set the citys standards.
Swedes
Swedish immigrants were the fourth-most common foreign-born
group in Denver according to the 1900 census. Danes and Norwegians also came, but in far
smaller numbers. Denver in 1890 had the eighth-largest Swedish population among U. S.
cities. By 1900, the city had eight Swedish societies, led by the Skandia Benevolent
Association founded in 1876.
Most Swedes were bachelors who came to make money and then
return to their homes in the Midwest or the old country. Swedes clustered around their
churches, such as the lovely sandstone Swedish Evangelical Lutheran Church and graveyard
at Ryssby, northwest of Boulder. Denver Swedes congregated at Augustana Lutheran Church,
the Swedish Baptist Church, the Methodist Episcopal Chapel in the basement of Trinity
United Methodist Church, as well as the Swedish Evangelical Lutheran Church in northeast
Denver, where many worked in the smeltersthe hardest, hottest, most dangerous work
in town.
Hard-working Swedes began looking for other jobs, as
smelters began closing down and laying off workers in the early 1900s, and as
Colorados silver and gold processing industry faded. Others tried farming, where the
odds were also tough. Aldor Olson settled on a farm near Kersey, Colorado. His crop was
hailed out in 1925, and again in 1926 and 1927. In 1928 he headed to Denver, looking for
work. He found it at Eaton Metals, a metal fabricating firm that made livestock watering
tanks and oil drums.
Nearly all of Eatons employees were Swedes, Olson
recalled in a July 1, 1996 interview with Kevin Rucker (CU-Denver history M.A. Thesis,
1997, "Eaton Metal Products: From Stock Tanks to Missile Silos."):
"Not only were they all Swedish, but families: father
and son, uncles and nephews. The Superintendent, Al Lindor, who was also a Swede, went
into Mr. Travis [the president of Eaton Metals] and told him that he had a complaint that
there too many Swedes working there and Mr. Travis says, Well, what about those
Swedes? Al Lindor said, Theyre the best workers I got. Mr. Travis
said, Well, the next time you hire somebody, hire a Swede."
Prominent Swedes included Edgar M. Wahlberg, born in Denver
to immigrants. After working his way through the University of Denvers Iliff School
of Theology, Rev. Wahlberg took on a bankrupt urban parish, Grace Methodist Church. He
transformed Grace into one of the most successful, reform-minded churches in Colorado,
which set the pace in helping Denvers poor cope with the Great Depression. His
church opened an employment agency, shoe shop, barbershop, and food, clothing and fuel
distribution center. Wahlbergs legendary Denver career led the United Nations to
recruit him for relief work in Europe at the end of World War II. Returning to Denver, he
worked for the War on Poverty. Wahlberg spent his life among the working classes, fighting
the discrimination and poverty that led his father, a tailor, to complain, "I should
have stayed in Sweden. Things were better there."
Scots
Although not as numerous as the English or the Irish, the
Scots had a Denver population of 1,000 by 1890. One of them, James Duff, was the most
influential foreign investor in Colorado: he brokered deals for English, Irish, and
Scottish investors. The Scots organized a Caledonian Club and St. Andrews Society. William
J. Palmer and Dr. William A. Bell of the Denver & Rio Grande Railroad laid out North
Denvers Scottish Village, a tiny neighborhood of short curving streets with Scottish
names at W. 32nd Avenue and Zuni Streets, that is an unusual exception to Denvers
ubiquitous street grid. Although some Scots-Irish settled in that area known as Highlands,
they were soon outnumbered by Irish, Italian, and Hispanic residents. Like the English,
the Scots assimilated into the dominant Anglo culture and made less of their ethnicity
than most other groups. One of the few traces left of Denvers Scottish pioneers is a
bronze statue of Robert Burns, installed in City Park in 1904 by the Colorado Caledonian
Club, with the inscription:
A poet, peasant born,
Who more of fames immortal dower
Upon his country brings
Than all her kings.
Italians
Only a sprinkling of Italians settled in Denver before
1880, when the census taker found a scant 86. In the following decades the railroads,
mining companies and other industries recruited Italian labor and the 1890 census listed
an Italian population of 999. By 1920, their population had climbed to over 3,000 and the
North Denver neighborhood of Highland became known as "Little Italy."
One of the first Italian families to arrive in the early
1870s were Mary Anne and Angelo Capelli. They opened a fruit stand and diner on Wazee
Street near Union Station, saving enough capital to build the Highland House on 15th and
Platte Streets. The Capellis treated both their countrymen and non-Italians to pasta
dinners on Columbus Day, when they draped their business with American and Italian flags
to celebrate Italian-American solidarity.
Like the Capellis, many Italians started out in the
Bottoms, the slummy area bordering the Platte River and the railroad tracks. In this dumpy
flood plain, these former peasant farmers found water and good soil. Soon the river
bottoms were checkerboarded with Italian vegetable patches. These urban farmers hawked
their produce downtown from fruit, vegetable, and flower stands. Some saved enough to buy
a horse and wagon. After putting a canvas roof on the wagon and hanging a scale on the
outside, Italians began infiltrating Denver neighborhoods and even suburbs with their
street song of "Vegetable Man! Vegetable Man! Nice ripe tomatoes! Fresh pascal
celery! Just picked strawberries!"
As the Mile High City grew, many of these farmers graduated
to larger businesses, opening pasta factories and restaurants, groceries and wholesale
produce companies. To this day, Denvers large wholesale produce firms are clustered
around the Denargo market in the Platte bottomlands, and many are run by descendants of
Italian pioneers.
Italians who came to Colorado tended to be poor and were
derided for their dark complexions, Catholicism, foreign language, different food, and
homemade wine. Denverites called them macaroni eaters, wops (without official papers), and
Dagos (originally "Diegos" a derogatory term for Hispanics who were confused
with Italians). Many lived in tents, shacks, and shanties in the river bottoms and worked
hard, poor-paying jobsbuilding railroads, digging coal, tending truck farms and
toiling in smelters.
Mother Frances Xavier Cabrini, the Italian nun who became
the first U. S. citizen to be canonized a saint, visited Colorado in 1902 and reported:
"Here the hardest work is reserved for the Italian worker...they merely look upon him
as an ingenious machine for work...I saw these dear fellows of ours engaged on
construction of railways in the most intricate mountain gorges.
Poor miners...work
uninterruptedly year in and year out, until old age and incapacity creep over them, or at
least until some day a landslide or explosion or an accident of some kind ends the life of
the poor worker, who does not even need a grave, being buried in the one in which he has
lived all his life."
To give Italian immigrants "the holy joys which in our
own country the poor peasant has on Sundays at least," Mother Cabrini helped erect
Our Lady of Mount Carmel Church [photo 4-17] in Denvers Little Italy. This dignified
Romanesque church, with its ornate Italian interior, still stands at 36th and Navajo
Streets in North Denver. One of the twin copper-capped towers houses the 1,000-pound bell
known as "Maria del Carmelina."
With the help of Mother Cabrinis church, as well as a
school and orphanage, Denvers Italian community ultimately prospered, moving out of
the river bottoms to North Denver and, still later, out to suburban Adams and Jefferson
counties. Hard-working first-generation immigrants sacrificed themselves to feed, cloth
and educate their children, who often became professional and white collar workers. In a
once-condescending city, Italians slowly earned respectand even
admirationoften the hard way.
Denver historian Stephen J. Leonard, in his detailed study
of early Denver immigrants, concludes that most groups, with the exception of the Chinese,
fared better in Denver than in many larger Eastern cities. Yet the Depression of 1893 and
the rise of the anti-immigrant American Protective Association darkened that dream for
many by 1900. Many immigrants, especially the Chinese and Scandinavians, were among the
thousands who left Denver during the 1890s. When the economy and immigration perked up
again after 1900, a new wave of immigrants came from central and eastern Europe, followed
by blacks from the South and East and Hispanics from southern Colorado and New and Old
Mexico.
SOURCES:
Arps Louisa. Denver in Slices. Denver: Sage Books,
1959 (1983 rerpint)
Converey, William. John Kernan Mullen. CU-Denver
in-process M. A. History Thesis, 1997.
DeRose, Christine, "Inside Little Italy: Italian
Immigrants in Denver," Colorado Magazine, LIV (Summer, 1977), p. 277-293.
Dorsett, Lyle W., "The Ordeal of Colorados
Germans During World War I," Colorado Magazine, LI (Fall, 1974), p. 277-293.
Historical Journal of the Denver Turnverein, 1865-1965.
Denver: Denver Turnverein, 1965. 80 pp., illus.
Leonard, Stephen J. Denvers Foreign Born
Immigrants, 1859-1900. Claremont, California: Claremont Graduate School History Ph.D.
Dissertation, 1971.
MacArthur, Mildred Sherwood. History of the German
Element in the State of Colorado. Chicago: German-American Historical Society of
Illinois, 1917.
Noel, Thomas J. Denver: The City & The Saloon,
1858-1916. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1982 (1996 reprint: University Press
of Colorado).
Perelli, Giovanni. Colorado and the Italians in Colorado.
Denver: Smith-Brooks Press, 1922.
Spence, Clark. British Investments and the American
Mining Frontier, 1860-1901. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1958.
Townshend, Richard B. A Tenderfoot In Colorado.
London: John Lane and Bodley Head, 1923.
Vickers, William B. History of the City of Denver.
Chicago: O. O. Baskin, 1880.
Wahlberg, Edgar M. Voices in the Darkness: A Memoir.
Boulder: Roberts Rinehart, 1983.
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