Julesburg, Colorado

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Julesburg is the statutory town that is the county seat of and the most populous municipality in Sedgwick County, Colorado, United States.<ref name="GNIS"/> The population was 1,307 at the 2020 United States census.<ref name="Census 2020" />

History

The original trading post was named for Jules Beni.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Julesburg was on the Pony Express (1860–1861) route from Missouri to California.

Jack Slade

File:Julesburg, Colorado UP Station.jpg
Julesburg's former Union Pacific station is now a museum

In 1858, Joseph A. "Jack" Slade, a superintendent for the Central Overland California and Pikes Peak Express Company, was tracking down horse thieves, including Jules Beni. Slade caught up with him at Julesburg, but Beni shot him five times. Thinking that Slade was dead, several angry townsfolk chased Beni out of Julesburg. When they returned, they found Slade struggling to his feet, having miraculously survived.

Beni continued to steal horses from the Pike's Peak Express Company, and Slade vowed to hunt him down. Beni attempted to ambush Slade at Slade's own ranch at Cold Springs. But Slade found out about the planned ambush and, along with some of his cowboys, captured Beni. Slade did not take Beni to authorities but instead shot him dead while he was tied to a fence post.<ref>Colorado Heritage (Autumn 2000) p.48</ref> He shot off each of Beni's fingers, then put the gun in Beni's mouth and pulled the trigger. Afterward, he severed Beni's ears as trophies.Template:Citation needed

Battle of Julesburg

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}} Julesburg was a large and prominent stagecoach station and the site of Fort Rankin (later Fort Sedgwick). In revenge for the Sand Creek Massacre, one thousand Cheyenne, Arapaho, and Lakota warriors attacked Julesburg on January 7, 1865. In the battle the Indians defeated about 60 soldiers of the U.S. Army and 50 armed civilians. In the following weeks the Indians raided up and down the South Platte River valley. On February 2 they returned to Julesburg and burned down all the buildings in the settlement, although not attacking the soldiers and civilians holed up in the fort. At the time, the town was said to have had over 1000 buildings.<ref>Grinnell, George Bird (1916) The Fighting Cheyennes. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, pp. 181-195</ref>

Union Pacific

In 1867, during the building of the Union Pacific transcontinental railroad, Julesburg served as an "end-of-track" town, where railroad workers would live while not laboring. At that time, about 4,000 workers inhabited the town, which had grown numerous saloons and gambling tents to serve them.<ref name=Violent />

Such towns were generally very violent places. A colonel in the U.S Army stationed in Julesburg, Richard Irving Dodge, reported that of 127 graves he saw there, only six of those buried had died of natural causes. This worked out to one violent death for every day of the town's lifespan to that point. Many had been killed by vigilance committees, lynched and hung from the telegraph poles of the Union Pacific.<ref name=Violent />

As the railroad advanced into Wyoming, new towns such as Cheyenne sprung up to house and service its workers. According to historian David T. Courtwright, end-of-track towns like Julesburg, Cheyenne and others were "agglomeration[s] (the word "community" is not appropriate) of young, transient, expendable, bachelor laborers whose self-image was one of toughness and whose unregulated vices attracted criminals, gamblers, prostitutes, and other armed opportunists eager to siphon off their wages." This mix created the environment that allowed the deadly violence of such places to thrive.<ref name=Violent>Courtwright, David T. (1996) Violent Land: Single Men and Social Disorder From the Frontier to the Inner City. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. pp.83-84. Template:Isbn</ref>

Geography

Julesburg is located at Template:Coord (40.988422, −102.266677).<ref name="GR1">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> According to the United States Census Bureau, the town has a total area of Template:Convert, all of it land.

The town is located on the north side of the South Platte River, along U.S. 138 and U.S. 385 and just off of I-76. It is the northernmost town in the state, less than Template:Convert south of the Colorado−Nebraska state line.

Climate

Julesburg has a semi-arid climate (Köppen BSk) with cold, dry winters and hot, wetter summers.

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Demographics

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Education

The Julesburg School District operates public schools.

  • The Jack Slade account above appeared on an episode of Stories of the Century – a syndicated television series starring and narrated by Jim Davis – which aired on March 4, 1955. Gregg Palmer played the role of Slade, and Paul Newlan portrayed Beni.
  • "Julesburg" is the title of the second episode (1955) of the ABC western Cheyenne.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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See also

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References

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