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That is the present and now a little information on
how it all started. Like all the towns in this area Loveland too had
it's ancient visitors as far back as 10,000 or more years. The recent
Native Americans especially the Utes lived and hunted here. The Ute
trail to the summer highlands started just west of Loveland and ends
near Grand Lake on the western side of the continental divide.
In 1858 the settler's arrived but were by no means the
first Europeans here. That was the French and English trappers who
hunted, trapped and fish west of Loveland and most of the Rockies. The
first settler here was said to be Mariano Medina. He established his
settlement near Namaqua just west of the present city on Highway 34. The
settlement was located on the Big Thompson River. The river being very
important to all settlements during those times. The Medina family grave site is still
located there in a park.
Downstream from where the Medina's a flour mill was located
in 1867 was a community called Old Saint Louis. One mile west of
downtown Old St
Louis the railroad established a line from Denver to Cheyenne in 1877.
David Barnes a farmer laid out a town next to the tracks on his farm.
Loveland's first developer named the town after his good friend W.A.H.
Loveland coincidently the President of the Colorado Central
Railroad at that time. There is an article I recently saw at
auction sale written in 1883. This article described the area as
follows. "The magnificent young commonwealth of Colorado has
much to boast of her marvelous mines, her wonderful grazing
lands, her superb agricultural districts, her splendid cities,
and her unprecedented march to progress, but more than all else, her self made men, or rather the men that made Colorado what she is.
Foremost among them was W.A.H Loveland."
Loveland's roots are in agriculture. With the
railroad it quickly established itself as a shipping point for the
cattle ranchers and for the lumber companies which had sprung up to
supply the ever growing town. In 1901 the Great Western Sugar company
established it's first sugar plant. This companies sugar mills can
still be seen in most of the small towns of this area. In Loveland it
is just south of highway 34 on the eastern edge of the old downtown
area. However, Great
Western has few left in actual production.
Back in 1954 when I first came through Loveland
heading for Ft. Collins to visit a high school friend. Loveland was a sleepy little town by most standards
but the people I knew from Loveland then seemed to be a happy bunch.
About 5,000 people were residents of Loveland then. The
shopping district was about three to four blocks long and two blocks
wide. It did straddle US 287 so every one drove through the middle of
town. It was and still is the entrance to Rocky Mountain National Park
40 miles or so west. One of the really nice features of Loveland is
there lake, called of course Lake Loveland. The kids I knew back then
all gravitated toward the lake for swimming and water skiing. Truly a
young persons place then. Now the same is true but it is more family
oriented. The lake is on west US 34.
Ah but then came the 60's and the 70's with Hewlett
Packard, Kodak, Water Pik and others moving to the area, growth
started in earnest. This was almost considered a gold rush but the
gold was employment. Many times towns in this area have been called
"one of the fastest growing" in America. another title often bestowed
is "a great place to retire". These titles of course can be good or
bad depending on your view. This growth has continued to this day and
at the moment shows no sign of slacking off.
Today Loveland is fast becoming the center of the
Northern Colorado Triangle area. This triangle is made up of Loveland,
Ft Collins and Greeley. In 2005-2007 Loveland has grown by leaps and
bounds as the I-25 Highway 34 intersection becomes a developers and
builders dream. Shopping Centers, medical centers, residential
building and offices are springing up everywhere as the interchange of
I-25 and US 34 races toward it's full potential.
There are articles through out this site if you are interested in the
growth of our fair city. Read more...
Loveland Colorado will be growing for quite sometime as more industry
and service companies find out about how good it is to live here
compared to the east and west coast. Loveland is the center for
universities, culture, the arts and shopping. See the links at left to
view all of Loveland Colorado advantages. |