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Harvesting Historical Riches
Goodnight Barn Gets Wake-up Call
“Don’t
mess with Texas.” This successful anti-litter slogan-turned-unofficial
Lone Star State motto did not stop Colorado Preservation, Inc. (CPI)
and the City of Pueblo from thwarting the National Ranching Heritage
Center’s attempt to buy a piece of Colorado history. The NRHC,
a Texas Tech-based museum and historical park interpreting ranching,
pioneer life, and the development of the livestock industry in North
America, approached the owners of the Goodnight Barn in Pueblo last
year. CPI discovered the plan to purchase the structure and relocate
it to Lubbock through the organization’s Endangered Places
Program nomination process for their annual Colorado’s Most
Endangered Places List. At the same time, the City of Pueblo stepped
up their efforts to find a way to purchase the property from the
private owner with support from the State Historical Fund.
Cattle baron and trailblazer Charles Goodnight established his Rock
Canon Ranch in 1870 on land formerly included within the Nolan Land
Grant near Pueblo. The ranch served as the northern headquarters
for the famous Goodnight-Loving Cattle Trail. Four years earlier,
Goodnight and his partner Oliver Loving drove a herd of two thousand
cows and steers from Texas to Fort Sumner in New Mexico. Goodnight
sold the steers to the local government contractor, earning twelve
thousand dollars in gold. Although Goodnight returned to Texas,
Loving continued north into Colorado, where he sold the remaining
cows and calves to John Iliff. Their pioneering cattle drive (and
many subsequent drives) not only established a new route to lucrative
markets, it helped to develop Colorado’s ranching industry.
As the Rock Canon Ranch’s only surviving structure, the Goodnight
Barn is one of Colorado’s most significant ranching-related
historic resources. Goodnight built the sturdy front-gable barn
using limestone quarried from nearby canyon walls. He fashioned
the beams, rafters, and distinctive wood doors by hand from native
timber.
Pueblo preservationists realized at once that losing the building
to the Ranching Heritage Center in Lubbock would devastate their
ability to interpret Colorado’s ranching history. As all preservationists
know, relocated buildings tell abridged stories about their past.
Therefore, if the Heritage Center moved the barn, even the people
fortunate enough to see the building in its new home would not be
able to appreciate its true significance.
Fortunately, CPI’s Most Endangered Places Program was created
to handle just this kind of situation. Established in 1997 and supported
in part by the State Historical Fund, this program identifies and
attempts to save historic resources threatened by vandalism, harsh
weather, neglect, encroaching development, or other hazards. Each
year, concerned citizens nominate around sixty properties to the
list. Volunteer committee members visit and evaluate the nominated
sites, meet to consider the merits of each nomination, and whittle
the list down to a dozen or so most historically significant and
most highly threatened resources. Then CPI’s board of directors
selects the final list based on recommendations of the committee
members. CPI announces Colorado’s Most Endangered Places List
at its annual Saving Places Conference each February. The Goodnight
Barn was one of seven properties listed in 2002.
As a statewide advocate for historic preservation, CPI offers technical
assistance, publicity, and other forms of aid to the stewards of
endangered places. In the case of the Goodnight Barn, listing facilitated
the City of Pueblo’s attempt to purchase the structure and
adjacent property. According to Scott Hobson, Department of Planning
and Development in Pueblo, CPI’s listing helped solidify local
efforts to secure matching funds for the project by broadening awareness
of and interest in the project from people outside Pueblo. The State
Historical Fund, the City of Pueblo, the Pueblo County Historical
Society, the Hudspeth Family Trust, the Frontier Pathways Scenic
and Historic Byway, and four other nonprofit foundations are contributing
to the project.
Future plans for the site include acquisition of nine additional
acres, the restoration and interpretation of the barn, and planning
for public use of the site. Colorado State Parks has expressed an
interest in purchasing 200 acres that would connect the barn site
to the Arkansas River and Lake Pueblo, setting the framework for
development of a riparian area that would connect the barn site
to riverfront trails. Descendants of the Hudspeth family, who owned
the property as a dairy farm, have approached CPI to provide photographs
and archival information about the site.
As of this writing, the final details of the property acquisition
were being hammered out by the City of Pueblo and the State Historical
Fund. All parties are confident that this important part of Colorado’s
heritage will not only remain in its current location, but will
be restored and opened to the public soon. Texans are welcome to
visit.
BY BEN FOGELBERG, Editor
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