Born out of the 1859 Pikes Peak gold rush, Boulder sits along the Front Range where the Rocky Mountains meet the plains. Discoveries of gold, silver, telluride, and coal nearby put the little supply town on the map, and early miners, farmers, and businessmen prospered there. The railroads arrival in 1873 brought more newcomers who cultivated a diverse community full of new businesses, social organizations, and schools, and the town flourished despite the social problems and economic fluctuations that were typical of early mining towns. By the 1890s, education, health, and tourism had become significant to Boulders economic development, a pattern that continues to this day. Great change came about during the early 1900s in the form of a citywide alcohol prohibition, the influenza epidemic, and the closure of the Switzerland Trail railroad in 1919, but Boulder weathered these difficult times even as it witnessed the end of the great railroading era.
Vol 47, No 1 First Pres Church Membership List, Nov 1926, Pt I: Alcorn-Fox James Robert Thomas (1838-1909) The Henry Blake Family of Boulder Left Hand United Brethren Church (Niwot United) Vol 47, No 2 First Pres Ch Membership List, Nov 1926, Part II: Fraser-Matthews Present at both Gettysburg and the Siege of Vicksburg? Confirming the Accuracy of a Family Story Tourism in Early Eldorado Springs Boulder County's Civil War Soldiers, Part I: A-B Vol 47, No 3 First Pres Church Membership List, Nov 1926, Part II: Matthieson-Smith Letters to Percy: from Edyth and Ida The Lost Ancestor: A Book Review Boulder County's Civil War Soldiers, Part II: C-E John Kinion, Civil War Soldier Vol 47, No 4 First Presbyterian Church Membership List, Nov 1926, Part IV: Smithies-Zinser Affiliated Members: 10 Oct 1926 Boulder County's Civil War Soldiers, Part III: F-H Letters to Percy from Jenny Lee Six Barker Brothers of the Cumberland Hills of Virginia A House Divided
Superintendent of Schools Visitation Records, 1890-1910: Parts I-IV of a Series; The Flood of 2014; Sacred Heart of Jesus and Sacred Heart of Mary Catholic Churches, Boulder, CO: Sacramental Records 1890; Lyman Franklin Rounds: Civil War Soldier; Boulder CO Land Records Reflect Local and State History; Boulder, CO Marriages, 1890; Salt Lake City Battle Plan; John Marshall Richards(on) 1838-1890; Unregistered Voters, Boulder, CO, Monday, 6 Nov 1882; How to Get from Here to There; Heroes, Cranks and Wild, Wild, Women: Allenspark's Characters; Pedigree Charts for: Walter James Sharp, Jane McMillan Hamilton, James Barbour, Edith DeCoster, Karlene Raye Howell, Gerald Dill Ferguson, Ethel Belle Fox, John Elisha Harrington, Rose Anna Marsh, John W Braden, Roberta May Thompson, and Aura J VoVillia
Whether it is to understand the networks of individuals, the physical makeup of a household or community, or to develop strategies for finding difficult-to-reach populations such as the homeless or drug-addicted, applied researchers increasingly need to understand spatial methods. In this brief volume, the techniques of network analysis, mapping, and finding hidden populations are explained in simple, practical language. The authors describe when and how to use these techniques and offer numerous examples of how the methods have worked in community psychology, drug research, risk assessment, and network analysis, among other settings.
Born out of the 1859 Pikes Peak gold rush, Boulder sits along the Front Range where the Rocky Mountains meet the plains. Discoveries of gold, silver, telluride, and coal nearby put the little supply town on the map, and early miners, farmers, and businessmen prospered there. The railroads arrival in 1873 brought more newcomers who cultivated a diverse community full of new businesses, social organizations, and schools, and the town flourished despite the social problems and economic fluctuations that were typical of early mining towns. By the 1890s, education, health, and tourism had become significant to Boulders economic development, a pattern that continues to this day. Great change came about during the early 1900s in the form of a citywide alcohol prohibition, the influenza epidemic, and the closure of the Switzerland Trail railroad in 1919, but Boulder weathered these difficult times even as it witnessed the end of the great railroading era.
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