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A Look Into The
Paparazzi Window
A ghost town without the ghosts
The gravestone declared his life ended in
Edgerton, Colo. in 1878.
Where is Edgerton Colorado?
As I soon found out, the question should have
been, where "was" Edgerton Colorado?
I visited the spot where the town once was...

Edgerton Colorado
The town site of Edgerton was located in the Ice Lake trailhead
parking lot area and in the vicinity of AFA’s Services and Supply
complex. Edgerton had homes on both sides of Monument Creek here.
Mr. David Edgerton first settled into this area in 1868. In the 1869
timeframe, the Pueblo to Denver stagecoach stopped three times a
week at a large two story home built by Harlow Teachout. This
two-story home, called the Edgerton House, was located to the nearby
south.
The Edgerton House had 8 rooms upstairs and a large dining room on
the main level. The area around it became a popular health resort.
As many as 200 tents could be seen gathered around the house during
the summer months. An advertisement in 1874 cited "Fine riding
horses, plenty of sweet cream and milk, board $7.00 a week." The
tracks of the D&RG were built near the house. Across to the east of
the Ice lake trailhead, Edgerton had access to the Santa Fe
Railroad. The community boasted several cattle and coal businesses,
but those weren’t the most regarded commodities or "crops" produced
locally. The big "crop" was ICE! Edgerton’s Ice Lake was
appropriately named by the citizens—as it was THE source of ice in
the town. Built in the 1880’s, the man-made lake was solely used for
ice production. Ice was the primary source of Edgerton’s income, and
the town’s own Cascade Ice Company drove the market. The ice would
be cut from the lake, then either shipped on special railcars, or
stored in large ice storage buildings and sold throughout the summer
to keep food cool on the railroads. The specially made stone and
wood buildings that stored the ice used sawdust between the inner
and outer walls as insulation. Believe it or not it worked!
Sometimes the ice would last throughout the summer in these
much-insulated buildings! Ice production and distribution was a big
deal back then…refrigerators weren’t invented yet! Along with
Edgerton, Monument and Palmer Lake also had ice production
operations on their respective lakes. We’ll learn more about ice
production when we visit Monument. Population-wise: the year 1891
saw fifty people living in Edgerton; by 1902, its population had
grown to 350.
(Author: Jack Anthony)











Mr. Anthony provided the following for sharing,
after he found this web page:
History Trail Run-Edgerton
by Jack Anthony, 29 Jan 2005
This is the second in a series of articles providing New Santa Fe
Regional Trail enthusiasts insight into the rich history of
communities and people who lived nearby this recreational trail.
This article introduces historical tidbits of the life and times
around the Air Force Academy’s Ice Lake area. The New Santa Fe
Regional Trail starts here and heads north to Palmer Lake.
Mr. David Edgerton homesteaded 160 acres here in 1872. The Denver &
Rio Grande Western railroad came right through Mr. Edgerton’s
property. From Edgerton’s ranch rose a village bearing his name.
Edgerton was first recognized 1877 Colorado Business Directory as
being a railroad station. The town of Edgerton grew with the
addition of the VC Lewis Hotel and post office in 1881. Also in this
time Dr A.W. Beach was the local doctor in Edgerton. By 1890,
Edgerton’s population was 50 citizens. Soon W.M. Smith established a
General Store, he was also the postmaster. By 1902 Edgerton had
grown to 350 people. Many of Edgerton citizens were people suffering
from lung disease (they were called “lungers”) who came for the
beneficial effects of the cool, dry air of Colorado. Later the
Woodmen Sanatorium would be established in the Woodmen Valley
(today’s Rockrimmon area) for these health seekers.
In 1893 the Cascade Ice Company was first noted in the Colorado
Business Directory. Their business was ICE! Ice harvesting and
distribution was a big deal back then…remember, refrigerators
weren’t invented yet! The Cascade Ice Company constructed several
stone dams on the West Branch of the Monument Creek and created
three small lakes for cutting blocks of ice in the wintertime. The
present Ice Lake was built in 1969. Except for some stone dam ruins,
there’s no evidence of the original Cascade Company’s “Ice Lakes.”
The railroad built two sidings off the main route that enabled the
Cascade Ice Company workers to load blocks of ice directly onto
specially insulated railroad box cars. These railcars had thick
wooden walls and often used sawdust between the inner and outer
layers to provide insulation. Once loaded, a passing freight train
stop along here, the brakeman would throw the switch, the train
would back up into the spur, connect and take away the ice laden box
car. Along with Edgerton, Monument and Palmer Lake also had ice
production operations on their respective lakes. When the highway
from Colorado Springs to Denver was built in the early 1920’s the
road by-passed Edgerton and it faded away as a village.
District 20’s first grammar school was located near here. It was on
the mesa about a ¼ mile west of the Ice Lake trailhead. Hints of an
old road leading northwest up to the Edgerton School can still be
seen (barely!) from where the access road crosses the railroad
tracks and leads east to the trailhead parking area. The Edgerton
School was built in 1874 and held classes until 1915. Kids from as
far away as the Woodmen Valley would walk or ride horses to attend
grades 1-8 at Edgerton School. Recess was great—the kids would fish
in the Monument Creek and I’m sure they also dropped their lines
into the Cascade Company’s lakes. The school met with some
controversy when Woodmen Valley area parents petitioned to have
transportation for their kids. The director of the school denied the
request—perhaps he was a cross country coach and wanted the kids to
get some distance training in! In early 1915, the Woodmen parents
got the OK to have a school built in the Woodmen Valley. By fall
that year, the new school was built where the Woodmen Center is
located today and the Edgerton School was closed. I wish to thank
Sharon Cunningham, local author and history enthusiast, who shared
with me info she learned in researching the Woodmen Valley and
Edgerton schools. Sharon is capturing the School District 20 history
in a book!
Edgerton area was as serene back then as it is today. However, one
day in 1886 a mysterious murder occurred. Frank Hall captured the
story of the Edgerton murder in an 1891 essay on El Paso County
history. An elderly lady and her grandson stayed behind at their
Edgerton ranch while the widowed mother went east to Boston on an
extended trip. The two lived quietly together and would occasionally
go to Denver for a week or so. Thus, the air of desertion around the
ranch was not unusual, but after what appeared to be a longer than
normal absence, the neighbors grew suspicious--something wasn’t
right! So the concerned neighbors investigated. They found the house
vacant, but noticed the dinner table was set for three! Only two
people lived here, who was the third place setting for? That will
forever remain a mystery! Then, the neighbors went to the barn and
found the normally secured barn door was broken into. Upon entering
they discovered the bodies of the lady and the child. It was
believed they were attacked in the house and sought refuge in the
barn, but met with death there. The murder remains an unsolved
mystery of that era.
Next time I will share some insight into the life and times of two
pioneer families who homesteaded this area in 1871-72 timeframe. The
Lennox family homesteaded northwest of the Ice Lake trailhead and
the Young family established their sheep ranch about a mile north of
Ice Lake. Each family kept detailed accounts of their efforts to
settle in the wild west. Mary Eliza Young kept a diary that
chronicled how the Young homestead was established and in 1872
14-year old Elizabeth Lennox also kept a journal. Mary and her
youthful neighbor to the south captured their family’s life as they
settled, prospered and persevered as Colorado pioneers.