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"State Bridge road out of Wolcott." State Highway 131 going toward State Bridge. Field is 4 Eagle Ranch, north of Wolcott.
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"Wolcott." Coming from State Bridge on Colo. State Hwy 131, into Wolcott. Buildings on the left are now Gallegos Masonry. Concrete arch bridge is visible at center. The Wolcott Store and gas station are on the far right. Jouflas ranch is at the left. U.S. Highway 6 parallels the Eagle River at midfield.
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Highway 6 & 24, plowed after snowfall, near Wolcott, Colorado. Train in distance.
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44) Homan
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Homan [probably Fletcher Bliss Homan] smoking a cigar at Kent.
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"The Horn Family at Wolcott, Colo. in 1960. Leonard, Dorothy, Don Gates, Harold, Lulu, Mabel, Gail and Pamela Horn and a Branscomb boy. All are living, except Don who died in a tragic ranch accident while haying in Axil Basin in 1966." -- McCoy Memoirs, p. 120 [Title supplied from catalog prepared by the Eagle County Historical Society.]
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The house was built in 1880-90's. It was moved from Keystone mines near Oak Creek in 1944 to the Leonard Horn Ranch. The house was sawed in half to get accross the frozen Colorado River at State Bridge in order to make the move. There is a barbed wire fence in the foreground and a rug airing on the porch rail.
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Irene, left, and Maude Harper, seated on steps next to a building in Wolcott.
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Jack Booco and Leonard Horn on horseback in 1921. [Title supplied from catalog prepared by the Eagle County Historical Society.]
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Jim Homan and Kate Flynn at the Wolcott depot, 1919.
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Jimmie Breen standing on the tracks at Wolcott, Colorado, on a cold day.
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Jimmy Sudduth standing outside the Sudduth home in Wolcott. There is a boardwalk to the house, in an attempt to keep mud outside the living areas.
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Joe Sudduth standing in the doorway of the Sudduth home in Wolcott. There is a boardwalk to the house, in an attempt to keep mud outside the living areas.
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Photo postcard of John Hartman at 2 years of age. He is sitting in a pull cart on a lawn.
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Studio portrait photograph of John Welsh, original homesteader and owner of the J over J Ranch, now (2009) 4 Eagle Ranch 4 miles north of Wolcott. He is wearing a three-piece suit with tie tack and a Masonic pin in his lapel. John Welsh also built a house on Wall Street in Eagle, Colorado, where the family of Charles and Sallie (Welsh) Hartman stayed during the winter so the children could attend school. John Welsh lost the Ranch in 1929 or 1930...
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Kate Flynn in traveling clothes near Wolcott in 1917. Inscription reads: "On my way."
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Kate Flynn, Fletcher B. Homan and Thomas at the Wolcott station. Fletcher B. Homan was the Denver and Rio Grande agent at Wolcott. [submitted by John J. Flynn, Jr.]
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The Koprinikar [Koprivnikar] ranch east of Wolcott, with barn and Mormon stacker. The ranch is now the Eagle Springs Golf Club at Wolcott. The barn has been incorporated into the course.
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Leonard Horn on Red Point, on the north side of the Eagle River near Wolcott. He frequently jumped his horse across the crevice between the cliff and the hillside. The Horn ranch is visible at far left.
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A $1,000 government subsidy was used to build this house on the Leonard Horn Ranch in 1944, during World War II.
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"Built in 1890, this old building at Wolcott, Colorado is still in good condition." -- McCoy Memoirs p.332 [Title supplied from catalog prepared by the Eagle County Historical Society.]