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Looking west on Water Street, Red Cliff, Colorado, in the winter. The horses and corral were the property of the Fleming Lumber Company; framing house on the right hand side of the street. First house on the left belonged to Tom Collins; second house was Earl Beck's. [Title supplied from catalog prepared by the Eagle County Historical Society.]
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Dessie Tomlin Beck holding her first son, Theodore "Bud" Beck at the corral where Tom and Dick are enclosed. Tom and Dick moved the Beck family from Salida to Red Cliff, probably in 1924.
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Three lumber wagons drawn by horse teams along a street in Red Cliff.
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Mike Walsh standing at the anvil in his blacksmith shop. Ferrier equipment, horseshoes visible in foreground and hanging from the rafters. "Saturday afternnon Mike Walsh and his son, Billy, stopped in town a short while, during which Mike visited with a number of old friends, among them the editor and Dr. Hotopp. Mike was eighty-six years of age a few days ago, and a number of his close friends threw a party in his honor on the occasion. More...
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Roy Tippett (L) and Buster Beck on horseback, posed in front of stacked mine timbers for the Gilman Mine. The house in the background belongs to the framer who worked for Fleming Lumber Company.
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Two individuals sits in a small buggy outside the Nims residence in Red Cliff. John D. Nims ran the "Eagle County Blade," a local newspaper published in Red Cliff from 1897 to 1911.