Showing 1 - 5 of 5 , query time: 0.01s
Cover Image
Format:
Image
The Brooks water wheel in 1970 showing signs of deterioration. Water wheels were common along the Colorado but the Brooks wheel is one of few still standing. [Title supplied from catalog prepared by the Eagle County Historical Society.]
Cover Image
Format:
Image
The Brooks water wheel on the Colorado River, near McCoy. Yarmony Mountain is in the background. Earl and Elsie Brooks sold the McCoy Hotel in 1919 to "Edith Stifel and purchased the former Charles Nelson place on the Colorado River. The place was badly rundown when Earl bought it and there were no improvements to speak of. So beginning from scratch they started the big undertaking of making it a modern ranch. Almost the first things which had to...
Cover Image
Format:
Image
Restoring the Brooks Water Wheel in the fall of 1993. "This past week, while Comer was reading a morning newspaper in his home, he heard a major crashing noise and immediately knew his beloved water wheel was taken out by the mighty high waters of the Colorado River." -- Raymond Bleesz, History in Need of Repair, Vail Daily June 4, 2014 p.A2
Cover Image
Format:
Image
Jesse Sherman, at left, owner of the Sherman Brothers Ranch, standing next to Skeet Koger, doing the irrigating of the potato crop. The potatoe types were "Red McClure and Ohio." By Marie Louise Ryan Special to The Sopris Sun "In the late 1800s Thomas McClure left his family against their wishes. He did so with a single motivation: to strike out on his own in the New World. He sold a prize brood sow to buy passage from Little Kenny, Ireland, and...
Cover Image
Format:
Image
Edward McHatton cultivates potatoes at his farm near Gypsum. A cabin is visible on the left.