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Papeton, Colorado

Papeton, Colorado (now Venetian Village)
Neighborhood
Etymology: John H. Pape
Papeton, Colorado (now Venetian Village) is located in Colorado
Papeton, Colorado (now Venetian Village)
Papeton, Colorado (now Venetian Village)
Papeton on a map of Colorado
Coordinates: 38°52′35″N 104°48′07″W / 38.87639°N 104.80194°W / 38.87639; -104.80194Coordinates: 38°52′35″N 104°48′07″W / 38.87639°N 104.80194°W / 38.87639; -104.80194
Country United States
State Colorado
Municipality Colorado Springs
Time zone MST (UTC−7)
 • Summer (DST) MDT (UTC−6)
Area code(s) 719
External images
Inactive Coal Mine Data and Subsidence Information for El Paso County (map)
Colorado Springs Central / Cragmor mines (map)
External images
Pike's Peak from Papeton (view 1), Denver Library Digital Collection
Pike's Peak from Papeton (view 2, the railroad train along present-day Nevada Avenue), Denver Library Digital Collection

Papeton, was a coal mining town, now in the area of Venetian Village, a neighborhood in Colorado Springs, Colorado, that is 1.4 miles (2.3 km) west southwest of Palmer Park. It is located at 6,184 feet (1,885 m) in elevation.

It was a coal mining town, named for Colorado Springs banker and broker John H. Pape, was inhabited by Southern European immigrants, many Italian, who came to Colorado directly after arriving in the United States at the turn of the 20th century. The town was inhabited by individuals who had mined at nearby Curtis, another mining town 1/2 a mile to the north, and moved to the town due to miner's labor issues after they were forcibly removed from their homes by strikebreakers. The 150 men, women and children were led by John Pape. The Curtis mine, established by W.W. Curtis in 1899, was a Cragmor area mine.

The plat for the town was filed on May 13, 1901 in which Pape divided up the land for the town into 180 lots. The town—bounded by the present El Paso Street, Templeton Gap Road, and Fillmore Street—had a steel company, power plant, farms, and a large greenhouse. Its street names were after states, like Virginia and Pennsylvania. Plans for a new two-room schoolhouse were made in 1908. A social program was implemented about 1919 by Professor A. P. R. Drucker and his students from Colorado College for immigrants to teach English, civics, history, and math. Wrestling and boxing classes were also taught as part of the program.

Nick Venetucci worked on the family farm in Papeton, where his Italian-born father was a coal-miner. Nick's brother died in an explosion on the farm. In 1942, 200 people lived in the town.

On May 27, 1922, a cloudburst flood, the most severe since 1880, occurred along Templeton Gap, a semi-circular basin surrounded by hills, and through Papeton. Papeton's streets were covered by up to 5 feet (1.5 m) of water. Barns, fences, and streets were washed out. Subsequently, there were water development construction projects by the federal government to protect Colorado Springs and Papeton from floods.

An airstrip was built on 320 acres owned by the Colorado Springs Company west of Papeton by Winfield E. Bowersox, who learned to fly and attained his pilot's license in 1913 from the Wright Aviation School. The airstrip was about four blocks from the end of the street car line. Papeton was adjacent to the Nichols Field in the 1950s.


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