History of
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The history of the Black Forest area (Map 1) is
closely paralleled by that of a larger area traditionally known as the "Pineries". The area originally
extended from Divide, Colorado (in Teller County), through the present planning area and east along the Platte-Arkansas
Divide to a point where the Ponderosa Pines thinned out. Altogether the Pineries encompassed a 1,000 square mile
area. Although the origin of the name is not clear, that portion of the Pineries north of Colorado Springs became
known as the "Black Forest" by around the turn of the century.
Arrowheads and charcoal pits provide evidence that the planning area was occupied by Native Americans at least
800 years ago. The first known inhabitants were the Ute and Commanche Indians. The dense Ponderosa Pines provided
them with protection, fuel, and timber for lodgepoles. These tribes were displaced by the Kiowas around 1800. Almost
40 years later the Arapahoe and Cheyenne tribes joined forces to drive out the Kiowas and become the last Native
Americans to inhabit the area.
When white men began to settle the region in the late 1850's the Black Forest became an important center of activity,
primarily as a source of scarce timber. The first of what would be several dozen sawmills was constructed in 1860.
Lumber and mine props were supplied to build Colorado Springs and Denver. Logging in the Pineries reached its height
in the summer of 1870 when over 700 teamsters and 1,000 lumberjacks and tie hacks were employed, mostly for railway
work. More than one billion board feet of lumber were removed to provide ties for the Kansas Pacific, Denver and
Rio Grande and New Orleans Railroads.
Although lumbering continued sporadically through the 1950's, farming and ranching had become the dominant activities
by the 1880's. A wide variety of crops were raised including, cattle, sheep, alfalfa, wheat, corn, hay and beans.
Potatoes, however, were the agricultural product for which the Black Forest area became most renown. Agricultural
productivity was subject to boom and bust cycles with crops often ruined by drought, floods, hail, blizzards, or
grasshoppers. The drought of the 1920's and the Depression of the 1930's combined to eliminate most types of agriculture
in the planning area. By the 1920's the area was mostly consolidated into large ranches. Some of these remain today.
Several towns and settlements dotted the planning area at one time or another during its history. The largest and
most long-lived of these was the Town of Eastonville. Eastonville (actually located just to the east of the planning
area) was begun in the early 1880's as a stop on the C & S Railroad. Its population peaked at about 400 in
1910 and was already in decline when the railroad ceased operations in 1935. Today only a few remnants of the once
thriving townsite remain.
In the forest itself, modern subdivision had a fitful start in the 1920's when Dreamland and Brentwood Country
Clubs were organized. Although these ventures were not particularly successful, they did represent the beginning
of what would become a significant summer home market in the planning area. A boom in year-round subdivisions took
place in the late 1950's and early 1960's. Most of the planning area was zoned for five acre minimum lot sizes
in 1965.
Primarily in response to plans for a major transportation corridor through the eastern portion of the planning
area, residents and County staff initiated work on a comprehensive land use plan in the early 1970's. The result
of this effort was adoption of the Black Forest Preservation Plan in 1974. While this plan recommended rural-residential
uses for most of the planning area, it also delineated several large areas for mixed urban uses. The largest of
these was in the southeast where the new "city" of Latigo would later be proposed.
While Latigo has not materialized as envisioned, the Colorado Springs metropolitan area itself has expanded rapidly
in the direction of the planning area. During the same period numerous large lot residential subdivisions have
been platted and developed in the planning area, allowing it to retain much of its rural character and a good bit
of its historic legacy.
Some of this legacy is in the form of remaining historic sites and structures. Map 2 identifies many of these as well as some additional historic information. Those who wish
to study the history of the planning area in greater depth are advised to read Thunder, Sun and Snow
written by Judy von Ahlefeldt in 1979.