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Colorado GenWeb Project 

 
 In memory of Lee Zion
CoGenWeb 1996-2008

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State Coordinator: Gail Meyer Kilgore 
Assistant State Coordinator: Colleen Pustola
Assistant State Coordinator: Sundee Anderson
COGenWeb Archives - File Manager: Martha A Crosley Graham
Tombstone Project Coordinator: Lee & Sandi Smith 
Tombstone Photo Project Coordinator: Wallace Miceli
Census Coordinator: Kathy Grace 
Photo Project: Need Volunteer! Need Volunteer! 
Historic Records Project: Need a Volunteer !

 


 




Links to Counties - County Table of Contents
 
 

Links

Colorado GenWeb Links

COGenWeb's Memorial Page
Memorial to Lee Zion
COGenWeb Queries
Colorado Counties
Colorado GenWeb Project - Spanish

Genealogical Societies

Colorado Genealogical Society
Colorado Council of Genealogical Societies
Colorado Genealogical Libraries
Colorado Historical Society

Other Helpful links

Colorado Dept of Health
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Notes
State of Colorado Official Site

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Special Projects

USGenWeb Colorado Archives Project
USGenWeb Colorado Archives Search Engine
Colorado Census Project - Images and transcriptions on line!
Colorado GenWeb Deeds Project
Colorado GraveStone Photo Project  
Colorado Digital Map Library
Colorado Migrations Project
The Colorado Military Pages - To Honor those who served
The Colorado Native Americans Genealogy and History page
Colorado Obituary Project
Colorado Photo Project
Colorado Places by County
COKidsGenWeb Project  Colorado Children's Genealogy Site

Cemeteries

Cemeteries sorted by name
Cemeteries sorted by county

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A Brief Colorado History

The territory of Jefferson was voted by the residents in 1859 but was never recognized by congress. Thus some of the counties have organization dates and records prior to 28 February 1861 when the Territory of Colorado was recognized.

The 1860 census showed a population of about 33,000 men, and 1,500 women in the gold camps along the front range. This was taken when Colorado was still split between Kansas, Nebraska, New Mexico and Utah.

The first territorial assembly created the first seventeen counties in September 1861. They were Arapahoe, Boulder, Clear Creek, Costilla, Douglas, El Paso, Fremont, Gilpin, Guadalupe (later named Conejos), Huerfano, Jefferson, Lake, Larimer, Park, Pueblo, Summit and Weld.

On August 1, 1876, President Ulysses S. Grant issued the proclamation of statehood. Colorado was the 38th state admitted to the Union.

The center of the state is approximately 1,500 miles west of the Eastern coast of the United States, 800 miles east of the Western coast, 650 miles south of the northern border with Canada and 475 miles north of the southern border with Mexico. Colorado is bounded on the east by the states of Kansas and Nebraska , on the north by Nebraska and Wyoming , on the west by Utah ,on the South West by Arizona and on the south by New Mexico and Oklahoma.

The boundary lines create an almost perfect rectangle, measuring approximately 387 miles from east to west and 276 miles from north to south and covering 104,247 square miles, including 450 square miles of bodies of water. Colorado is the eighth largest state when measured in square miles area.



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State Coordinator;  Gail Meyer Kilgore
Assistant State Coordinator: Colleen Pustola
Assistant State Coordinator: Sundee Anderson
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 This Site Updated: 11 May 2009
Martha A Crosley Graham
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