By
Steven Wade Veatch
The tall spires and monoliths of the Garden of the
Gods have been a landmark to countless travelers and explorers. The story of these rocks starts long ago and
spans many periods of geologic time. About 65 million years ago, forces in the
Earth’s crust resulted in the uplift of buried Pikes Peak granite and the
bending and warping of overlying sedimentary rocks to a near vertical
position. This uplift, called the Laramide
Orogeny, formed a major fault, the Rampart Fault, that fractured rocks in the
area and caused their movement along this and other faults.
The Rampart Fault divides the Garden of the Gods Park. Rocks on the west side of the park are at an angle of 45 degrees or less. It is here that the rocks of the Fountain Formation, such as Balanced Rock, are on display. To the west were the Ancestral Rocky Mountains, formed 300 million years ago. Erosion washed down unsorted sand and pebbles of many sizes from the nearby Ancestral Rocky Mountains. By 250 million years ago these mountains were eroded away, leaving behind sediments piled up as gravels in layers that formed the Fountain Formation. This rock unit, up to 4,500 feet thick, has a dark red color from the chemical alteration of iron minerals.
Rocks east of the Rampart fault have been tilted more than 90 degrees from their original, horizontal position, such as the North Gateway Rock, which is formed from ancient sand dunes when the area was much drier and windier 280 million years ago when all the continents were joined into one giant landmass known as Pangaea. Today, geologists call this rock formation the Lyons Sandstone which is composed of uniform sized grains of sand. The Lyons Sandstone was deposited largely in a desert environment, and oxidation of iron to hematite caused the red color.
Archaeologists tell us people have visited the Garden
of the Gods for over 3,000 years. Before
the advent of settlers and their occupation, the plentiful game, wild plants,
and nearby water, made the park a good camping site for the Ute people and
other Indian tribes.
Starting in the 1800s, explorers spread the word of
the scenic wonders there. The 1850s and 1860s
brought gold prospectors through the region and others who stayed and farmed
and raised cattle in this area. With the
establishment of the railroad in the 1870s, tourists flocked to see the unusual
sandstone formations.
In 1879, General William Jackson Palmer, the founder
of Colorado Springs, persuaded his friend, Charles Elliot Perkins, to buy land
in Garden of the Gods. Perkins paid
$22.00 per acre for 480 acres that surrounded the Gateway Rocks. Perkins, who lived in Iowa, was the president
of the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad.
He never built on his land in Garden of the Gods and wanted his holdings
to become a public park. Perkins died before this could be arranged. In accordance with their father’s wishes,
Perkins’ children offered the land to the City of Colorado Springs with the
following restrictions: 1) the park will be free of charge to visitors; 2) the
park will be known as Garden of the Gods; 3) no liquors could be made or sold in
the park; and 4) no buildings could be built, other than those needed to
maintain the park.
Late in 1909, the Colorado Springs City Council
accepted the land and conditions. Today,
Garden of the Gods Park, with over 1,360 acres, is a national landmark
(designated in 1972 by the U.S. Department of the Interior) and a popular
destination for tourists from all over the world. We all owe a debt to the
Perkins family.