By Steven Wade Veatch
On August 10, 1908, a visitor to the
Pikes Peak region traveled up the dusty, winding road through South Cheyenne Cañon.
This road, long hailed as "The Grandest Mile of Scenery" in Colorado,
ends at Seven Falls, a tourist attraction since the early 1880s. Fascinated
with the sights along the way, he bought a postcard at the local curio shop to commemorate
his tour.
Moved by the striking geology along
the road, he began to consider the geologic processes at work. He observed how
South Cheyenne Creek relentlessly carved down through the faulted Pikes Peak
Granite to create the cañon. He wrote messages on both sides of the postcard to
remember how these geologic wonders moved him on that summer’s day. On
the front of the postcard, he wrote:
On either side are perpendicular walls, nearly a thousand
feet high and at one place, but forty feet apart, barely giving room for the
creek and roadway between them. Indeed, the whole space was originally occupied
by the stream, which had to be crowded from its bed. Saw this Aug. 9, 1908.
And then, on the back of the
postcard, he typed:
Before us are two tremendous cliffs “The Pillars of
Hercules.” They seem to stand squarely across the cañon, completely filling it
and demanding a halt. The way seems barred, and the stranger is at a loss to
know which way to go, but the brook has found a way and so must we. Here is a
most wonderful demonstration of the action of water. For hundreds of feet the
cañon at this point has been worn through the solid granite.
The anonymous visitor did not mail
the postcard but kept it with his important papers and keepsakes. That this
postcard has lasted all these decades is as remarkable as the magnificent
mountain scenery it portrays. The cañon continues to this day to impress
visitors.
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