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词条 Larimer County, Colorado
释义

  1. History

     Early history  Railroads  Agriculture 

  2. Geography

     Adjacent counties  National protected areas  State protected areas 

  3. Demographics

  4. Communities

     Cities  Towns  Census-designated places  Unincorporated communities  Ghost towns 

  5. Politics

  6. Education

  7. Recreation

     Prehistoric site  National trails  Bicycle route  Scenic byways  Other features and attractions 

  8. See also

  9. Notes

  10. References

  11. External links

{{Infobox U.S. county
| county = Larimer County
| state = Colorado
| ex image = Colorado State University Spruce Hall.jpg
| ex image size = 220px
| ex image cap = Colorado State University Historic Spruce Hall.
| seal =
| founded year = 1861
| founded date = November 1
| seat wl = Fort Collins
| largest city wl = Fort Collins
| area_total_sq_mi = 2634
| area_land_sq_mi = 2596
| area_water_sq_mi = 38
| area percentage = 1.4%
| coordinates = {{coord|40.65|-105.46|display=title,inline|type:adm2nd_region:US-CO_source:UScensus1990}}
| census estimate yr = 2017
| pop = 343976
| density_sq_mi = 133
| time zone = Mountain
| web = www.co.larimer.co.us
| named for = William Larimer, Jr.
| district = 2nd
| footnotes =
}}

Larimer County is one of the 64 counties in the U.S. state of Colorado. As of the 2010 census, the population was 299,630.[1] The county seat and most populous city is Fort Collins.[2] The county was named for William Larimer, Jr.,[3] the founder of Denver.

Larimer County comprises the Fort Collins, CO Metropolitan Statistical Area. The county is located at the northern end of the Front Range, at the edge of the Colorado Eastern Plains along the border with Wyoming.

History

Larimer County was created in 1861 as one of seventeen original counties in the Colorado Territory; however, its western boundary was disputed. Controversy existed as to whether Larimer County ended at the Medicine Bow Range or at the Continental Divide thirty miles farther west. An 1886 Colorado Supreme Court decision set the boundary at the Continental Divide, although the land between the Medicine Bow Range and the divide was made part of Jackson County in 1909.

Unlike that of much of Colorado, which was founded on the mining of gold and silver, the settlement of Larimer County was based almost entirely on agriculture, an industry that few thought possible in the region during the initial days of the Colorado Gold Rush. The mining boom almost entirely passed the county by. It would take the introduction of irrigation to the region in the 1860s to bring the first widespread settlement to the area.

Early history

At the time of the arrival of Europeans in the early 19th century, the present-day county was occupied by Native Americans, with the Utes occupying the mountainous areas and the Cheyenne and Arapaho living on the piedmont areas along the base of the foothills. French fur trappers infiltrated the area in the early decades of the 19th century, soon after the area became part of the United States with the Louisiana Purchase and was organized as part of the Missouri Territory. In 1828 William H. Ashley ascended the Cache la Poudre River on his way to the Green River in present-day Utah. The river itself received its name in the middle 1830s from an obscure incident in which French-speaking trappers hid gunpowder along its banks, somewhere near present-day Laporte or Bellvue. In 1848 a group of Cherokee crossed through the county following the North Fork of the Poudre to the Laramie Plains on their way to California along a route that became known as the Cherokee Trail.

The area of county was officially opened to white settlement following negotiations with the Cheyenne and Arapaho in the 1858 Treaty of Fort Laramie, by which time the area was part of the Nebraska Territory. The first U.S. settlers arrived that same year in a party led by Antoine Janis from Fort Laramie. Janis, who had visited the area near Bellvue in 1844 and proclaimed it "the most beautiful place on earth", returned to file his official claim and helped found the first U.S. settlement in present-day Colorado, called Colona, just west of Laporte. Nearly simultaneously, Mariano Medina established Fort Namaqua along the Big Thompson River just west of present-day Loveland. The first irrigation canals were established along the Poudre in the 1860s.

In 1862 the settlement established by Janis became a stagecoach stop along the Overland Stage Route which was established because of threats of attacks from Native Americans on the northern trails in Wyoming. In 1861, Laporte was designated as the first county seat after the organization of the Colorado Territory. In 1862, the United States Army established an outpost near Laporte that was designated as Camp Collins. A devastating flood in June 1864 wiped out the outpost, forcing the Army to seek a better location. At the urging of Joseph Mason, who had settled along the Poudre in 1860, the Army relocated its post downstream adjacent to Mason's land along the Overland stage route. The site of the new post became the nucleus of the town of Fort Collins, incorporated in 1873 after the withdrawal of the Army. By that time, Mason and others had convinced the Colorado Territorial Legislature to designate the new town as the county seat. In 1870, the legislature designated Fort Collins as the location of the state agricultural college (later Colorado State University), although the institution would exist only on paper for another decade while local residents sought money to construct the first campus buildings. In 1873, Robert A. Cameron and other members of the Greeley Colony established the Fort Collins Agricultural Colony, which greatly expanded the grid plan and population of Fort Collins.

Railroads

One of the primary goals of the early citizens of the county was the courting of railroads. County residents were disappointed when the Denver Pacific Railroad bypassed the county in 1870 in favor of Greeley. The first railroad finally arrived in the county in 1877 when the Colorado Central Railroad extended a line north from Golden via Longmont to Cheyenne. The town council of Fort Collins designated right-of-way through the center of town (and through the campus of the unbuilt college) for the line, creating a contentious issue to this day.

Along the new railroad sprung up the new platted towns of Loveland and Berthoud, named respectively after the president and chief surveyor of the Colorado Central. Likewise Wellington (founded in 1903) was named for a railroad employee. The Greeley, Salt Lake and Pacific Railroad arrived three years later as a subsidiary of the Union Pacific Railroad, with the intention of creating a transcontinental line over Cameron Pass. Although the line was never extended over the mountains, it opened up the quarrying of stone for the railroad at Stout, furnishing another industry for the region. The brief attempt at the mining of gold in the region centered at the now ghost town of Manhattan in the Poudre Canyon.

Agriculture

The early growth of agriculture, which depended highly on direct river irrigation, experienced a second boom in 1902 with the introduction of the cultivation of sugar beets, accompanied by the construction of the large processing plant of the Great Western Sugar Co. in Loveland. In the following decade, the sugar beet industry brought large numbers of German emigrants from the Russian Empire to the county. The neighborhoods of Fort Collins northeast of the Poudre were constructed largely to house these new families.

A significant increase in the agricultural productivity of the region came in the 1930s with the construction of the Colorado Big Thompson Project following the Great Depression, sort of a third boom for the agricultural industry around Fort Collins. This project collected and captured Western Slope water, and carried it over to the Front Range Colorado counties of Boulder, Larimer and Weld, along with an extensive water storage and distribution system, which significantly extended the irrigable growing season and brought substantial additional land under irrigation for the first time.

Geography

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the county has a total area of {{convert|2634|sqmi}}, of which {{convert|2596|sqmi}} is land and {{convert|38|sqmi}} (1.4%) is water.[4]

Adjacent counties

  • Laramie County, Wyoming—northeast
  • Weld County—east
  • Boulder County—south
  • Grand County—southwest
  • Jackson County—west
  • Albany County, Wyoming—northwest

National protected areas

  • Cache La Poudre Wilderness
  • Comanche Peak Wilderness
  • Neota Wilderness
  • Rawah Wilderness
  • Rocky Mountain National Park
  • Roosevelt National Forest

State protected areas

  • Boyd Lake State Park
  • Lory State Park

Demographics

{{US Census population
|1870= 838
|1880= 4892
|1890= 9712
|1900= 12168
|1910= 25270
|1920= 27872
|1930= 33137
|1940= 35539
|1950= 43554
|1960= 53343
|1970= 89900
|1980= 149184
|1990= 186136
|2000= 251494
|2010= 299630
|estyear=2017
|estimate=343976
|estref=[5]
|align-fn=center
|footnote=U.S. Decennial Census[6]
1790–1960[7] 1900–1990[8]
1990–2000[9] 2010–2015[1]
}}

As of the census[10] of 2000, there were 251,494 people, 97,164 households, and 63,156 families residing in the county. The population density was 97 people per square mile (37/km²). There were 105,392 housing units at an average density of 40 per square mile (16/km²). The racial makeup of the county was 91.44% White, 0.66% Black or African American, 0.66% Native American, 1.56% Asian, 0.08% Pacific Islander, 3.41% from other races, and 2.19% from two or more races. 8.27% of the population were Hispanic or Latino of any race.

There were 97,164 households out of which 31.70% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 53.60% were married couples living together, 7.90% had a female householder with no husband present, and 35.00% were non-families. Of all households 23.40% were made up of individuals and 6.30% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.52 and the average family size was 2.99.

In the county, the population was spread out with 23.80% under the age of 18, 14.20% from 18 to 24, 30.70% from 25 to 44, 21.80% from 45 to 64, and 9.60% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 33 years. For every 100 females there were 99.90 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 98.20 males.

The median income for a household in the county was $48,655, and the median income for a family was $58,866. Males had a median income of $40,829 versus $27,859 for females. The per capita income for the county was $23,689. About 4.30% of families and 9.20% of the population were below the poverty line, including 6.80% of those under age 18 and 4.40% of those age 65 or over.

Communities

Cities

  • Fort Collins
  • Loveland

Towns

  • Berthoud (partially in Larimer and partially in Weld county)
  • Estes Park
  • Johnstown (partially in Larimer and partially in Weld county)
  • Timnath
  • Wellington
  • Windsor (partially in Larimer and partially in Weld County)

Census-designated places

  • LaPorte
  • Red Feather Lakes

Unincorporated communities

{{div col|colwidth=22em}}
  • Bellvue
  • Buckeye
  • Campion
  • Cherokee Park
  • Drake
  • Glendevey
  • Glen Haven
  • Livermore
  • Kinikinik
  • Masonville
  • Pinewood Springs
  • Pingree Park
  • Poudre Park
  • Rustic
  • Teds Place
  • Waverly
{{div col end}}

Ghost towns

  • Manhattan
  • Old Roach
  • Virginia Dale

Politics

Larimer was previously a Republican stronghold. Between 1920 and 2004, the only Democrat to ever win an absolute majority of votes in the county was Lyndon Johnson in 1964. However, increasing urbanization, as well as the influence of Colorado State, caused the Republican margins to decline steadily in the 1990s and early 2000s. In 2008, Barack Obama became the first Democrat to carry the county with the majority of the vote since 1964, and in so doing recorded the best performance by a Democrat since the days of Woodrow Wilson and William Jennings Bryan.

{{Hidden begin
|titlestyle = background:#ccccff;
|title = Presidential election results
}}
Larimer County vote
by party in presidential elections
[11]
Year Republican Democratic Others
42.6% 83,4309.9% 19,438
45.7% 82,3762.8% 5,057
44.3% 73,6421.8% 2,910
51.8% 75,8841.6% 2,286
52.7% 62,4298.5% 10,053
47.1% 45,93510.8% 10,550
36.1% 35,99525.5% 25,433
55.3% 45,9671.7% 1,396
66.7% 49,8831.4% 1,069
56.5% 36,24016.9% 10,817
60.7% 32,1693.4% 1,809
65.0% 27,4622.5% 1,041
62.1% 18,4387.0% 2,086
47.3% 11,6360.7% 173
67.4% 15,6710.2% 34
71.8% 14,3640.2% 39
72.9% 14,4840.6% 110
57.6% 9,8130.9% 154
65.5% 9,9140.4% 58
62.2% 10,7200.7% 126
47.6% 7,2433.0% 457
49.9% 7,0404.1% 584
70.9% 8,2131.4% 162
66.7% 6,53813.3% 1,301
64.3% 5,4873.9% 333
34.2% 2,7976.3% 518
27.0% 1,93236.8% 2,632{{efn|The leading "other" candidate, Progressive Theodore Roosevelt, received 1,661 votes, while Socialist candidate Eugene Debs received 546 votes, Prohibition candidate Eugene Chafin received 401 votes, and Socialist Labor candidate Arthur Reimer received 24 votes.}}
{{Hidden end}}

Education

  • Park R3 (Estes Park)[12]
  • Poudre R1 (Fort Collins & Surrounding Area)
  • Thompson R2-J (Berthoud & Loveland)

Fort Collins is home to Colorado State University.

Recreation

Prehistoric site

  • Lindenmeier Site

National trails

  • Continental Divide National Scenic Trail
  • Greyrock Mountain National Recreation Trail
  • Mount McConnel National Recreation Trail
  • Round Mountain National Recreation Trail

Bicycle route

  • Great Parks Bicycle Route
  • Poudre River Trail
  • Spring Creek Trail
  • Mason Trail
  • Fossil Creek Trail
  • Cathy Fromme Prairie Natural Area
  • Power Trail
  • Loveland's Recreation Trail

Scenic byways

  • Cache La Poudre-North Park Scenic and Historic Byway
  • Peak to Peak Scenic and Historic Byway
  • Trail Ridge Road/Beaver Meadow National Scenic Byway

Other features and attractions

  • Poudre Canyon
  • Horsetooth Mountain
  • Big Thompson Canyon
  • Medicine Bow Mountains
  • Front Range
{{clear}}

See also

{{portal|Geography|North America||United States|Colorado}}
  • Colorado census statistical areas
  • Fort Collins-Loveland Metropolitan Statistical Area
  • Front Range Urban Corridor
  • Heele County, Jefferson Territory
  • Index of Colorado-related articles
  • National Register of Historic Places listings in Larimer County, Colorado
  • Outline of Colorado
  • Justin Smith, sheriff of Larimer County since 2011

Notes

{{notelist}}

References

1. ^{{cite web|title=State & County QuickFacts|url=http://quickfacts.census.gov/qfd/states/08/08069.html|publisher=United States Census Bureau|accessdate=June 8, 2014|deadurl=yes|archiveurl=https://www.webcitation.org/6098VeL3h?url=http://quickfacts.census.gov/qfd/states/08/08069.html|archivedate=July 13, 2011|df=}}
2. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.naco.org/Counties/Pages/FindACounty.aspx|accessdate=2011-06-07|title=Find a County|publisher=National Association of Counties}}
3. ^{{cite book|last=Gannett|first=Henry|title=The Origin of Certain Place Names in the United States|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=9V1IAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA181|year=1905|publisher=U.S. Government Printing Office|page=181}}
4. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.census.gov/geo/www/gazetteer/gazette.html|publisher=United States Census Bureau|accessdate=2011-04-23|date=2011-02-12|title=US Gazetteer files: 2010, 2000, and 1990}}
5. ^{{cite web|url=https://factfinder.census.gov/faces/nav/jsf/pages/index.xhtml|title=American FactFinder|accessdate=March 23, 2018}}
6. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.census.gov/prod/www/decennial.html|title=U.S. Decennial Census|publisher=United States Census Bureau|accessdate=June 8, 2014}}
7. ^{{cite web|url=http://mapserver.lib.virginia.edu|title=Historical Census Browser|publisher=University of Virginia Library|accessdate=June 8, 2014}}
8. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.census.gov/population/cencounts/co190090.txt|title=Population of Counties by Decennial Census: 1900 to 1990|publisher=United States Census Bureau|accessdate=June 8, 2014}}
9. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.census.gov/population/www/cen2000/briefs/phc-t4/tables/tab02.pdf|title=Census 2000 PHC-T-4. Ranking Tables for Counties: 1990 and 2000|publisher=United States Census Bureau|accessdate=June 8, 2014}}
10. ^{{cite web|url=http://factfinder2.census.gov|publisher=United States Census Bureau|accessdate=2011-05-14|title=American FactFinder}}
11. ^{{cite web|url=http://uselectionatlas.org/RESULTS/|title=Dave Leip's Atlas of U.S. Presidential Elections|first=David|last=Leip|website=uselectionatlas.org|accessdate=May 26, 2017}}
12. ^Park R3

External links

{{commons category|Larimer County, Colorado}}
  • {{official|http://www.co.larimer.co.us}}
  • Rocky Mountain National Park website
  • [https://web.archive.org/web/20070205102713/http://www.stanwyck.com/cogenweb/cocounties.html Colorado County Evolution by Don Stanwyck]
  • Colorado Historical Society
  • Community website for Larimer County specifically Fort Collins and the surrounding areas.
{{Geographic Location
|Centre = Larimer County, Colorado
|North =
|Northeast = Laramie County, Wyoming
|East = Weld County
|Southeast =
|South = Boulder County
|Southwest = Grand County
|West = Jackson County
|Northwest = Albany County, Wyoming
}}{{Larimer County, Colorado}}{{Colorado}}

4 : Larimer County, Colorado|1861 establishments in Colorado Territory|Colorado counties|Populated places established in 1861

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