Placer Theater in Fairplay, Colorado

Kodachrome. Date scanned: 2001-05-29. Identifier: NMHFM-350. Plastic mount; text on front of mount. Held in the National Mining Hall of Fame and Museum. Donor: Charles Burgess. Slide showing the Placer Theater in Fairplay, Park County, Colorado. At the time of the photograph, the Theater was playing...

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Colorado Digitization Project, National Mining Hall of Fame and Museum
Format: Still Image
Language:unknown
Published: Colorado School of Mines. Arthur Lakes Library 1941
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11124/9686
Description
Summary:Kodachrome. Date scanned: 2001-05-29. Identifier: NMHFM-350. Plastic mount; text on front of mount. Held in the National Mining Hall of Fame and Museum. Donor: Charles Burgess. Slide showing the Placer Theater in Fairplay, Park County, Colorado. At the time of the photograph, the Theater was playing the 1941 film "Back Street." Fairplay was established in 1859 when placer gold was discovered at the junction of Beaver Creek and the South Platte River. The founders of this new camp called it "Fair Play" referring to the treatment they vowed people would receive there as opposed to that of a nearby gold camp. During the 1860s, Fairplay developed into a supply center for the surrounding mining camps, and in 1867 it became the county seat. After most of the town burned to the ground in 1873, it was quickly rebuilt and most of the new buildings were made of stone. The Fairplay district's small placer claims were consolidated in the 1870s and only intermittently worked through the 1890s. Dredges were brought in to work the gold placers starting in 1922 and their operations continued intermittently into the 1950s. Although Fairplay began as a mining town, Sponsored by the Colorado State Library, the regional library systems of Colorado, and the Institute of Museum and Library Services.