More From Linda DuVal

Featured image for “Capturing the past”
Featured image for “Pat Garrett shot Billy the Kid in the back … or did he?”
Featured image for “Colorado’s premier cookbook still going strong with over a million copies sold”

Colorado’s premier cookbook still going strong with over a million copies sold

Colorado Cache satisfies appetites over generations

By Linda DuVal | September 19, 2024
The Colorado Cache Cookbook started out as a venture to make a little money for charity but ended up as a recipe for a philanthropic powerhouse. The hefty spiral-bound cookbook, first published in 1978 by the Junior League of Denver, has sold more than one million copies, with its proceeds benefiting dozens of various charities in the Denver area.
Read More
Featured image for “Open your eyes and read about where you are”
Featured image for “In Memoriam: Author and adventurer Stewart Green”

About Linda DuVal


Linda DuVal was an award-winning reporter/feature writer/section editor at The Gazette in Colorado Springs for 32 years. She has been a freelancer for the past 20 years and has co-authored a guidebook (Insider’s Guide to Colorado Springs) and published a novel (The Lightkeeper) as well as hundreds of articles for various newspapers, magazines and online sites.

Linda DuVal

Support Rocky Mountain Reader


Rocky Mountain Reader depends on generous contributions from readers to support our operations. Please consider making a donation that you can afford — one-time, monthly or yearly. Donations are tax-deductible.

Newsletter Updates


Subscribing is free! To subscribe, sign up to receive our weekly newsletter that will provide previews and links to upcoming content, literary news items from around Colorado and more.

Briefly Noted


The Beckwith Dynasty: A Ranching Empire in Colorado’s Wet Mountain Valley

Courtney Miller
Filter Press
130 pages
Image

Once one of the largest cattle ranches in southern Colorado, Beckwith Ranch rises to its former glory in the concisely and neatly written, The Beckwith Dynasty: A Ranching Empire in Colorado’s Wet Mountain Valley by Courtney Miller. The author explores the history of a successful shipbuilding family who traveled west in 1869, and would eventually create through hard work, luck and a handful of shenanigans, an incredibly successful agricultural operation. Miller guides the reader through the origins of the ranch with stories of true cowboys and the Old West.

Beginning with a meager 160 acres, the family created a vast holding of land and livestock that would eventually become a thriving and majestic showplace of 8,800 acres with a very distinctive mansion of white clapboard and red roof. The fortunes of the Beckwith empire grew even more with the discovery of gold and silver in the nearby mountains. The mansion continued to expand as well, becoming a rambling complex with all the latest Victorian fineries accumulated from travels afar. Sophisticated and worldly travelers were entertained with unparalleled grandeur in the hinterlands of Colorado’s Wet Mountains.

As with any great western story about perseverance and triumph, the tale of the downfall of the family and the mansion is equally fascinating. Death, disease and estranged family relations all contributed to the passing of the heyday of the grand place.

Located on Hwy 69 near Westcliffe, Colorado, the site and venue is now listed on National Register of Historic Places. The obvious sincere and deep appreciation the author has for the ranch shines through in his writing. He packs a lot of Wet Mountain Valley history in this small volume with fine research and striking details. This book is a nice resource for any Colorado history buff. — Jeffery Payne