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قراءة كتاب The Boys of Crawford's Basin The Story of a Mountain Ranch in the Early Days of Colorado

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‏اللغة: English
The Boys of Crawford's Basin
The Story of a Mountain Ranch in the Early Days of Colorado

The Boys of Crawford's Basin The Story of a Mountain Ranch in the Early Days of Colorado

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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The Boys of Crawford’s Basin

THE STORY OF A MOUNTAIN RANCH
IN THE EARLY DAYS OF COLORADO

BY

SIDFORD F. HAMP

Author of “Dale and Fraser, Sheepmen,” etc.

ILLUSTRATED BY

CHASE EMERSON

W. A. WILDE COMPANY

BOSTON CHICAGO


Copyrighted, 1907

BY W. A. WILDE COMPANY

All rights reserved

The Boys of Crawford’s Basin


“THERE WAS BIG REUBEN LOOKING DOWN AT US” “THERE WAS BIG REUBEN LOOKING DOWN AT US”

PREFACE

In relating the adventures of “The Boys of Crawford’s Basin,” the author has endeavored to depict the life of the ranchman in the mountains of Colorado as he knew it towards the end of the “seventies” of the century just past.

At that date, the railroads, after their long climb from the Missouri River to the foot of the Rocky Mountains, were still seeking a practicable passage westward over that formidable barrier, and in consequence, the mountain ranchman—who, by the way, was also sometimes a prospector and frequently a hunter—having no means of shipping his produce to the outside world, depended for his market upon one or another of the many little silver-mining camps scattered over the State.

That infant State was but just learning to walk without leading-strings; and it has been the aim of the author to show how two stout young fellows, prone to honesty and not afraid of hard work, were able to do their share in advancing the prosperity of the growing Commonwealth in which their lot was cast.

It may not be out of place, perhaps, to mention that, besides having had considerable experience in ranching, the author was, about the date of the story, himself prospecting for silver and working as a miner. He would add, too, that several of the incidents related therein, and those in his opinion the most remarkable, are drawn from actual facts.


CONTENTS

I. Big Reuben’s Raid 11
II. Crawford’s Basin 27
III. Yetmore’s Mistake 42
IV. Lost in the Clouds 64
V. What We Found in the Pool 82
VI. Long John Butterfield 101
VII. The Hermit’s Warning 119
VIII. The Wild Cat’s Trail 134
IX. The Underground Stream 150
X. How Tom Connor Went Boring for Oil 169
XI. Tom’s Second Window 190
XII. Tom Connor’s Scare 210
XIII. The Ore-Theft 229
XIV. The Snow-slide 250
XV. The Big Reuben Vein 271
XVI. The Wolf With Wet Feet 289
XVII. The Draining of the “Forty Rods” 313

ILLUSTRATIONS

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