Cheyenne Mountain Highway | |
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Map of the Cheyenne Mountain Highway in red | |
Route information | |
Maintained by CDOT | |
Length | 7.5 mi [1] (12.1 km) |
Location | |
Country | United States |
State | Colorado |
Highway system | |
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Cheyenne Mountain Highway, otherwise known as Cheyenne Mountain Zoo Road, previously called Wonder Road, [2] is a 7.5 mile- (12.1 km) paved and unpaved highway in the U.S. state of Colorado, at an estimated 3,000 feet in total elevation. The highway begins at a interchange (Penrose Boulevard, Old Stage Road, and West Cheyenne Mountain Boulevard), [3] at El Paso County. [4]
It is a private road when traversing pass Cheyenne Mountain Zoo and Will Rogers Shrine of the Sun. It is a paved road up to Cheyenne Mountain Zoo and the Will Rogers Shrine of the Sun. About 5.0 miles (8 km) of the highway is managed and maintained by the Colorado Department of Transportation (CDOT), and is part of the Colorado State Highway System.
After the completion of The Broadmoor; which was planned by Spencer Penrose, Penrose began to develop property that he had purchased on the northern peak of Cheyenne Mountain during 1915. During 1925 Penrose planned and completed 7.5 miles (12.1 km) of a new highway. [1] [5] [a]
Initially called the Broadmoor-Cheyenne Mountain Highway, it began one mile (1.6 km) south of The Broadmoor at the Old Stage Road and ascended to the summit with 32 switchback turns up the mountain, gaining almost 3,000 feet (910 m) in altitude with a maximum 10% grade. It afforded views of Colorado Springs and Pikes Peak. [7]
The road is paved to the Will Rogers Shrine of the Sun, thereafter it is a four-mile-long (6.4 km) unpaved road to The Horns, where The Broadmoor's Cloud Camp is located. This was formerly the site of the Cheyenne Mountain Lodge. There are gates that control the access to the road: two after the Cheyenne Mountain Zoo and a third after the Will Rogers Shrine. The Broadmoor has maintained the road for the transport of guests to Cloud Camp. [8] A portion of the road is named Cheyenne Mountain Zoo Road. [9] The Cheyenne Mountain Highway was originally built for transportation to properties built by Spencer Penrose, which came to include the zoo, the shrine, and the top of the mountain. [10] : 222
Penrose hired Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) workers to build the unpaved decomposed gravel toll road. In the depressed economy, this provided work for individuals in need of jobs and helped him to manage construction costs. The cost of the construction was $350,000 (equivalent to $6,275,427in 2024). [1] : 8:7 [11] In 1926, the Cheyenne Mountain Lodge opened at the top of Cheyenne Mountain. [12] [b] Visitors could make the trip up the highway to the lodge on the backs of elephants, [5] [c] such as an elephant given to Penrose by an Indian rajah. [13]
The toll gate was situated on the highway just before the Cheyenne Mountain Zoo (1926) [13] [14] , [15] : 88 and the Will Rogers Shrine of the Sun (1937) was built on the northern promontory of the mountain. [14] [16] : 1 The Broadmoor also operated a ski area from 1959-1991 on Cheyenne Mountain, [17] near the Broadmoor Shooting Range. [18] The highway was rebuilt and widened, received several scenic turnouts, and paved with asphaltic concrete following a flood that washed out the road in July 1965. It reopened in April 1966. [19]
Penrose opened the original Broadmoor-Cheyenne Mountain Zoo Cog Railroad in June 1938, and Shirley Temple was a passenger on its first run. The train was a replica of the steam trains operated by the Manitou and Pike's Peak Railway [20] [21] [d] In 1950, a "new streamlined" cog train called the Broadmoor Mountaineer was dedicated by Charles L. Tutt, Jr., The Broadmoor's president, and J. F. Gordon, the president of Cadillac Motor Company, who operated the train on its inaugural ride. [20]
Cheyenne Mountain Cog Railroad offered service on a narrow gauge road from The Broadmoor to the Cheyenne Mountain Zoo from 1961 until 1974. [23] [24] The railway engine called The Mountaineer was a small edition of the narrow gauge cog trains used to climb Pikes Peak. Two Plexiglas-topped cars, each carrying up to 20 people, took passengers for a two-mile (3.2 km) ride through four tunnels. The ride began at a boarding station by the lake at The Broadmoor and stopped at the zoo's entrance, the Thundergod House. [25] [26]
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