William Byers's 1860 Walking Tour of Auraria

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There was a Ferry St.? Does that imply that there was a ferry service in Denver at that time?

The 1859 map shows a bridge was constructed at Ferry and Cherry Creek, so I can imagine there may have been a small barge to hop back and forth there for a short period. Unfortunately, I have never seen mention of it.

Early Denver settler William McGaa was awarded the right to operate a ferry across the Platte River near its confluence with Cherry Creek by the founders of the Auraria Town Company. The ferry operated at the foot of Ferry Street. On January 17, 1859 McGaa sold the ferry business for $400 to Thomas Pollock, a local blacksmith and businessman who also was a city marshal. Source: Henrietta Bromwell, “FiftyNiners’ Directory of Colorado Argonauts (1858-1859)”, Denver, 1926, pg. 247.

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Great walking tour.

Lest we forget the town was founded by William Greeneberry Russell and party of fellow settlers from Georgia on October 3, 1858, over a month before William Larimer platted the future "Denver City" across Cherry Creek. The town was named for the gold mining settlement of Auraria, Georgia.

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