
The Beckwith Ranch, established in 1874 by brothers Elton and
Edwin Beckwith, was at its peak one of the largest cattle operations
in Colorado. Sons of a wealthy shipbuilder from Mount Desert Island,
Maine, Elton and Edwin brought cattle from Texas in 1869 for the
miners in Colorado with Charles Goodnight, one of the legendary
founders of the western cattle industry.
In the 1870's Elton and Edwin began building a ranching empire.
Elton married Elsie Chapin Davis in 1875, and in 1877 their daughter,
Velma, was born. Their Victorian mansion was built during this
time. Elton enjoyed a short political career, serving one term
as a Colorado state senator. In addition to their ranch home, Elton
and Elsie owned a home on Capitol Hill in Denver.
Beckwith died in June of 1907. After Elton's death, Mrs. Beckwith
sold the property in the Wet Mountain Valley and moved to Denver,
where she lived in the Brown Palace Hotel, until purchasing a home
in the city. She lived there until her death in 1931. Elton, Elsie,
and Edwin are all buried in the Ula Cemetery, located a few miles
southwest of the ranch.
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