Independence Ghost Town
Independence e-tour / map | The Most Asked Questions About Independence

13.5 miles east of Aspen, 4 miles from the top of Independence Pass    historic sites map

^ The Farwell Mill has all but disappeared now, but at one time it milled ore for most of the mines at Independence, c. 1881.


^ Cabins, tents, saloons and boarding houses line both sides of Main Street. Most are long gone, but a few remain to testify to a rugged life at 11,000 feet. Photo c. 1930.


^ Visitors at the site today. © Ann Hodges photo

• Location: 13.5 miles east of Aspen on Highway 82, this 1879 mining town is open daily for self-guided tours
• Time: Self-guided tours only until Independence Pass closes for the winter season
• Fee: Suggested donations $3/adults
Please, no dogs

Take an Independence e-tour

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Legend has it that prospectors discovered the Independence Gold Lode on July 4, 1879. A tent city sprang up that summer, and by 1880 there were 300 people living in the camp.

By 1881, the Farwell Mining Company had acquired most of the leading mines in the area including the Independence No. 1, 2, & 3, Last Dollar, Legal Tender, Mammoth, Mount Hope, Champion, Sheba, Friday, and Dolly Varden. The company also operated the Farwell Stamp Mill and a large sawmill for their mines. That summer, the population grew to 500, served by four grocery stores, four boarding houses and three saloons. The Independence Miner started printing in October. By 1882 the Town of Independence had over 40 businesses with three post offices and an estimated population of 1,500. A miner could get room and board for $2 at the New England House, a boarding house on the east end of Main Street.

Typical of mining boom towns, the bust soon followed. Miners were lured away from Independence by the abundant work, good pay and milder climate of Aspen. The citizens of Independence could expect to be blanketed in snow from early October to late May. Daily life in a town at 10,900 feet was not easy!

Although mining at Independence proved to be short lived, over $190,000 worth of gold was produced between 1881 and 1882. The next year production dropped to $2,000. By 1888, only 100 citizens remained in the high mountain town, which in its brief history had been called many names—Independence, Chipeta, Mammoth City, Mount Hope, Farwell, Sparkill and Hunter’s Pass.

During the winter of 1899 the worst storm in Colorado’s history cut off the supply routes to Independence. The miners, who were running out of food, proceeded to dismantle their homes to make 75 pairs of skis and to escape en masse to Aspen. They made light of their adventure by making it a race of the Hunter’s Pass Ski Club—entry fee: one ham sandwich.

For a first-hand 1881, account of the trip from Leadville over Independence pass to the new boomtown of Independence, click here

For a Leadville reporter's account of the trip all the way to Aspen, click here

If you would like to fund a research intern to focus on the history of Independence, click here

You can also visit Ashcroft Ghost Town which is located 10 miles from Aspen on Castle Creek Road and may be visited year round. Six tours are offered per day by the Aspen Historical Society interns in partnership with the Aspen Center for Environmental Studies.

For information on current activities of the Independence Pass Foundation visit www.independencepass.org

Independence e-tour / map | The Most Asked Questions About Independence

Visit Independence's Historical and Environmental interpretive station created in cooperation with the Aspen Center for Environmental Studies (ACES) and the US Forest Service.
What Would You Do for Gold ?
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on-line Flash movie (20.6 MB) on-line slide show
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Covers the of Aspen from prehistory to the present, Ute Indians to snowboarders.
online Flash Movie —(39.2 MB) updated 8/11/05 on-line slide show

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