Yuma County, Colorado
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Yuma County Facts

  • Organized March 15, 1889.
  • County seat is Wray.
  • Named for the town of Yuma which was the original seat of county government.
  • 2000 population:
    • Yuma County - 9,841
    • Eckley - 278
    • Wray - 2,187
    • Yuma - 3,285

Yuma County Places

Yuma County Map

Lee Zion, email mdmonk2@tx.rr.com
Updated Sunday, 13-Jul-2008 11:08:30 CDT


A Short Yuma County History

Yuma County, straddling the 40th parallel on the eastern edge of Colorado, was a relatively late addition to the Colorado map. While archeological digs in the county show that mankind has occupied the county since prehistoric times, the first "American" settlers didn't move into the county until after 1870. The first explorers, traveling through the high plains area in a drought period, labeled the area the "Great American Desert." The Oregon Trail passed to the north following the Platte River. The Santa Fe Trail passed far to the south along the Arkansas River. The land along both rivers was settled early in Colorado history. The land between the two rivers remained a hunting ground used by several American Indian tribes.

Originally claimed by Spain, what is now Yuma County was part of the land the young United States acquired from France in the 1803 Louisiana Purchase. In 1805, it was included in the newly founded Louisiana Territory. It was part of the original 1812 Missouri Territory and was designated unorganized US territory in 1821 when Missouri became a State. The 1854 Kansas-Nebraska Act, split what is now Yuma County between Nebraska Territory and Kansas Territory along the 40th parallel. (The area covered by the following Northeast Colorado maps is shown outlined in red.)

The discovery of gold in the Colorado Rockies in 1858 brought a large influx of people to Colorado and lead to the 1861 establishment of Colorado Territory. However, the high plains remained an Indian hunting ground until about 1870. Conflicts between the Indians and the new residents spreading out from the Front Range and with travelers on the trails to the gold camps in the mountains lead the US Army and the Colorado Militia to force the tribes out of Eastern Colorado onto reservations in Oklahoma and Wyoming in 1870.

When Colorado Territory was created by Congress in 1861 Northeastern Colorado was split between Weld and Arapahoe Counties along the 40th parallel. What is now Yuma County was split in half; Weld County to the north and Arapahoe County to the south. Both of the new counties stretched from Denver to the Kansas-Nebraska border. The land in eastern Colorado south of the Platte and north of the Arkansas remained mostly unoccupied. (The area covered by today's Yuma County is outlined in green.)

After the Civil War, settlement in western Kansas forced Texas cattle herds driven north to market further and further west. About 1870, cattle trails were established through Eastern Colorado to the Union Pacific railroad at Ogallala, Nebraska and to markets further north in Wyoming, Dakota and Montana. Ranchers recognizing the value of the high plains grasslands established holding and fattening areas in what is now Yuma County that soon developed into large ranches occupying both private and public lands. Ranching was the only industry in the local area when Colorado became a state in 1876.

The Burlington and Missouri (later the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy) railroad completed a mainline to Denver in 1882 through the middle of what would become Yuma County. Land and townsites along the new rail line were promoted worldwide to potential settlers in an effort to establish a base of customers for the new rail line. Then in 1885, the President directed that illegal ranch fences be removed from public lands forcing the large ranches off public lands and opening them to homesteaders. Real Yuma County settlement dates from those two events.

By 1887, the population of eastern Weld County was large enough for voters to demand a split into new counties. The original Weld County was split roughly in half. The southeastern corner became Washington County with the county seat designated as Akron. The northeastern corner became Logan County with the county seat designated as Sterling.

Two years later in 1889, Washington County was divided in half and Yuma County [shown in yellow] was created with the County seat in Yuma. The southern portion of todays' Yuma County remained in Arapahoe County. In the same year, Logan County was divided in half to create Sedgwick [orange] and Phillips [violet] Counties. Morgan County [dark brown] was formed from the southeast corner of Weld County. Arapahoe County remained stretching from Denver to the Kansas border.

The Colorado Legislature divided Arapahoe County east to west in 1901 to form Adams County [brown]. The new Adams County was just as wide as Arapahoe County and voters in the eastern part both counties objected to having to travel so far to the county seats located in Denver and Brighton. Also in 1901 Denver County was created but that act was rejected by the Colorado Supreme Court.

In 1902, after a twelve year political battle, two-thirds of Yuma County voters chose to move the Yuma County seat to Wray.

The 1902 legislature rewrote the 1901 acts and reorganized Arapahoe and Adams Counties. The eastern portions of both were added to Washington and Yuma Counties in 1903, doubling their size. The City and County of Denver was carved out of western Arapahoe County. These changes were the final changes to the county borders of northeastern Colorado map until 2001 when the City and County of Broomfield was created.

Those political county boundary changes are only part of the story. The mid-1880s demise of the large open range ranches was also driven by two years of record snow, blizzards and record low temperatures. Many ranchers lost three-fourths of their stock in the winter of 1885-1886 alone.

Many of the 1880s settlers moved back east or on west after several years of drought in the 1890s. The early 1900s brought more settlers only to see them chased off the land by the hard times of the great depression and the drought years. The automobile forecast the end of the local general store. By the middle of the 1950s most of the small community businesses had closed their doors in favor of the larger towns. The traditional small family farm and ranch died a slow death in the period 1950-1980.

Today's Yuma County remains true to its heritage. It is primarily agricultural. Land use is divided almost evenly between ranching and farming. Yuma County measures 60 miles north to south and 40 miles east to west. The 2000 population was 9,841 down from the 1920 census high of 13,897.

Need exact dates of any of these events? See the Colorado County Chronology in Colorado Places by County.


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