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| Detroit Free Press, October 3, 1864 |
While some internet sites state that Pike's
Peak came into being in 1882, they're wrong. Not only that but Pike's Peak and
Perrinsville existed at the same time as attested to in this article
from 1864. Pike's Peak is noted to be a city of no "magnificent
distances" with stumps barely cleared and it used to have a store on
Broadway Street (I think they are implying Main St.).
A large crowd of 1,200-1,500 assembled from Perrinsville, Pike's Peak and Plymouth,
which brought a band, to meet in a barn to hear political speeches by
Hon. Levi Bishop, M. W. Reynolds and J. D. Weir, among others.
They praised the defunct Whig Party, lambasted the Republicans and the
National Union Party (Lincoln Republicans) of Lincoln and neglected to
mention the Democrats entirely so I'm not sure who they were for. I
guess I'll have to track down the election results. Not that I'm all
that concerned being more interested in the depiction of Pike's Peak. I
wonder why they don't use an apostrophe on the "s" in Pikes.

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