Silverton, Colorado, is a National Historic Landmark nestled in the high San Juan mountains. According to the Town of Silverton, it became a center for the many regional silver and gold mining camps in 1874. The town has a rowdy “Old West” past that its residents are happy to say hasn’t entirely left. Silverton is found along the San Juan Skyway, which includes the “Million Dollar Highway,” supposedly one of the most dangerous roads in the U.S. The Durango & Silverton Narrow Gauge Railway travels to Durango except in the winter when the risk of avalanches is too great. At an elevation of 9,318 feet, tourists visit Silverton for year-round outdoor activities and to experience a bit of an old mining town.
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Silverton, Colorado
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Silverton Colorado in the Switzerland of the Americas. Your first view of Silverton is breathtaking! Nestled in a wee valley between snow capped peaks, the town is surrounded by rugged terrain and forestland. Countless rivers, highland lakes and glacia
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Silverton, Colorado
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Silverton, Colorado. Terminal of the Durango to Silverton Narrow Gauge Railroad, visited each summer by thousands of tourists who ride the train then drive over the Million Dollar Highway pictured here to see more of the high country.
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Silverton, Colorado
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Color image showing Silverton, Colo. Shows a field in the front that is intersected by a road with the town behind it, followed by the mountains. There is an orange train at the R.R. station, with a black coal powered train behind it. Back of postcard reads, "Once a wild, wicked and lusty 1800s mining town. Silverton still offers visitors a taste of that bygone era."
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Silverton, Colorado
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Ghost town of the roaring mining era. Now one of the fine tourist spots of Western Colorado. Between Ouray and Durango, on the Million Dollar Highway, approximately 10,000 feet elevation.
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