Dr. Tom Noel's Top Ten Reading List of Books
About Denver and Colorado
- Arps, Louisa Ward. Denver in Slices. Denver: Sage Books, 1959
(1983, 1998 reprints by Swallow Press with intro. by Tom Noel).
Delicious slices of Denver's past including the mint, drinking water, City
Ditch, Cherry Creek, the South Platte River, Tabor ghosts, the Windsor
Hotel, the Baron of Montclair, Overland Park, Buffalo Bill, Elitch Gardens
and Eugene Field. A delightfully written and diligently researched
appetizer.
- Fowler, Eugene. Timber Line: A Story of Bonfils and Tammen. N.Y.:
Covici, Friede, 1933. (many reprints).
A gossipy, not always true, account of the adolescence of The Denver Post,
written with as much zest and a shade more accuracy than the former con-man
Bonfils and former bartender Tammen ever mustered for their outrageously
sensational (and profitable) newspaper.
- Iversen, Kristen. Molly Brown: Unraveling the Myth. Boulder:
Johnson Books, 1999.
Far from the comic nouveau riche character she has been cast as, Maggie was
a feminist, labor sympathizer and role model for rising minorities,
according to this revisionist biography.
- Leonard, Stephen J. and Thomas J. Noel. Denver: From Mining Camp to
Metropolis. Niwot: University Press of Colorado, 1990, 1994 paperback.
The most comprehensive urban biography of the Mile High City offers separate
chapters on the suburban counties
- Lindsey, Benjamin Barr and Harvey J. O'Higgins. The Beast. Garden
City: Doubleday, 1911.
Chilling exposé by the celebrated Juvenile Court judge and muckraking
reformer who blackens Denver's power elite-Evans, Moffat, Hughes, Cheesman,
and-sparing not even the clergy-Rev./Gov. Henry Buchtel. The trail of the
Beast in Denver led, according to Lindsey, "step by step, from the
dives to the police board, from the police board to the lower courts, from
the courts to the political leaders to the corporation magnates who ruled
all. The trail leads from the offices of the corporations to the doors of
the Capitol, it ascends the steps of the State House; it enters the sacred
precinct of the Supreme Court itself." A fast cure for any nostalgic
soul who is hungry for the good old days when politicians were supposedly
honest and democracy supposedly pure.
- Noel, Thomas J. The City and the Saloon: Denver, 1858-1916.
Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1982/1984; Bison Book paperback,
1996; University Press of Colorado reprint.
A liquid history of Denver's founding, politics, ethnic groups, and social
fragmentation.
- Norgren, Barbara S. and Thomas J. Noel. Denver: The City Beautiful and
Its Architects. Denver: Historic Denver, Inc., 1987/1993 reprint.
- Perkin, Robert L. The First Years: An Informal History of Denver and
the Rocky Mountain News, 1859-1959. N.Y.: Doubleday, 1959.
This witty, highly readable history of the Rocky Mountain Snooze and
Denver is a splendid complement to the less-reliable Timberline by
Gene Fowler who wrote the introduction to this treasure chest of knowledge
and trivia.
- Smiley, Jerome C. History of Denver. Denver: Western Pub. Co., 1978
(Reprint of original 1901edition).
Centuries from now, Smiley will probably still be the definitive and the
longest-winded biographer of 19th-century Denver. A booster history written
with amazing grace, wit, and insight. Crackerjack 37-page index.
- West, Elliott. The Contested Plains: Indians, Goldseekers and the Rush
to Colorado. Topeka: University Press of Kansas, 1998.
A major re-interpretation, eloquently written by one of the best and
brightest Colorado historians.
These books are available at area book stores, or from any Denver
Public Library location.

Denver's
Peoples
Bluemel, Elinor. Florence Sabin: Colorado
Woman of the Century. Boulder: Univ. Press of Colorado, 1959; index,
bibliography of the publications of Florence Sabin, illus.
Bluemel, Elinor. The Golden Opportunity: The
Story of the Unique Emily Griffith Opportunity School of Denver. Boulder:
Johnson Pub. Co., 1965; bib.,index.
Coel, Margaret. Chief Left Hand: Southern
Arapaho. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1981; illus., maps, notes,
bib., index.
A fascinating, sad look at one of the original
Denver natives.
Dunning, John. Denver. N.Y.: Times Books,
1980.
A lusty historical novel that vividly portrays
Denver journalism, politics, and the Ku Klux Klan in the 1920s.
French, Emily. Emily: The Diary of A
Hard-Worked Woman. ed. by Janet Lecompte. Lincoln: Univ. of Nebraska
Press, 1987; index, epilogue, notes.
This extraordinary insight into the life of a
divorced lower-class woman will dispel any romantic notions about "the good
old days."
Goldberg, Robert Alan. Hooded Empire: The Ku
Klux Klan in Colorado. Urbana: Univ. of Illinois Press, 1981; index,
endnotes, bibliography.
The best study of the 1920s KKK nightmare in
Colorado comes to some surprising conclusions.
Noel, Thomas J. The City and the Saloon:
Denver, 1858-1916. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1982/1984 Bison
Book paperback/1996 University Press of Colorado reprint; illus., maps, notes,
bib., index. cloth and paper. NW
A liquid history of Denver's politics, ethnic
groups, and social fragmentation.
Parkhill, Forbes. Mister Barney Ford: A
Portrait in Bistre. Denver: Sage Books, 1963; index, bibliography,
illustrations, 9" x 6" hardback, $4.50
Sanford, Mollie Dorsey. Mollie: The Journal of
Mollie Dorsey Sanford.... Intro. and notes by Donald F. Danker. Lincoln:
Univ. of Nebraska Press, 1959.
Uchill, Ida Libert. Pioneers, Peddlers and
Tsadikim. Denver: Sage Books, 1957; notes, bib., index.
Splendid history of Jews in Colorado.
Secrest, Clark. Hell's Belles:
Denver’s Brides of the Multitudes with attention to Various Gamblers,
Scoundrels, and Mountebanks and a Biography of Sam Howe, Frontier Lawman.
Aurora: Hindsight Historical Publications, 1996; index, bib, endnotes, photos,
drawings, appendices.
Varnell, Jeanne. Women of Consequence: The
Colorado Women’s Hall of Fame. Boulder: Johnson Books, 1999; index, bib., illus.
Anthology of Denver’s most
influential women.
Vigil, Ernesto B. The Crusade for Justice.
Madison: The University of Wisconsin, 1999; index, endnotes.
An insider’s view of the emergence of the
Chicano Movement in Denver
