Blog


  • Sand Creek Fact or Fiction: How Many Indians Were Killed at Sand Creek?

    We are starting a blog series, fact or fiction concerning the Sand Creek event in 1864.  In this first part we will be discussing the number of Indians killed and the discrepancies in the numbers.  How Many Indians Were Killed at Sand Creek and How is the Number Changing?  The official count was conducted by…

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  • Irving Howbert, Grandson of Sand Creek Soldier, Visits the Lost Sand Creek Site in 2007

    By Mike Bowen Irving Howbert, the grandson of one of the founding fathers of Colorado Springs and soldier at Sand Creek, also named Irving Howbert, visited Chuck and Sheri Bowen’s Sand Creek discovery site in 2007 at the age of 92.   His grandfather’s book, Memories of a Lifetime in the Pike’s Peak Region, had…

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  • The Water Valley Schoolhouse, a Testament of Truth

    By Mike Bowen, co-author, We Found the Lost Sand Creek Site The Water Valley Schoolhouse, which now sits on Chuck and Sheri Bowen’s ranch in Cheyenne County, originally sat several miles down Sand Creek, about six and a half miles northeast of Chivington and was last used as a school nearly one hundred years ago.…

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  • William Bent’s Son, George, Stayed at the Campbell House While in School in St. Louis

    Robert Campbell was George Bent’s guardian when George went to St. Louis in 1857 to finish his education after going to school for four years in Westport, present-day Kansas City. George is the son of William Bent who built Bent’s Old Fort. George was born at the fort. Campbell worked for the American Fur Company and…

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  • Book Cover Photo Taken on Sand Creek Anniversary in 2008

    Our good friends Curt and Angie Neeley spent Thanksgiving with us in 2008. Curt and I went to see the location of Bent’s New Fort/Fort Lyon on Nov. 28.  Thanksgiving fell on the anniversary of Sand Creek, Nov. 29, 1864. Curt went with me to our family ranch on Sand Creek, the discovery site, early…

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