Name/Title
Caribou CemeteryEntry/Object ID
2024.1.4Description
Caribou Cemetery
Prints are located in Box 18, white binder.
Slides are located in Box 18, red binder.
1. Grave with wood fence 8"x10" B&W print
2. Caribou Cemetery gate and fence with several other graves in background. 8"x10" B&W print
3. Caribou Cemetery- wood fence around grave. Color slide and color 8"x10" print. Both scanned. Print was donated by Tom Hendricks and made from color slide donated by Lorraine Todd.
4. Caribou Cemetery path and grave. Color slide and color 8"x10" print. Print (scanned) was donated by Tom Hendricks and made from color slide donated by Lorraine Todd.
5. Caribou Cemetery vandalized grave. Color slide and color 8"x10" print, both scanned. Print was donated by Tom Hendricks and made from color slide donated by Lorraine Todd.Context
Caribou City, established in 1870, soon grew to a thriving community of 60 businesses and 400 people, supported by 20 producing mines. At its peak, Caribou was home to over 1,000 people.
Caribou was noted for its weather. At 10,000 feet elevation, the town was subject to thunderstorms, snow that buried buildings and violent winds. Old-timers said that Caribou was “the town where the winds were born.” Caribou was rebuilt after a devastating fire in 1879, but the silver crash of 1893, along with epidemics of scarlet fever and diphtheria and a second fire in 1900, meant the end of Caribou. Its cemetery was vandalized over the years and is now being restored.Collection
Edgeley W. Todd and Lorraine Todd CollectionAcquisition
Accession
2024.1Source or Donor
Lorraine L. Todd