Author Archives: SLWhite

Return of the Bell

Morrison acquired its first school building in 1875, and it was used as a school until about 1955. This beautiful sandstone building had, as traditional, a school bell in a “belfry” on top. Sometime after 1955, the building was vacant, the bell mysteriously disappeared, and the belfry itself was soon removed. (See before and after photos at the link above.)

In 2006, just in time for Morrison’s centennial celebration, the bell came home. After some negotiation by Dan Rohrer, the town borrowed it from the International Bell Museum in Evergreen, where it had come to reside. The loan was extended after the Bell Museum’s proprietor, Winston Jones, died in August 2006. Last year, the town arranged to acquire the bell from the beneficiaries of Winston’s 6,000-bell collection. A few other historic Colorado bells were also repatriated, but most of the collection has gone to a new home at Hastings College in Hastings, Nebraska. (Click photos to enlarge.)

On Wednesday, I ran across the bell again while it was awaiting a new installation back home in Morrison. Here, DeWayne, Jerry, and Marcie contemplate the 240-pound bell in the back of a town pickup, making plans for its relocation near the town’s new mural and interpretive kiosk along Mt. Vernon Creek at main street (Bear Creek Avenue).

Yesterday, Jerry kindly sent this photo of the bell in its new home above the Mt. Vernon Creek bridge on the Bear Creek Trail. He promises step-by-step photos soon. If you get a chance, go by and welcome the old bell back to its hometown, if not its rightful spot!

Mural in Morrison is now complete

Reposted in April 2025 from a Lariat Loop blog that is no longer active.

The historic mural by Emanuel Martinez, commissioned by the Lariat Loop Heritage Alliance, is now finished. Last week, Emanuel put a few finishing touches on the early panels, including Morrison’s famous dinosaurs shown here, and ended his work on the last two panels.

Noted performers from Red Rocks are a real attraction, with passersby often stopping to talk with Emanuel while he worked, as here. His image of Bono, of the band U2, is especially striking.

Later this fall, an interpretive panel identifying the characters and stories in the mural will be mounted on the wall at the lower right.

Art and History on the Wall in Morrison

Reposted in April 2025 from a Lariat Loop blog that is no longer active.

Our mural in downtown Morrison has reached modern decades, 150 million years from its first panel. We’ll have more “in-progress” photos up on the Lariat Loop website soon– or stop in and take a look next time you’re in Morrison! Click any photo for a closer view.

Artist Emanuel Martinez is now at work on the fifth panel, depicting stars from Red Rocks– from Ella Fitzgerald to Jerry Garcia. The latter, he tells us, is attracting a lot of attention to the project. There’s little doubt the concert panel will become the most popular of the six depictions of Morrison’s history, from dinosaurs to rock ‘n roll.

Back in August, just getting started: Dinosaurs and Indians take shape on the first two panels, as a sketchy George & Isabel Morrison wait in panel 3.

And yesterday, moving toward the present: Jerry Garcia and a CCC worker from 1930s Red Rocks keep a watchful eye while Emanuel works on Jimi Hendrix’s afro.

This project is funded by grants from the Federal Highway Administration (Colorado Byways program), the Lariat Loop Heritage Alliance, Denver Theatres and Arenas, the Friends of Dinosaur Ridge, the Morrison Natural History Museum Foundation, Karin Bond, and Jeanne and Cy Esphahanian. An interpretive sign to be posted nearby will provide information on each of the mural’s six historic scenes.

The Family of Capt. Zebulon Pike

Father of Zebulon Montgomery Pike, the Discoverer of Pikes Peak

Note: This information was transferred from an older version of this website; the source for the original data was not given.

  • Capt. Zebulon Pike (1751-1834) and Issabella Brown Pike (1753-1809)
    • Gen. Zebulon Montgomery Pike* (1779-1813) and Clarissa Harlow Brown (d.1847)
        *   Discoverer of Pikes Peak, Colorado.
      • Clarissa Brown Pike Harrison and John Cleves Symmes Harrison*
        *   Son of President William Henry Harrison
        • Pike Harrison
        • Symmes Harrison
        • William Henry Harrison, Jr.
        • Zebulon (daughter)
        • 2 unidentified daughters
    • James B. Pike (b.1784) [m.1815] Elizabeth Carberry Pike (1794-1855)
      • William Montgomery Pike (1813?-1846) [m.1842] Harriet Frances Murphy
      • George Washington Pike (b.1817*) [m.] Prudence Jane Ross
      • Montgomery Pike (b.1818-1900) [m.1845] Lucy Jenison
      • Catherine Pike (1821-1843)
      • Joseph Pike (1823-1893)
      • Zebulon Wardell Pike (1825-1864) [m.] Mary Callender
      • John Brown Pike (1827-1910) [m.] Eliza Frazer
      • Anderson Gage Pike (1830-1899) [m.1861] Hannah Pike (1840-1887)  Moved to Morrison, Colorado.
    • Maria Herriot Pike Gage (b.1790*)
      • Zebulon Gage (b.1811*)
      • Sarah Gage [Wardell] Sturdevant (1814*-1909)
      • Clarissa Gage (b.1817*)
      • unidentified daughter (b.1822*)
    • George W Pike (??-1812)

*   Birthdates calculated from age on a document in 1823.