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Latest Posts:

  • First People Here

    Stone Age people, indigenous tribes, trappers and traders are among the early inhabitants of Northern Colorado. See page 2.

    • March 6, 2022
  • Lynching in Greeley

    Vigilante justice resulted in the hanging of a vicious Greeley man in 1888. See page 9 of this month’s issue.

    • March 6, 2022
  • Colorado ERs

    Health officials dislike the high costs associated with free-standing emergency rooms and want them converted to other services, such as primary care clinics. See page 5.

    • March 6, 2022
  • Beware of Bad Doctors

    Misinformation spread by doctors impacts people’s ability to make good decisions about their health. See page 8 of the current issue.

    • March 6, 2022
  • Wild Ghost Towns

    Tincup was a wild, wicked mining town controlled entirely by owners of the saloons, gambling halls and bordellos. See page 2 of the February issue of The Voice.

    • January 29, 2022
  • A Monument to Themselves

    Southeast of Laramie, Wyoming, near Interstate 80, the wealthy Ames brothers built a monument to themselves in 1882. Page 4 of the February issue.

    • January 29, 2022
  • A Special WWII Town

    North Platte’s historic downtown has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Page 7 of the February Voice.

    • January 29, 2022
  • Spotted Fawn

    We don’t know much about most Indian women who married white men in the 1800s, but a few things are known about one called Spotted Fawn. See page 2 of the January...

    • December 28, 2021
  • Estes Park Pioneer

    He was called the patriarch of Estes Park. That’s why you see so many places named for him. Page 8 of the January issue.

    • December 28, 2021
  • Can We Control Drug Prices?

    Americans pay nearly three times as much for drugs as patients in dozens of other countries. Page 7 of the January issue.

    • December 28, 2021