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Search South Aurora October 2025

Search South Aurora – October 2025 Edition Experience the best of South Aurora in the October 2025 issue of Search South Aurora Magazine. From local fall festivals and Halloween fun to restaurant spotlights, family activities, and neighborhood news, this issue captures the vibrant lifestyle of Southeast Denver. Explore the area’s top dining, recreation, and community happenings — all in one place. Search South Aurora is your trusted local guide to living, connecting, and celebrating life in Aurora, Colorado.

Search South Aurora – October 2025 Edition

Experience the best of South Aurora in the October 2025 issue of Search South Aurora Magazine. From local fall festivals and Halloween fun to restaurant spotlights, family activities, and neighborhood news, this issue captures the vibrant lifestyle of Southeast Denver. Explore the area’s top dining, recreation, and community happenings — all in one place. Search South Aurora is your trusted local guide to living, connecting, and celebrating life in Aurora, Colorado.

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Food tells the story of

us: our history, industry,

and culture. Take a look

at how the food industry

began here in Douglas

County.

Early Colorado

natives ate fish

preserved with

salt, as well as rabbits, deer,

and birds. With horses, the Utes

were able to hunt for bison to

expand their meat options. They maintained a wide hunting and gathering economy. They ate seeds, berries, pine

sap, and roots that they gathered, also drying fruits and meats for the winter.

When new settlers came to Colorado, their diet and economy looked very different. Unlike the nomadic natives,

the pioneers chose to settle in one place to develop agriculture. Over 150 years ago, many came to our area when

miners began searching for gold. When gold was not found, farming became the primary industry in early Douglas

County, which was officially created with 17 other counties in 1861. The previous year’s census showed 1,388 residents

in the county.

“Early Douglas County homesteaders primarily raised cattle because hilly geography is not highly tenable to farming.

A few chose to farm wheat, like the Lowell family along East Plum Creek, and potato crops were profitable for a

time in Larkspur and Greenland. The Cherry Creek Valley focused on dairying ventures, and German immigrants

there ran the successful Cherry Creamery for decades. The Carlson-Frink Creamery in Larkspur also ran well into the

20th century. Some ranches, like the Diamond K near Highlands Ranch, raised poultry and small sheep herds. Beef

has always been king in Douglas County, especially along West Plum Creek. Douglas County ranchers remain avid

participants in Denver’s Western Stock Show, and popular 4-H Clubs thrived in the mid-20th century. This passion for

(and proximity to) cattle is clear in the recipes of pioneers and ranchers, which often include variations on beef and

dairy.” (DCL Achives, Food Culture in Douglas County)

Individuals involved in agriculture helped to establish the area. An early farmer to the Highlands Ranch area, Dad

Rufus Clark was a big potato farmer. Samuel Long began his homestead in 1880 and later practiced dryland farming

on 2,000 acres. The house, sold to John Springer, later became the Highlands Ranch Mission. John continued to

enlarge his ranch and soon raised horses and cattle on 12,000 acres. An Englishman, Charles Allis, set up a ranch in

the 1880s on over 1,700 acres near Castle Rock, known as Greenland, where he raised sheep.

While the agricultural industry remained important, many changes have taken place over the years. The Denver Union

Stockyard, with 4,400 seats, was established in 1886 on 130 acres. It was the largest receiving market with facilities

for 70,000 sheep, 33,000 cattle, 10,000 hogs, 2000 horses or mules, and 4500 cattle chutes. In 1890, the Castlewood

Dam was commissioned to provide irrigation for farmers and ranchers. In the early 20th century, tractors replaced

horses and turned thousands of acres of grassland into wheat fields. Dust storms of the 1930’s put many farmers out of

business, caused by periods of drought and high winds. Many Japanese Americans were forced to leave California

and moved to Colorado during World War II, becoming good farmers and harvesting spinach.

The Douglas County area remained largely farms and ranches for nearly a century after its creation. After World War II,

Colorado’s population began to grow significantly. The suburbs began to change from open land to subdivisions. After

I-25 was completed in 1963, the connection from Denver to Colorado Springs made this change more convenient.

Agriculture has remained in Douglas County in the southern part of the county, even with huge growth in the northern

part of the county. Production has changed from wheat, corn, and cattle to hay, cattle, and horses. The cowboy

and agricultural influence is still in tact in Douglas County.

Even with a huge history in farming and ranching, the county has shifted much of its food industry in recent decades.

Restaurants, cafes, and fast-food establishments dot the county in force and have combined food with service to

create a new era of eating and social experiences to fit our modern schedules and culture.

OCTOBER 2025 7

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