Routes USA ColoradoGolden
Clear Creek Walk

Golden, Colorado, USA

Clear Creek Walk

Length3.8 mi
Elev. Gain262.4 ft
Est. Steps8500
Created by Cindy
Introduction
Clear Creek Walk is a 3.8 mile (8,500-step) route located near Golden, Colorado, USA. This route has an elevation gain of about 262.4 ft and is rated as easy. Find the best walking trails near you in Pacer App.

Astor House (Golden, Colorado)

Tourist Attraction
The Astor House, at 822 12th St. in Golden, Colorado, is a historic stone hotel from the earliest years of Golden, Colorado. It was built in 1867. It has also been known as the Astor House Hotel, the Lake House and as Castle Rock House. It is now the Astor House Hotel Museum.Associated with prominent area pioneers, it was also a pioneering effort in historic preservation in the region.

Rocky Mountain Quilt Museum

Tourist Attraction
The Rocky Mountain Quilt Museum (RMQM) is a cultural and historical quilt museum in Golden, Colorado. The permanent collection contains over 550 quilts dating back to the 19th century. The museum is also home to the Sandra Dallas Library and a gift shop.The museum is an independent nonprofit institution with approximately eight staff members, more than 250 volunteers, and a seven-member Board of Directors.

Colorado School of Mines Geology Museum

Tourist Attraction
The Colorado School of Mines Geology Museum is a geology museum based in the Colorado School of Mines, Golden, Colorado, United States. It was established in 1873 and opened in 1874.The museum has two floors in which it displays fossils, gemstones, meteorites, minerals, and mining artifacts, including the Colorado lunar sample displays.

AC Golden Brewing Company

Place
The AC Golden Brewing Company, founded July 11, 2007 by Pete Coors and Glenn Knippenberg, is a subsidiary of MillerCoors, a Division of Molson Coors Brewing Company. Its purpose is to serve as a specialty brewing arm of MillerCoors; in the words of president Glenn Knippenberg, "Our mission for AC Golden is to be a brand incubator for what is now MillerCoors".

Campbell Field (Colorado)

Place
Campbell Field, officially Marv Kay Stadium at Harry D. Campbell Field, is an American college football stadium located in Golden, Colorado. The stadium serves as the home field of the Colorado Mines Orediggers football team representing the Colorado School of Mines. Campbell Field is one of the oldest football fields in existence, the oldest west of the Mississippi River and the oldest in NCAA Division II.

Barnes–Peery House

Place
The Barnes–Peery House, known commonly as the Barnes Mansion, is one of the oldest private homes of Jefferson County, Colorado, USA. It was built in 1865 by David Barnes, the first flour miller in Jefferson County, who had just moved his flouring mill (a business still operating today as the Golden Mill) to Golden after establishing it on Bear Creek to the south the year before.

Colorado National Guard Armory

Place
One of the most unusual landmarks of its region, the Colorado National Guard Armory, known commonly by locals simply as the Armory, was built in 1913 by the Colorado National Guard as an armory, quarters, mess hall and auditorium for the Guard's Company A of Engineers. When it was completed in 1914, the Company was housed in this building's second and third floors while the first-story garden level was available for rental to the public.

Calvary Episcopal Church (Golden, Colorado)

Building
Calvary Episcopal Church is a Gothic Revival style chapel dating to the pioneer days of Golden, Colorado, United States. It is the oldest continuously used Episcopal church in Colorado, and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

Loveland Block and Coors Building

Place
The Loveland Block and the Coors Building are adjacent historic storefront buildings in downtown Golden, Colorado. The Loveland Block, named for pioneer William A.H. Loveland, once served as the territorial capitol building of Colorado. Both buildings are listed on the National Register of Historic Places as a single entity.

White Ash Mine disaster

Place
The White Ash Mine disaster occurred on 9 September 1889 at the White Ash Mine, an underground coal mine in Golden, Colorado. Ten men who had been working at the end of the lowest level were killed when the mine was accidentally flooded. Their bodies were never recovered, and the mine was abandoned. It is likely that the flood was caused by a fire that weakened a barrier between the White Ash Mine and a nearby abandoned mine that was known to be flooded.
Route Details

Length

3.8 mi

Elev. Gain

262.4 ft

Est. Steps

8500
Created by
Cindy
Open in AppOpen