

While Martin still leased the ranch, in 1879, two men with a wagon approached the ranch at night, and inquired of him whether the road ahead was clear. Saying it was, but unable to clearly make out what the men were about, he let them on their way. Later, it was found out, these men were Samuel Woodruff and Joseph Seminole, two outlaws who had just killed wagonmaster Reuben Benton Hayward, and would hide his body beneath a bridge not far on their way from the Cold Spring Ranch. Martin was the first to have seen the wagon without three men in it, as the third had just been killed and was laying unconcealed in the wagon, between Mt. Vernon and Cold Spring Ranch. Had Martin approached the wagon, he most certainly would've been in grave danger; as it was, he became a key witness to the prosecution. After an interstate manhunt by the Rocky Mountain Detective Agency, Woodruff was intercepted in Big Grove, Iowa, while Seminole was captured with the help of the Indian Police at the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota. The Hayward murderers were brought to Golden, and lynched from a railroad trestle before a trial could take place.
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In 1891 the Denver, Lakewood & Golden railway established
its own tramway line through the Cold Spring Ranch, bringing the latest
in public transit (including Pullman-built motors) to a place that once
served ox teams going to the gold fields. By this time, the ranch
had been pared down to a stock ranch of 600 acres, its western acreage
being sold to become the (on paper) Pullman Hights (sic) subdivision.
In early 1900 the ranch saw a truly somber moment in history, when the
funeral of William C. Rooney (Johnson's brother-in-law) took place in
the Pullman building. Rooney was killed in the line of duty as
a guard at Cañon City attempting to stop four prisoners from
escaping, and his funeral entourage was made up of 26 carriages of mourners.
Later the funeral of Alexander Rooney was also held here. |
In 1911 Johnson made the grisly discovery of a skeletal body on the ranch, having washed down in a gulch from South Table Mountain. These proved to be the remains of Maria LaGuardia, an Italian matriarch of Denver who had been lured to the mountain and murdered two years earlier by Angeline Garramone, for her money. In one of the most famous trials in Denver area history, Garramone was sentenced to life in prison for the brutal crime, with friends testifying she had given them threats of death if they ever told of the crime. Much of the remains of LaGuardia still reside somewhere at Long Gulch, the way where Quaker Street ascends South Table Mountain.