La Junta, Colorado
The La Junta Post Office
La Junta was most likely founded as a railroad town. I say this because the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad built one of their regional offices here. The trackyard is larger than a town this size might need but there are also several feedlots along the tracks testifying to the amount of cattle that pass through here on their way to be processed in the big meat packing plants in the Midwest. In the old days, the reasonably easy ford of the Arkansas River here was also helpful.
One of many churches just off of downtown La Junta
The Masonic Temple, with retail shops on the first floor
This was the local offices of the AT & SF Railroad
Looking through the front yard of the Colorado Bank & Trust at one of the old Fox Theaters
Built in 1890 in downtown La Junta
La Junta is a bustling, well-kept small city in the Arkansas River Valley. The Koshare Indian Museum and the rightly famous Koshare Indian Dancers are located here, as is the Otero County Junior College. Downtown has a nice collection of retail stores and is surrounded by quite an assortment of churches (and former church buildings). Except for the Colorado Bank & Trust complex and perhaps the Otero County offices, it looks like most of the construction downtown is pre-1930. One of the banks downtown has an interesting drive-through branch: the teller's office is in a refurbed railroad caboose. There is also a full-service hospital in La Junta, on the south side of town.
American author Ken Kesey (One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest) was born in La Junta.
Notice the elk on the balcony of the Elks Lodge in downtown La Junta
This brick edifice was constructed just as the Great Depression was getting underway
Quite the structure for a video rental shop
La Junta is a great starting-off point for journeys into the historic aspects of eastern and southern Colorado. La Junta is very close to where the Mountain Branch of the Santa Fe Trail left the Arkansas River Valley and headed south along the Purgatoire River to Trinidad. About 30 miles south of town you can even journey back 150 million years and explore the longest dinosaur tracksite in the world at Picketwire Canyonlands. A few miles northeast of town is the Bent's Old Fort National Historic Site, originally built when the Arkansas River was the international boundary between the United States and the Spanish Empire in the New World. And this area was traversed by Native American tribes for thousands of years before that (that's why the Koshare Indian Museum).
Latitude: 37.9813°N
Longitude: 103.5475°W
Incorporated: 1881
Elevation: 4,078'
Education:
High School or Higher: 76.8%
Bachelor's Degree or Higher: 16.3%
Graduate or Professional Degree: 7.0%
2011 Cost of Living Index for La Junta: 80.8
Estimated Median Household Income: $31,900
Estimated Median Home Value: $58,500
Median Resident Age: 35.8 Years
Major Industries:
Health Care, Educational Services, Government, Construction, Rail Transportation, Agriculture, Social Services, Finance & Insurance Services, Waste Management Services
Unemployed (March 2011): 10.4%
Population Demographics: 2010
Total Population | 7,077 |
Males | 3,381 |
Females | 3,696 |
Population by Age | |
Under 18 | 1,761 |
18 & over | 5,316 |
20-24 | 525 |
25-34 | 830 |
35-49 | 1,173 |
50-64 | 1,295 |
65 & over | 1,206 |
Population by Ethnicity | |
Hispanic or Latino | 3,224 |
Non Hispanic or Latino | 3,853 |
Population by Race | |
White | 5,290 |
African-American | 87 |
Asian | 50 |
Native American | 132 |
Hawaiian or Pacific Islander | 8 |
Other | 1,169 |
Two or more | 341 |
Santa Fe Trail - Bent's Old Fort - Picketwire Canyonlands
State Trust Lands & Wildlife Areas
National Park Service Sites - BLM Sites - National Wilderness Areas - Unique Natural Features
Outdoor Sports & Recreation - Ski & Snowboard Areas - Photo Galleries - Colorado Mountains