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Mount Bross

Fourteeners of ColoradoMountains of ColoradoMountains of Park County, ColoradoNorth American 4000 m summitsPike National Forest
Mt Bross
Mt Bross

Mount Bross is a high mountain summit in the Mosquito Range of the Rocky Mountains of North America. The 14,178-foot (4,321 m) fourteener is located in Pike National Forest, 4.1 miles (6.6 km) northwest by north (bearing 327°) of the Town of Alma in Park County, Colorado, United States. Mount Bross is named in honor of William Bross, who owned property in the area.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Mount Bross (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Mount Bross
Forest Road 437 Mount Lincoln,

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Wikipedia: Mount BrossContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 39.335446 ° E -106.1077257 °
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Address

Moose Mine

Forest Road 437 Mount Lincoln

Colorado, United States
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Mt Bross
Mt Bross
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North London Mill
North London Mill

The North London Mill is a gold mill in Park County, Colorado that commenced operations in 1883. In 1874, the first London mine was opened, named for the mountain it burrowed into. The London mines became some of the most productive mines of gold, silver and lead in the area. Between 1879 and 1889, some $82,000,000 of silver was processed in the Leadville area during the Colorado Silver Boom. Due to the rugged environment and high altitude, transportation of ore between the mines and mill was difficult and costly. Thus, the first rope cable-way in Colorado was built to carry ore down the thousand-vertical-foot slope from the mine to the mill. The mine was owned by William K. Jewett of New York and Colorado Springs. The North London Mill site is at 11,400 feet above sea level, West of Park City on County Road 12 (Mosquito Pass Road) outside of Alma in Park County, and has been recognized by the Park County Historic Preservation Advisory Committee as a local landmark. Mosquito Pass, at an elevation of 13,185 feet, is crossed by the highest through road in North America, and its access roads are rich in mining heritage. Constructed in the late 1870s, the Mosquito Pass Road was used despite its treacherous terrain because it is the shortest route between Fairplay and Leadville. It is the lowest-elevation pass over the highest ridge in the United States (outside Alaska) and the Rocky Mountain Range, and as such has particular fauna and flora such as Penland's alpine fen mustard, not found elsewhere in the lower 48 states.