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The Mancos High School, at 350 Grand Ave. in Mancos, Colorado, was built in 1909. [1] It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1991. [1] It is built of sandstone blocks cut by local people. It was expanded and renovated in 1954 at cost of $140,000. [2] A second major renovation was completed in 2020. [3]
Mancos High School, built in 1909 of local sandstone, was the first high school in the county. The Mancos Opera House was completed in 1910. The Wrightsman House was built in 1903 of late Victorian architecture. Attempts to create a separate Mancos County from the eastern portion of Montezuma County in the mid-20th century failed.
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The Wrightsman House (formerly Wrightsman Hotel), at 209 Bauer Avenue in Mancos, Colorado, was built in 1903 and listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1997, alongside three contributing buildings. [1] Wrightsman is a two-and-a-half-storey eclectic stone house amidst a wide area of lawn and mature trees.
Granada War Relocation Center as seen in August 2019. Interpretive signs are visible. Since 1990, the Amache Preservation Society, a Granada high school group, has worked on preservation of the site and its documents. [4] [19] As a school project, Granada Undivided High School students have set up a museum for the Granada War Relocation Center.
Mancos State Park is a Colorado state park. It is located near Mesa Verde National Park, the West Mancos Trail and the San Juan Skyway. [2] The park is known to have been a dwelling place for Ancestral Puebloans. They lived in the Four Corners area in ancient times from AD 1 to 1300.
The Ute Mountain Ute Tribe are descendants of the Weeminuche band [2] (Weminuche, Weemeenooch, Wiminuc, Guiguinuches) lived west of the Great Divide along the Dolores River of western Colorado, in the Abajo Mountains, in the Valley of the San Juan River its northern tributaries and in the San Juan Mountains including eastern Utah. [3]
South Fork West Mancos River is a tributary of the West Mancos River in Montezuma County, Colorado. The river flows from a source in the Owen Basin of the San Juan National Forest to a confluence with the North Fork that forms the West Mancos River.