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The America West Hockey League (AWHL) was a Tier II Junior A ice hockey league. The AWHL was formed in 1992 to offer junior ice hockey to the Rocky Mountain region of USA Hockey . It originally was called the American Frontier Hockey League ( AFHL ), and the name change to AWHL came in 1998.
Papeton, was a coal mining town, now in the area of Venetian Village, [1] a neighborhood in Colorado Springs, Colorado, [2] that is 1.4 miles (2.3 km) west southwest of Palmer Park. [3] It is located at 6,184 feet (1,885 m) in elevation.
The team posted the largest margin of victory in meet history with a 143-point win over runner-up Wingate. The women’s team again tied its highest-ever finish at 3rd place. For the first time in program history, all seven Mines' men earned all-American honors while the women also had three all-Americans, matching the 2019 record total.
Animas Forks is an extinct mining town located 12 miles (19 km) northeast of Silverton in San Juan County, Colorado, United States. [3] The area is managed by the Bureau of Land Management . At an elevation of 11,185 feet (3,409 m), Animas Forks is one of the highest mining camps in North America.
In 1998, the Gold Kings relocated to Colorado Springs and became the Colorado Gold Kings. In its four seasons in Colorado the team fared better than it did in Alaska by qualifying for the postseason every year, but still failed to move past the second round of the playoffs. The Colorado Gold Kings folded after the 2001–02 season. [4]
Ashcroft is an extinct mining town located in Pitkin County, Colorado, United States.The silver mining camp was founded as Castle Forks City in the spring of 1880. A post office named Ashcroft operated at the site from August 12, 1880, until August 5, 1881, when the name was changed to Chloride.
Nevadaville started in 1859, soon after John H. Gregory found the first lode gold in what is now Colorado. At the time, the townsite was in western Kansas Territory. The town grew to house the miners working the Burroughs lode and the Kansas lode. The population was predominantly Irish. [4]
The miners, by contrast, were usually longtime Colorado residents who had worked in mines elsewhere. [3] Mining towns in 19th-century Colorado had often been built by the miners themselves out of whatever material they could find and assemble in their spare time. Often these wound up being log cabins covered with rock and dirt. The companies ...