Bott and Langmeyer Building Stone
(Originally published in the Red Rock Rag, Volume 1, Number 8: December, 2000,
Adapted with minor revisions)
In 1859, Anthony Bott was one of the founders of Colorado City. Over the years between the founding of Colorado City in 1859 and Mr. Bott’s death in 1916, Anthony Bott engaged in a variety of enterprises, including road building, real estate, farming, limestone mining, cement manufacture, and the quarrying of building stone.
Photos and lithographs of Colorado City suggest that the first stone building in town was built within two years of the founding of Colorado City; and one historian has suggested that this building may have been built to promote Mr. Bott’s building stone business.
The stone which Anthony Bott quarried was Dakota sandstone. The quarries were located on the east face of the Dakota hogback (the highest ridge in Red Rock Canyon Open Space) about a mile and a half south of Fountain Creek. Although these quarries were apparently operated in the 1860’s, most of the land where the quarries were located did not become privately owned until it was obtained by John Langmeyer as a homestead in 1875. John Langmeyer was Anthony Bott’s business partner in the building stone business and also Anthony Bott’s brother-in-law. According to the Colorado State Business Directory, the business was known as Bott and Langmyer (sic) Building Stone. After John Langmeyer’s death in the summer of 1880, Anthony Bott continued to operate the stone quarries . Apparently Mr. Bott thought highly of his brother-in-law and business partner. In 1889, nine years after John Langmeyer’s death, a street in Bott’s Addition Number 4 to Colorado City was named Langmeyer Street.