You know you are getting somewhere when
you see this sign on I-25.
CLUI photo
Discussion of Colorado Springs as an emerging
center of power came up following the last presidential election.
While most of the commentary centered around the growth of powerful
Christian organizations in the area, evidence from a recent visit
to the region by representatives of the Center shows that this
small city looms large on the national and even global landscape
in more ways than can be simply coincidence.
Colorado’s second largest city (pop 320,000), the Springs’
sits on the western end of the American plains, at the abrupt
eastern base of the Rockies, like a smaller version of Denver,
65 miles north. While this transitional, or “liminal”
physiogeography may explain some of the city’s contemporary
characteristics, it doesn’t explain them all.
The origins of the city are as a supply center for the mining
boomtowns in the hills, like the legendary Cripple Creek. In 1917,
when the nation switched from gold to silver for its coinage,
creating a slump in the local gold mining industry, businesses
in the region were quick to cash in on the landscape itself: the
dramatic mountain scenery became the draw, and tourism became
the major local industry.
Spearheading this trend was one of the grandest western resorts
in the nation, the Broadmoor, which opened in 1918, and roared
into the twenties at full tilt, attracting recreating presidents
and foreign royalty. Pikes Peak, which looms 8,000 feet above
the city’s streets, became a national landmark, famous for
the daredevil auto races up the winding dirt road all the way
to the peak’s 14,110 foot summit, a road privately built
and financed by the Broadmoor. A cog railway, also owned by the
Broadmoor, offered another way to the summit. Today, both are
still popular summer attractions, though traffic on the narrow
private toll road travels at a much slower pace.
It could be that the recreational opportunities, and the existence
of a swanky resort is what first brought Colorado Springs to the
attention of federal military planners. Or it could be just a
naturally nationally strategic location. In either case, Colorado
Springs has become the symbolic, if not the actual, center for
the nation’s defense, and it teems with military activity,
Army and Air Force.
Focus on the Focus on the Family HQ.
CLUI photo
Most famous of course is Cheyenne Mountain, the
spring-cushioned underground satellite and radar observation nidus
and command center bored into a hill at the base of Pikes Peak
at the peak of the Cold War. Like a central nervous system, connected
by satellite, fiber optics, and microwave to thousands of sensitive
ground and space-based receptors, spread all over the world, Cheyenne
Mountain still vigilantly monitors the skies and space for hostile
or suspicious moving objects the world over. It recently underwent
a $1.7 billion renovation. It is operated by NORAD, and the US
Space Command, which is headquartered at Peterson Air Force Base,
also in Colorado Springs. Petersen employs a few thousand people
in communication, security, logistics, and intelligence programs,
and is also associated with nearby Schriever Air Force Base, the
military center for time and space (see article on next page).
At the base of Cheyenne Mountain is Fort Carson, a large mechanized
infantry (tank) base, with 137,000 acres and around 15,000 military
personnel and 3,000 civilian jobs. On the north edge of town is
the Air Force Academy, the Air Force’s equivalent to West
Point (a jet-age modernist complex, opened in 1958, in the foothills
of the Rockies – compare to West Point’s medieval
fortress on the Hudson, founded in Napoleonic times). All told,
at least 35,000 people are employed by the military and related
civilian jobs in Colorado Springs, despite – or perhaps
because of – being nearly as far from foreign lands as possible.
The high elevation and sporty environment were no doubt the attractions
that brought the United States Olympic Committee’s administrative
headquarters and Training Center to Colorado Springs. If the complex
has an authoritative look at its core, that is because its previous
use was as Ent Air Force Base, the former headquarters of the
North American Defense Command (before it moved to nearby Petersen
AFB). The Olympic Committee moved into the former defense node
in 1978, soon after it was vacated by the Air Force. The complex
was expanded massively in the 1990s to house new training facilities
for athletes, including a sports science center, 45,000 square
foot aquatic center, a 59,000 square foot multi-story gymnasium,
the largest indoor shooting facility in the western hemisphere,
housing and support for over 550 trainees and trainers, and much
more. It is the center of the US’s olympian efforts, and
one of the largest diversified sports training complexes in the
country.
Air Force Academy.
CLUI photo
It has been suggested that Colorado
Springs’ location at a sort of geographic fulcrum for the
lower 48, where the plains meet the mountains, favors the timely
and simultaneous distribution of mail to all parts of the country.
This theory explains the presence of a number of mail order and
direct marketing businesses in the region (Columbia House, transcripts
and tape companies, and the Citizen Information Center, run by
the federal government in nearby Pueblo), and is supported by
the fact that Federal Express has opened a regional distribution
node at the airport.
This “mail hub” theory helps to explain, partially
at least, the new nationally prominent evangelical Christian presence
in the Springs. The national headquarters for the politically
influential Focus on the Family, now one of the largest private
employers in the region, is located off the Interstate north of
town. Its sprawling new campus sends out enough mail (reportedly
4 million pieces a month) to have its own zip code. At the next
exit off I-25 is the headquarters of the New Life Church, with
its 10,000 seat World Prayer Center. The head of this church,
pastor Ted Haggard, is the president of the National Association
of Evangelicals, and a good friend of the Bush administration.
No doubt he too sends out a lot of mail.
Perhaps some of the same forces that draw such technological
and spiritual extremes to the Springs also attracted Nikola Tesla
here in 1899. Seeking open land and lots of electricity, the notoriously
inventive high energy physicist built a lab a mile east of downtown
to investigate, among other things, the transmission of electricity
through the air. A few months later, while making what has been
described as the largest artificial lightning display ever created,
the town electrical utility became overloaded, and their only
generator exploded. After unsuccessful attempts to convince the
utility to provide service to his lab again, Tesla left the Springs,
never to return. A hundred years later, the only museum in the
whole country dedicated to this pioneering inventor of alternating
current, located in downtown Colorado Springs, auctioned off its
assets and closed for good, citing lack of public interest and
support as the reason.
Another curious and unique museum that seems, however, to be
thriving in Colorado Springs, is the Money Museum. This is America’s
largest museum dedicated to numismatics, and is located at the
institutional headquarters of the American Numismatic Association.
The ANA is the lead agency for promoting the hobby and industry
of coin collecting in the nation. 500 clubs and over 32,000 individuals
are members of the ANA. Why the hub of this network of money collectors
is in Colorado Springs remains a mystery.
The nation’s center for numismatic outreach, global space/time
control, projectile tracking, international athleticism, bulk
mail powerhouse, politically powerful evangelical Christianity,
and the sort of higher education that only the Air Force can provide:
This is today’s Colorado Springs.