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The Overland Trail stage line was
regularly terrorized by outlaws, where the surrounding area provided
multiple opportunistic hideouts. One hideout, labeled the
Robbers Roost atop Table Mountain, was so popular that the
outlaws built a cabin there. Table Mountain, only about a
mile northeast of the Virginia Dale Stage Station, was a perfect
hideout, as it is difficult to climb with practically perpendicular
cliffs and a rim of shale.
At the time, it was rumored that
Joseph "Jack"
Slade, the Station Master was the leader of the gang.
Jack
Slade, not as famous as many other
outlaw characters, was nevertheless, as notorious as many of them.
Slade was said to have had an uncontrollable temper, was a heavy
drinker, had murdered in the past, and was eventually hanged in
Montana. Though the stage line suspected
Slade, they could not prove it, so
they just fired him. Uncharacteristically, the
bad-tempered Slade, left without any problems.
Later
Jack
Slade moved
on to
Virginia City,
Montana. A heavy drinker with a bad temper, he wrecked a
saloon
soon after his arrival.
Jack was arrested but he tore up the
arrest and threatened the judge. Though he pleaded for his life,
he was immediately hanged.
Virginia Dale, his
girlfriend (or common law wife) was brought to town by one of
Jack's
friends, took his body home, pickled it in alcohol in a metal casket,
and kept it under her bed for several months. She then took it to Salt
Lake City, Utah and buried him in the old Mormon Cemetery where his
body remains today.
The gold taken by the
robbers at Virginia Dale has never been found.
Today, Virginia Dale
is nothing more than a
ghost
town, located in the northern part of Larimer County, about 45
miles northwest of Fort Collins, and just about four miles south of
the
Wyoming border on US Highway 287. The old Overland
Trail Stage Station is listed on the National Register of Historical
sites and recently efforts have been made to preserve the old station.
The stage station is
situated at the very end of County Road 43F, about 1 mile east of US 287. A monument erected for the station marks the beginning of CR 43F. Follow the county road through a narrow gorge beneath Lover’s Leap, past a
ranch, and it will take you right to the door. The station itself is on
private property, but the access to the site is on a county road. If
you intend to visit the Stage Station, you can take pictures of the
grounds and the exterior of the building, but please do not trespass onto
the private property.
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