Welcome to the Zebulon M. Pike Expedition Web Site! Image: Zebulon Montgomery Pike
Image: The Pike Page, a commemorative project of the Zebulon Pike Bicentennial.
 


Zebulon M. Pike Expedition Bicentennial Highlights!

Communities all along Pike’s route, drawn to the saga of Pike’s adventures that literally unfolded in their own back yards, and aware that their communities were a direct result of the historical processes brought on in the wake of Pike’s endeavor, have likewise embraced the bicentennial as their own.

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Senate Endorses the Bicentennial

In honor of Zebulon Montgomery Pike’s explorations into the West, including Colorado, United States Senator Ken Salazar (D-Colorado) drafted a Senate Resolution to officially recognize the bicentennial in 2006.

Sen. Salazar
Sen. Salazar

“When people think of Colorado, they think of Pikes Peak,” said Senator Salazar. “It is only fitting that as we near the 200th anniversary of his explorations we honor Zebulon Pike’s contributions to the great state of Colorado and this nation.”

Senator Salazar’s resolution, S.Res 252, was co-sponsored by Senator Wayne Allard (R-Colorado), and passed on November 15, 2005, exactly 199 years to the day of when Pike first glimpsed the mountain that would bear his name.

Sen. Allard
Sen. Allard

To access the resolution click here.

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Colorado Artist Designs The Bicentennial Logo

The image that will be seen with increasing frequency as the Pike bicentennial unfolds was created by Pueblo, Colorado, artist Ken Williams.

The Pike bicentennial logo actually grew out of a much larger project begun in 2001, when the city of Pueblo embarked on an ambitious project to create a plaza dedicated to Pike near the actual site of one of his camps. Williams' design for the plaza included a large bronze medallion of Pike peering through his spyglass as a major graphic element.

Colorado Springs Kicks Off Bicentennial

The Rock Ledge Ranch Historic Site in Colorado Springs, Colorado, hosted a special Pike expedition bicentennial event on Sunday, January 22, 2006. With assistance from historical reenactors from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, and Indian Representatives, the purpose of the event was to depict interaction between Pike and his men and the American Indians he met along his route.

Over 400 people attended the activities and had a chance to learn what life was like in 1806. The afternoon program featured a lecture by independent historian Mark Gardner. This program capped off a full weekend of activities in Colorado Springs that marked the beginning of the bicentennial year. In all over 2,200 people participated in special events at Rock Ledge Ranch and the Colorado Springs Pioneers Museum.

A full slate of exhibits and programs are scheduled at the two Colorado sites through the end of the year and into 2007. For more on the numerous bicentennial activities in Colorado Springs, and elsewhere, click here.

A Plaza for Pike

Pueblo, Colorado’s renowned Pike Plaza, one of the largest and certainly the most innovative of the nation’s architectural monuments to Pike and his expedition, will be the centerpiece of an ambitious program of bicentennial events. Click here for more.


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