Trinidad
Our editors will review what you’ve submitted and determine whether to revise the article.
Trinidad, city, seat (1866) of Las Animas county, south-central Colorado, U.S., situated on the Purgatoire River in the foothills of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains at an elevation of 6,025 feet (1,836 metres), south of Pueblo. Near the foot of Raton Pass (12 miles [19 km] south on the Colorado–New Mexico border), the site was a camping ground for traders, hunters, and cattlemen traversing the Santa Fe Trail. In 1870 the Santa Fe Railway built a line through the pass, and the settlement (named for Trinidad Baca, daughter of an early settler) developed as a coal-mining and shipping centre. Coal production, which decreased steadily after 1900, has been supplemented by cattle industries (dairying, meatpacking), wood processing, and the manufacture of bricks, structural clay products, and plastics. Trinidad State Junior College was opened in 1925. Baca House (an adobe, built in 1869), Bloom House (1882), and the Santa Fe Trail Museum are points of interest; the downtown area (locally called the Corazon de Trinidad [Heart of Trinidad]) is a National Historic Landmark District. Trinidad Lake State Park is nearby. The remains of the Ludlow camp, where 25 people, including 11 children, died in a clash between Colorado state militiamen and striking miners on April 20, 1914, are located 15 miles (24 km) to the north of Trinidad. Inc. town, 1876; city, 1879. Pop. (2000) 9,078; (2010) 9,096.