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Two Lawyers. One Shotgun. Zero Gold.

Two Lawyers. One Shotgun. Zero Gold.
The con that accidentally built a Colorado town is wilder than you think.

Buck Timber

Feb 26, 2026

THE CON THAT BUILT ALLENSPARK

How Two Nebraska Lawyers Created a

Town They Were Trying to Rob

This account draws from Colorado Public Radio's 2019 report "The Fake Gold Rush That Put Allenspark On The Map," Boulder County landmark designation records, the National Park Service's 2006 mining survey of Rocky Mountain National Park, and the documented history of Allenspark, Colorado. The corporate fraud is verified through official county records. The shotgun salting detail comes from oral history preserved by Allenspark resident and amateur historian Edie DeWeese, whose family has lived there since 1904. No forensic evidence from the 1890s exists to confirm it, but the story has held together for over a hundred years in a small town where people tend to know the difference. The broad facts are solid. Some scenes have been shaped for the telling. Think of it the way you would any good historical drama: based on true events, with a few gaps filled by a storyteller who has lived in this valley long enough to know how these things usually go.

-Enjoy The Story, Buck

 

Moe Pass came by Thursday with coffee and what he called "something you are going to want to hear." He sat down at the kitchen table, pulled off his gloves, and told me he had been reading about Allenspark.

I told him I already knew a story about Allenspark.

 

He said he doubted it was the same one.

 

He was wrong. We had both stumbled onto the Clara Belle Mining and Reduction Company, which is either the funniest or the most embarrassing chapter in the history of Colorado gold mining, depending on whether you were the one holding the shotgun or the one writing the check.

 

Last week I told you about the  Agnes Lowe stunt up at Rocky Mountain National Park. A fake cavewoman, a crowd of two thousand, a ranger waiting in the trees with a change of clothes. This one is different. You better pull up a chair.

 

SIT DOWN. THIS ONE'S GOOD.

 

The Men Who Shot Gold Into the Walls

 

How Two Nebraska Lawyers Built a Town They Were Trying to Rob

 


What Is the Clara Belle Mining Scam?

Allenspark, Colorado sits at 8,428 feet on the Peak to Peak Highway, about fifteen miles south of Estes Park. It is quiet up there. Small. The kind of place where the same families have lived for four generations and everybody knows whose cabin is whose.

It was not always quiet.

In 1896, Allenspark was the site of a gold rush. Investors came from as far away as Omaha, Nebraska. A mill was built. Claims were staked. Money changed hands.

Not one meaningful ounce of gold ever came out of the ground.

 

What came out instead was a story.

 


Who Was Alonzo Allen?

The man the town is named after, Alonzo Nelson Allen, arrived in Colorado from Columbus, Wisconsin, during the gold rush of 1859. He prospected. He ran cattle. He built the first cabin in the high meadow in 1864. He never found significant gold. He died in 1894, the same year a forest fire took his cabin to the ground.

 

When Allen died and his cabin burned, the land was essentially open. The pioneer era was over. What came next was something different.

Something from Omaha.

 


Who Were the Men Behind the Clara Belle?

John Bishop, William McCollister, and C.L. Tripp were not miners. They were Nebraska attorneys.

 

McCollister and Tripp had practiced law together. They understood contracts, corporate structures, and the specific kind of paperwork that makes a fraudulent venture look like a sound investment.

 

In 1896 they formed the Clara Belle Mining and Reduction Company.

The name was chosen carefully. Clara was Tripp's wife. Belle was McCollister's. Naming a mining company after your wife signals permanence. Legacy. The kind of long-term thinking that reassures a man writing a large check. It says: we are not here to take your money and run. We are here to build something for our families.

They were absolutely here to take the money and run.

 


Why Did Investors Believe Them?

Their timing was sharp. The silver crash of 1893 had rattled every investor between St. Louis and Denver. People were desperate for the next great find.

Eight miles south of Allenspark, the town of Ward was a genuine gold and silver producer. The Switzerland Trail railroad was on its way. Real ore. Real money.

The Clara Belle men pointed at Ward and said: look at that. Now look north. Same mountains. Same rock. Same veins.

The same veins did not run north. But the investors from Omaha did not know that.

 


How Did the Shotgun Gold Scam Work?


Read More...

Trivia Questionâť“

The Clara Belle Mining and Reduction Company was named after two real women. Who were they, and what was their connection to the men who ran the company?

Answer at the bottom of the newsletter

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DID YOU KNOW? 

 

  • The town of Ward, eight miles south of Allenspark, was a genuine gold and silver producer during the same period as the Clara Belle scam. The Clara Belle promoters used Ward's real success to argue the same rich veins must run north into Allenspark. They did not.
  • C.L. Tripp and William McCollister were practicing attorneys in Nebraska before launching the Clara Belle. They structured the enterprise with the legal precision of men who knew exactly how close to the line they were walking.
  • "Mine salting" was a recognized fraud technique in the 1890s with a documented history across the American West. Shotgun salting was one of several known methods. Others included planting ore samples, falsifying assay reports, and bribing assayers directly.
  • Allenspark's first post office application was filed May 29, 1896, the same year the Clara Belle rush began. The town plat was officially filed May 23, 1896. The fraud and the founding happened in the same calendar month.

Buck's Joke Of The Day

What do you call two lawyers who load a shotgun with gold dust and fire it into a mine wall? Founders. (Boulder County said so officially. I am not making that up.)

LOCAL HIGHLIGHT

 

If the Clara Belle story has you curious, the drive down State Highway 7 from Estes Park to Allenspark is worth making on a clear February day. The Peak to Peak Scenic Byway runs straight through town and the views of Longs Peak from that stretch are as good as they get in any season. The Wild Basin trailhead sits just west of town for anyone who wants a winter walk. The Clara Belle mill is long gone, but the high meadow that fooled investors from Omaha is still right there, looking completely innocent.

đź’ˇ Answer to Trivia Question:

Clara Tripp and Belle McCollister. Clara was the wife of C.L. Tripp, and Belle was the wife of William McCollister, the two Nebraska attorneys who co-founded the company with John Bishop. Naming the enterprise after their wives was a calculated move to project permanence and respectability to outside investors. Whether their wives knew what their names were being used for, the historical record does not say.

CLOSING FROM BUCK

Two lawyers loaded a shotgun with gold dust and accidentally built a town.

That is not how you are supposed to do it. But here we are.

Allenspark is still standing and the con men are long gone.

Some stories end the way they should.

 


Stay smart, stay safe, and leave the mountains richer than the men who tried to rob them.

- Buck Timber Estes Park, Colorado

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