Palmer Lake Chautauqua Assembly
The Palmer Lake Chautauqua Assembly is a revival of the annual summer cultural gatherings that took place in the town’s rustic Glen from 1886 until 1910. The summer-long “tent university” featured speakers, nature talks and walks, hikes, singing, concerts and outings to various destinations in the Pikes Peak region. People stayed for nights – even weeks – in tents and tent-cabins and at the local hotel. These summer gatherings originated near Lake Chautauqua, New York, which gave them the name.
On August 3, 2008, the Palmer Lake Historical Society revived the Chautauqua with a one-day event that featured traditional elements, including a nature walk, musical performances, lectures, a Native American dance troupe, Sunday service in the Pinecrest Chapel and persons portraying figures from the past.
Hundreds of Chautauqua go-ers came to Palmer Lake, boosting passenger service and ticket revenues. Merchants, hotel owners, boarding house operators and livery stables also benefited from the summer influx.
The Chautauqua lectures included Professor Cutler from Colorado College on the geological history of Elephant Rock and Dr. W. H. Riley of the Colorado Sanitarium on “Food Its Relation to Health.” Chautauqua-goers hiked to the apex of Chautauqua Crest that towers above the 150-acre grounds, where a gazebo had been built.
The idea caught on elsewhere in Colorado. In Boulder, for example, schoolteachers from Texas started the Chautauqua Assembly that still functions in original meeting halls and cottages. Nationally known musicians continue to perform in the historic Chautauqua Theater throughout the summer while lectures and forums engage the public.
Chautauqua gatherings faded from popularity, at Palmer Lake and elsewhere, in the 1910s as Americans sought other entertainment outlets and began enjoying summer auto vacations, rather than the Chautauqua Assemblies.
Begun in 1874 in upstate New York, the Chautauqua adult education movement spread across the country. People flocked to these entertaining and educational sessions, popular in the days before radio, movies and television.
Summer gatherings in woodsy places attracted hundreds of folks for educational lectures, cultural entertainment, spiritual enlightenment and outdoor recreation. People were eager to learn from nature walks, lectures, religious lectures and field trips.
Summer Chautauqua Assemblies were held at more than 400 locations around the country. Troupes of educators, speakers and entertainers traveled the country bringing educational, cultural and recreational programs to ordinary people in rural areas. These Circuit Chautauquas visited more than 10,000 communities.
President Theodore Roosevelt called the Chautauqua “the most American thing in America.” Nationwide, an estimated 45 million Americans attended a Chautauqua Assembly. The Chautauqua summer camps also provided training to thousands of schoolteachers.
Chautauqua
Begun in 1874 in southwestern New York, the Chautauqua adult education movement spread across the country. People flocked to these entertaining and educational sessions, popular in the days before radio, movies and television. Summer gatherings in woodsy places attracted hundreds of folks for educational lectures, cultural activities, concerts, spiritual enlightenment and outdoor recreation.
Palmer Lake hosted one of the first Chautauqua Assemblies west of the Mississippi starting in 1887. It was an annual summer event for more than two decades, lasting until 1910. The Rocky Mountain Chautauqua Assembly made Palmer Lake a destination point for many. People from Colorado Springs and Denver, as well as elsewhere in Colorado and Midwestern states, arrived on the Denver & Rio Grande Railroad. Palmer Lake’s Chautauqua took place in Glen Park centered around an auditorium built on what we now know as Chautauqua Avenue. Many homes in “The Glen” neighborhood began as rustic tent cottages, where Chautauqua-goers stayed for the six-weeklong assembly. Many Chautauqua cottages eventually evolved into permanent homes where some descendants still live today. Chautauqua activities in Palmer Lake included lectures, debates, concerts, campfire gatherings and burro excursions up to the reservoirs. A season ticket costs $2.50. The Chautauqua lectures included Professor Cutler from Denver University on the geological history of Elephant Rock and Dr. W. H. Riley of the Colorado Sanitarium on “Food -Its Relation to Health.” Chautauqua-goers hiked to the apex of Chautauqua Crest that towers above the 150-acre grounds, where a gazebo had been built.
The name “Chautauqua” is a Seneca Indian word meaning “where the fish was taken out.” Across all cultures historically, fish have symbolized a rich source of nourishment for mankind. The Chautauqua Assembly operated based on the premise that “everyone has a right to be all that he/she can be—to know all that he/she can know,” and hoped to provide a nourishing experience from which participants came out enriched and entertained.
