"A Look Back"

    The Stories presented here are about people and events during the early days when this corner of Colorado was first settled.

    Other stories in the "A Look Back" series:

  • "Bad Man" Bob Meldrum
  • 509 Yampa – Standing the test of time
  • 595 Colorado Street
  • Al Martinez – a man of faith and leadership
  • Architect turned homesteader – L. A. Heard
  • Attractive New Filling Station Nearly Finished
  • Augusta Wallihan
  • Bringing a touch of class to Northwest Colorado
  • Byron Cooper – A man of integrity
  • Charles and Effie Osborn
  • Christian Church of Craig – up from the ashes
  • Christina Murray – last and first
  • Cosgriff Hotel
  • Craig airport an important part of city’s history
  • Craig Armory building an important part of history
  • Craig Becomes An Official Town
  • Craig Bottling Works
  • Craig drugstores
  • Craig Motel
  • Craig, Colorado The First Twenty Years
  • Craig’s Early Gas Stations
  • Craig’s early Motels
  • Craig’s oldest continuous retail business still going strong
  • D. W. Diamond, Photographer
  • D.W. Diamond
  • Doc Montgomery Early Craig Cobbler
  • Drawing the lines of a new territory
  • Duffy Tunnel
  • Elsie Wingo
  • Ersel Deakins – A man of Craig
  • George and Julia Welch – part of Craig’s founding tapestry
  • Gregory Cash Grocery
  • Hamilton Hamlet Home to Hundreds
  • Historical Church Changes With Time
  • Historical Movers and Shakers
  • I.P. Beckett – born to lead
  • J.J. Stanton – One of Craig’s early movers
  • John and Fern Sherman
  • Joseph S. Collom, Pioneer Axial Basin Rancher
  • Joseph S. Collom, Pioneer Axial Basin Rancher
  • Julia Carpenter – Craig’s grand Lady
  • L.S. “Ted” McCandless – caring for Craig
  • Ladore Canyon Dam Project
  • Lawrence couple strong supporters of Craig
  • Lay, Colorado
  • Lewis M. Hellebust, photographer
  • Loyd DeuPree III
  • Martin Lukas – Bohemian homesteader
  • Mary Wiley Humphrey
  • Maurice Flynn heads for Hollywood…and back…and back
  • Mining something
  • Moblile Economy Run
  • Moffat County High School – history repeats itself
  • Moffat County homesteader goes to State
  • Moffat County’s railroad legacy
  • One Boy's Life
  • P. F. Kremer, Artist and Homesteader
  • Persinger sisters showed true style
  • Piecing together a good life
  • R.V. Bryan Helped To Lay The Foundations of Craig
  • Rangewars - Sheep Massacre on the Yampa
  • Red Wash Jones
  • Rev. J. N. Bridges
  • Russell Coles – Keeping the books for Moffat County
  • Sawtooth Range Riders
  • Sheep industry/Winder
  • Stoddards recorded the history of Craig as they lived it
  • Teacher brings Europe to Craig
  • The Bilsing Family
  • The Crosthwaites – providing a legacy of excellence
  • The Fuss family – Bringing the staff of life to Craig
  • The Future of Craig
  • The last of the bad good guys
  • The last passenger train to Craig
  • The Legacy of Tracy & Lant
  • The lost Freeman grave
  • The Osborn clan grows up and out
  • Tragedy at Wadge Mine Part 1
  • Tragedy At Wadge Mine Part 2
  • Tragedy At Wadge Mine Part 3
  • Tragedy At Wadge Mine Part 4
  • Tragedy At Wadge Mine Part 5
  • Tragedy At Wadge Mine Part 6
  • Victory Highway
  • W.P. Irwin – Pharmacist and friend of Craig
  • Wantland – hope or speculation?
  • Washington Held – a friend of Craig
  • William Penn Finley – Supporter of Craig and her people
  • William Terrill – keeping the peace
  • Yampa Canyon


  • Rosetta Webb-McKinney – an early Craig dynamo
    By Shannan Koucherik, for the Museum of NW CO

    Many of Craig’s residents enjoy the benefits of our public library and City Park, but few know how either of these facilities came to be, or that they both may be credited to one determined lady with a lot of community spirit.

    Rosetta Webb was born in Clayton County, Iowa on September 25, 1857. She came to the eastern slope of Colorado as a teenager and soon married a young man of the area. After her marriage, Rosetta was not content to just stay at home, but became the assistant postmaster of Longmont.

    She was also active in the Democratic Party and in this capacity, she met many prominent people who would remain her friends and acquaintances for the rest of her busy life.

    After she left the postal service, she served for three years as a matron at the Colorado Penitentiary. She found time to be a mother as well as a career woman – a skill that would serve her well as the years unrolled.

    In 1898 her husband was assigned to work on an irrigation project north of Craig. He left his family on the eastern slope to take the job, not knowing that it would be the last time he would see them. He died unexpectedly soon after his arrival from unknown causes.

    Most women would avoid a strange town where their husband had died alone, but Rosetta wasn’t most women. She soon moved to Craig and went into the hotel business. The Webb Hotel on the corner of what is now Yampa Avenue and Victory Way, quickly gained a reputation for clean rooms, comfortable beds and good food. Many meetings held in her dining room would be pivotal in the development of the growing community. She kept up the hotel for 17 years before trying her hand at other endeavors.

    She dabbled in real estate sales over the years, but should be best remembered for two of her many projects undertaken to build the rough frontier town into a complete city. When her daughter died in 1926, Rosetta could have easily packed up and left, but instead she continued to throw her energies into building the town’s social structure.

    She organized the Sunshine Club for young Craig girls in 1919. She helped them to do charitable work throughout the community and exhibited an outstanding role model that would still shine today.

    Rosetta Webb loved books and education. She felt that Craig needed a library and took it upon herself to bring in books from the Traveling Library Association. She began with five books, freighted in at considerable expense and slowly added to the collection in her hotel’s reading room – all available without charge to anyone who wanted to read them.

    She persistently encouraged the people of Craig to form a Library Association and finally saw that entity incorporated on July 25, 1912. She asked for the privilege of donating the first volume to the newly established “official” library. Her gift was a copy of “Pilgrim’s Progress.” She served as the official librarian for several years, lovingly tending the growing library collection.

    In 1913, a friend of Mrs. Webb’s donated 500 volumes to the library. That donation and the continued additions received from W.H. Rose and other Craig citizens brought the collection to a size that no longer fit in the hotel’s reading room. Several temporary buildings were used before the Library Association moved its collection into a former Catholic church building that had been moved to a site in the 600 block of Yampa Avenue just north of Sixth St in 1926.

    In 1921, Rosetta Webb surprised the citizens of Craig by marrying her childhood sweetheart, Edwin McKinney. They had hoped to marry as young people, but her move to Colorado had dashed that hope. He never forgot her and after they were both widowed, he asked her to marry him. She was strong-willed enough to say that she wasn’t about to leave Craig, so he sold his holdings in Iowa and arrived in Craig determined to marry her. A week later, she became his bride and they lived happily together until his death in 1934.

    Rosetta felt that in addition to a good library, the town needed a public park where people could come together to celebrate big and small occasions and relax. She was instrumental in the formation of City Park. Even after she moved back to Longmont to live with her nephew, she returned to Craig on occasion to promote the park.

    Rosetta Webb-McKinney died in January 3, 1940 after a long life of public service. We can still enjoy her contributions today as we celebrate Craig’s centennial.


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    Museum of Northwest Colorado
    590 Yampa Avenue
    Craig, Colorado 81625
    970-824-6360
    Fax: 970-824-1098
    e-mail:
    musnwco@moffatcounty.net

    Open year round - Monday thru Friday 9:00-5:00 Saturday 10:00 - 4:00
    Admission Free - Donations Gladly Accepted
    Museum is wheelchair accessible