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Castle Rock, Colorado

Home-rule town in Douglas County, Colorado, USA

Castle Rock, Colorado

Home-rule town in Douglas County, Colorado, USA

FieldValue
nameCastle Rock, Colorado
settlement_typehome rule town
image_skylineCastle Rock, CO.jpg
image_captionLooking down Wilcox Street (2018)
image_mapDouglas County Colorado Incorporated and Unincorporated areas Castle Rock Highlighted 0812415.svg
map_captionLocation within Douglas County and Colorado
pushpin_mapUSA#USA Colorado
pushpin_labelCastle Rock
pushpin_label_positionright
pushpin_map_captionLocation of Castle Rock
coordinates
coordinates_footnotes
elevation_ft6224
elevation_footnotes
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_nameUnited States
subdivision_type1State
subdivision_name1Colorado
subdivision_type2County
subdivision_name2Douglas
government_typehome rule town
leader_titleMayor
established_titleFounded
established_date1874
established_title1Incorporated
established_date1April 14, 1881
unit_prefUS
area_footnotes
area_total_km289.981
area_land_km289.981
area_water_km20.000
area_total_sq_mi34.742
area_land_sq_mi34.742
area_water_sq_mi0.000
population_as_of2020
pop_est_footnotes
population_footnotes
population_total73158
population_density_km2891.19
population_density_sq_mi2308.19
population_rankUS: 445th
CO: 14th
population_urban2686147 (US: 18th)
population_metro2985871 (US: 19th)
population_blank1_titleCombined
population_blank13663515 (US: 18th)
population_blank2_titleFront Range
population_blank25055344
timezoneMST
utc_offset−07:00
timezone_DSTMDT
utc_offset_DST−06:00
postal_code_typeZIP code
postal_code80104, 80108, 80109
area_code_typeArea codes
area_code303/720/983
blank_nameGNIS pop ID
blank_info
blank1_nameGNIS town ID
blank1_info
blank2_nameFIPS code
blank2_info
blank3_nameMajor highways
blank3_info[[File:I-25.svg24pxlink=Interstate 25 in Colorado]] [[File:US_85.svg24pxlink=U.S. Route 85 in Colorado]] [[File:US_87.svg24pxlink=U.S. Route 87 in Colorado]] [[File:Colorado_83.svg24pxlink=Colorado State Highway 83]] [[File:Colorado_86.svg24pxlink=Colorado State Highway 86]]
website

CO: 14th

Castle Rock is a home rule town that is the county seat of and the most-populous municipality in Douglas County, Colorado, United States. The town’s population was 73,158 at the 2020 census, a 51.68% increase since the 2010 census. Castle Rock is the most-populous Colorado town (rather than city) and the 14th-most populous Colorado municipality. Castle Rock is a part of the Denver-Aurora-Lakewood, CO metropolitan statistical area and the Front Range urban corridor.

The town is named for the prominent, castle-shaped butte near the center of town.

History

The Denver and Rio Grande Railway's Castle Rock depot (1917)

White settlers were drawn to the area by rumors of gold and by land opened through the Homestead Act of 1862. The discovery of rhyolite stone, though, not gold, ultimately led to the settlement of Castle Rock.

Castle Rock was founded in 1874 when the eastern Douglas County border was redrawn to its present location. Castle Rock was chosen as the county seat because of its central location.

One of the first homesteaders in the area near today's Castle Rock was Jeremiah Gould. He owned about 160 acre to the south of "the (Castle) Rock". At that time, the settlement consisted of just a few buildings for prospectors, workers, and cowboys. In 1874, Gould donated 120 acre to the new town, which was also now home to the Douglas County government. Six streets named Elbert, Jerry, Wilcox, Perry, Castle, and Front were laid out to build the actual town of Castle Rock. The courthouse square was defined and about 77 lots, each 50 by, were auctioned off for a total profit of US$3,400.

A new train depot brought the Denver and Rio Grande Railway to the area.

During the late 1800s and early 1900s, Castle Rock had a very active rhyolite-quarrying industry. Many immigrants arrived in the area to work in the quarries.

In 1936, the town received a donation of land that included its namesake geographical feature. Men employed by the Works Progress Administration constructed a star atop the butte shortly after Castle Rock received that donation. The star was lit every year from 1936 to 1941. After World War II began, the star was left unlit as a symbol of sacrifice in support of the war effort. On August 14, 1945, shortly after V-J Day, the star was modified into a V-for-victory symbol. On December 7, 1945, the star was lit for the holiday season. It has been lit every year since around the same time.

The town's historic county courthouse, which was built in 1889–1890, burned down on March 11, 1978, the result of arson.

Castle Rock's municipal government experienced significant financial difficulties during the early 1980s. In 1984, the town's voters approved a charter amendment that authorized the creation of a home-rule charter commission. The home-rule charter was finalized in 1987.

The original Douglas County courthouse was one of seven buildings in Castle Rock that have been added to the National Register of Historic Places. The other buildings include Castle Rock Depot, Castle Rock Elementary School, First National Bank of Douglas County, Samuel Dyer House, Benjamin Hammer House, and Keystone Hotel.

A dispute about whether the Castle Rock Police Department was required to enforce a civil restraining order was decided by the U.S. Supreme Court in 2005. The court held, in Town of Castle Rock v. Gonzales, that a municipality cannot be held liable under a federal civil-rights statute, 42 U.S.C. § 1983, for failing to enforce civil restraining orders. The case had arisen from a 1999 murder of three young girls by their father outside the Castle Rock Police Department building. The children were killed by their father, in violation of the restraining order that had been obtained by their mother, within several hours of being abducted. The mother had asked the Castle Rock police to enforce the restraining order by finding and apprehending the father after he removed the children from her home and before the murders. Castle Rock police officers declined to do so, refusing even to contact the Denver Police Department after the mother notified them that the father had taken the children to an amusement park in that city.

Geography

The town of Castle Rock is named after this prominent castle tower-shaped butte.

Castle Rock is located at (39.372212, −104.856090) at an elevation of 6,224 feet (1,897 m). Castle Rock is in central Colorado at the junction of Interstate 25 and State Highway 86, 28 mi south of downtown Denver and 37 mi north of Colorado Springs.

The town lies a few miles east of the Rampart Range of the Rocky Mountains on the western edge of the Great Plains. Castle Rock, the butte for which the town is named, is just north of the town center. Other prominent landforms visible from Castle Rock include Dawson Butte, Devils Head, Mount Blue Sky, and Pikes Peak.

East Plum Creek, a stream within the South Platte River watershed, flows generally north through Castle Rock. Hangman's Gulch, which runs northwest then west around the north side of the town center, drains into East Plum Creek, as do multiple unnamed gulches in the southern and western areas of town. McMurdo Gulch and Mitchell Gulch run north then northeast through eastern Castle Rock and drain into Cherry Creek east of town.

Castle Rock is in the Colorado Foothills life zone. The hillsides are covered with meadows of grass, small plants, scattered juniper trees, and open ponderosa pine woodlands. Other trees common in the area include Gambel oak (scrub oak or oak brush) and pinyon pine. Local wildlife includes the American badger, American black bear, bobcat, coyote, Colorado chipmunk, crow, garter snakes, gray fox, mountain cottontail rabbit, mountain lion, mule deer, pocket gopher, porcupine, skunk, and tadpoles. Birds found in the area include the golden eagle, peregrine falcon, sharp-shinned hawk, black-billed magpie, red-tailed hawk, pinyon jay, and western tanager.

The town had a total area of 89.981 km2, all land in 2023.

Lying within the Front Range urban corridor, the town is part of the greater Denver metropolitan area. Castle Rock borders three communities, all to its north; from west to east, they are Castle Pines Village, the city of Castle Pines, and The Pinery. Other nearby communities include Franktown to the east, Larkspur to the south, Perry Park to the southwest, and Sedalia to the northwest.

Climate

Castle Rock has a semiarid climate (Köppen BSk) with cold, dry, snowy winters, and hot, wetter summers. January is the coldest month, July the hottest, and August the month with the most precipitation.

|Jan record high F = 73 |Feb record high F = 75 |Mar record high F = 82 |Apr record high F = 91 |May record high F = 94 |Jun record high F = 101 |Jul record high F = 102 |Aug record high F = 99 |Sep record high F = 101 |Oct record high F = 88 |Nov record high F = 85 |Dec record high F = 82

|Jan avg record high F = 64.5 |Feb avg record high F = 64.6 |Mar avg record high F = 72.8 |Apr avg record high F = 77.7 |May avg record high F = 84.9 |Jun avg record high F = 92.7 |Jul avg record high F = 95.3 |Aug avg record high F = 92.8 |Sep avg record high F = 89.6 |Oct avg record high F = 82.1 |Nov avg record high F = 72.8 |Dec avg record high F = 65.3 |year avg record high F = 96.1

|Jan avg record low F = -4.0 |Feb avg record low F = -3.4 |Mar avg record low F = 6.6 |Apr avg record low F = 15.7 |May avg record low F = 27.2 |Jun avg record low F = 38.5 |Jul avg record low F = 48.2 |Aug avg record low F = 45.6 |Sep avg record low F = 32.1 |Oct avg record low F = 16.7 |Nov avg record low F = 3.6 |Dec avg record low F = -3.0 |year avg record low F = -9.5

|Jan record low F = -37 |Feb record low F = -32 |Mar record low F = -20 |Apr record low F = -8 |May record low F = 7 |Jun record low F = 25 |Jul record low F = 30 |Aug record low F = 34 |Sep record low F = 11 |Oct record low F = -5 |Nov record low F = -18 |Dec record low F = -29

|access-date = August 8, 2022 |access-date = August 8, 2022

Statewide, Colorado has experienced an average temperature increase of about 2.5 F-change over the past half-century. Given its location in the center of the state, Castle Rock is expected to experience continuing warming and higher average temperatures through the 21st century, as the effects of climate change continue to be felt. Daily minimum temperatures are also expected to continue rising, as they have for the past 30 years.

Neighborhoods

Castle Rock's ZIP codes include many neighborhoods:

North of Downtown / West of I-25

  • The Meadows
  • Castle Pines Village

Castle Rock encompasses about 35 sqmi, with a population of more than 73,000.

Demographics

| align-fn = center 2020 Census

2010 census

As of the 2010 census, 48,231 people, 16,688 households, and 12,974 families were residing in the town. The population density was 1,526.3 PD/sqmi. The 17,626 housing units had an average density of 557.8 /sqmi. The racial makeup of the town was 90.7% White, 1.7% Asian, 1.1% African American, 0.6% American Indian, 0.1% Pacific Islander, 2.9% from other races, and 2.8% from two or more races. Hispanics and Latinos of any race were 10.0% of the population.

Of the 16,688 households, 48.4% had children under 18 living with them, 65.4% were married couples living together, 3.9% had a male householder with no wife present, 8.5% had a female householder with no husband present, and 22.3% were not families. About 17.7% of all households were made up of individuals, and 4.0% had someone living alone who was 65 or older. The average household size was 2.86, and the average family size was 3.27.

In the town, the age distribution was 32.4% under 18, 5.8% from 18 to 24, 33.0% from 25 to 44, 22.6% from 45 to 64, and 6.2% who were 65 or older. The median age was 33.8 years. For every 100 females, there were 98.5 males. For every 100 females 18 and over, there were 95.5 males 18 and over.

The median income for a household in the town was $85,461, and for a family was $95,973. Males had a median income of $66,993 versus $47,087 for females. The per capita income for the town was $34,089. About 4.0% of families and 6.2% of the population were below the poverty line, including 8.2% of those under 18 and 6.2% of those 65 or over.

Castle Rock is the 16th-most populous municipality in Colorado and is the center of the burgeoning urbanization of the county.

Economy

Because of its Front Range location between Denver and its inner suburbs and Colorado Springs, many of Castle Rock's residents commute nearly 40 miles to southern Colorado Springs on I-25 or the Denver Technological Center, better known as the Denver Tech Center, which is an 18-mile drive north, with downtown Denver roughly 30 miles north, and Denver International Airport about 45 miles north.

About 80% of Castle Rock residents commute out of town to work. The average one-way commute time for a Castle Rock resident is about 29 minutes, longer than the U.S. average. One reason for this is that the town has not yet attracted the variety or extent of employers needed to significantly lower the number of commuters to work outside Castle Rock. The town has relatively little land zoned for industrial or light industrial use, with the vast majority of the land within town limits dedicated to residential construction only.

As of 2011, 78.2% of the population over the age of 16 was in the labor force, 0.4% was in the armed forces, and 77.7% was in the civilian labor force, with 72.6% employed and 5.1% unemployed. The employed civilian labor force was 48.0% in management, business, science, and arts; 25.8% in sales and office occupations; 14.7% in service occupations; 6.4% in natural resources, construction, and maintenance; and 5.2% in production, transportation, and material moving. The three industries employing the largest proportion of the working civilian labor force were educational services, health care, and social assistance (15.5%); professional, scientific, and management, and administrative and waste management services (13.2%); and finance and insurance, and real estate and rental and leasing (12.6%).

Castle Rock's cost of living is above average. Compared to a U.S. average of 100, the cost of living index for the town is 137.2.

As of mid-2019, the median home value in the town was $427,537. The median gross monthly rent for an apartment was about $1,461.

The town's housing base continues to grow. About 1,400 permits to build new homes were issued in 2018.

Government and politics

Castle Rock Town Hall (2010)

Castle Rock is a home-rule municipality with a council–manager form of government. The town's governing body is the town council, made up of seven members including the mayor and mayor pro-tem. Each councilmember is elected to represent an election district, and the mayor is elected to represent the town at large. One member, appointed by the council, serves as the mayor pro-tem. Castle Rock voters approved a change to the town charter that authorized an at-large mayor in 2017.

The mayor presides over council meetings and casts one vote, like other councilmembers. The council sets policy for the town, adopts ordinances, approves the town budget, makes major land-use decisions, and appoints key town government staff, including the town manager, town attorney, municipal judge, and members of town boards and commissions.

The town manager supervises all departments, prepares and implements the town budget, and works with the council to develop policies and propose new plans.

Tax revenues are used to provide general government, fire, police, parks maintenance and programs, street maintenance and operations, support for recreation, and planning and code enforcement services. The town also provides development services, golf, water, and sewer services to residents through self-supporting enterprise funds. The average annual municipal property tax bill of a Castle Rock resident is $40.66. That is in addition to property taxes assessed by Douglas County and other entities.

As the county seat, Castle Rock is the administrative center of Douglas County. The county courthouse, the Douglas County Justice Center, is north of downtown, and most departments of the county government base their operations in the town.

Castle Rock lies within Colorado's 4th U.S. Congressional District. The town is in the 2nd district of the Colorado Senate and the 45th district of the Colorado House of Representatives.

Castle Rock is the county seat of Douglas County, a Republican stronghold in Colorado.

Education

Primary and secondary education

Douglas County School District, based in Castle Rock, operates 18 public schools in the town. These include 10 elementary schools, two middle schools, two charter schools, one magnet school, one alternative high school, and two high schools: Castle View High School and Douglas County High School. In addition, there are three private primary schools in Castle Rock.

School-board elections in Douglas County are held in odd-numbered years. In recent years, the community has experienced a spirited debate between supporters of significant change in the management of local schools and those who oppose such changes or believe they should advance at a slower pace.

Libraries

The Douglas County Libraries public library system is based in Castle Rock, co-located with the local branch library, the Philip S. Miller Library, south of downtown. The Miller Library includes archives and local history and offers several educational and recreational programs to the public. Also, it includes Little Free Library places scattered throughout, such as in the festival park.

Infrastructure

Transportation

Interstate 25 and U.S. Route 87 run concurrently north-south through Castle Rock. U.S. Route 85, also a north-south route, enters the town from the northwest, meeting I-25 at Exit 184; south of the exit, it runs concurrently with I-25 and U.S. 87. Colorado State Highway 86, an east-west route, enters Castle Rock from the east, then turns north and west as Founders Parkway, terminating at its junction with I-25 at Exit 184.

For local transportation within Castle Rock, the town government sponsors a voucher program for reduced-fare taxi service. This service is available to town residents who are disabled or who do not have access to a vehicle. In addition, the Castle Rock Senior Center offers a shuttle service for resident senior citizens.

Castle Rock does not participate in the Denver metropolitan area's Regional Transportation District. Municipal voters decided in November 2005 to opt the town out of the district. As a result, neither bus nor light-rail service to Denver or any of its other suburbs is available from Castle Rock.

BNSF Railway and Union Pacific Railroad each have a freight rail line that runs through Castle Rock. Both lines run parallel to U.S. 85.

Utilities and water

CORE Electric Cooperative, based in nearby Sedalia, provides electric power. Black Hills Energy provides natural-gas service. Waste Management and other businesses provide trash removal.

The town government's Utilities Department oversees water provision, distribution, and infrastructure maintenance. Historically, nearly all of the water needed by Castle Rock residents was pumped from aquifers below the ground, including the Denver Basin aquifer. Beginning in 2013, when the town developed its first strategic plan for the management of water, Castle Rock has moved toward more use of surface water. Between 2006 and 2018, daily per capita water use in Castle Rock declined from 137 gallons to 115 gallons.

Starting in 2020, Castle Rock expected to begin treating sink, tap, and toilet water to potable water quality standards so that it can be reused. The town aimed to achieve a goal of reliance upon renewable water resources for 75% of municipal needs by 2050 and, by 2020, about one-third of all water used in Castle Rock was expected to be from a reusable source.

As of July 2019 Castle Rock, Denver, and Pitkin County are the first three Colorado municipal or county governments to adopt a state regulation governing greywater reuse.

Health care

AdventHealth Castle Rock is the only hospital.

Media

Founded in 1895, Castle Rock News-Press is the only newspaper. Castle Rock is part of the Denver radio and television market. Radio station KJMN is licensed to Castle Rock, but broadcasts from Denver playing a Spanish adult hits format on 92.1 FM. Denver radio station 850 KOA, which broadcasts a news/talk and sports format, operates its 50,000-watt transmitter from a site 10 miles northeast of downtown Castle Rock, in the town of Parker. Another Denver station, KAMP (1430 AM), a CBS Sports Radio affiliate with a sports radio format, operates its transmitter from Highlands Ranch, 13 miles north of downtown Castle Rock.

NPR programming can be heard on Colorado Public Radio's KCFR-FM. Castle Rock is also served by the AM signal of KGNU, a noncommercial affiliate of PRI, Pacifica, and the BBC World Service, and which also provides diverse music programming.

Television station KETD, an affiliate of the Estrella TV network, broadcasts on digital channel 46. Licensed to Castle Rock, the station is located near Centennial, Colorado.

Parks and recreation

Castle Rock's open space and parks comprise 27% the town's total land area (5415 acre of parks and open space / 20224 acre total land area). Additionally, there are nearly 75 mi of soft-surface and paved trails.

Culture

Points of interest

Philip S. Miller Park is the largest park project in Castle Rock. "Phase One" of the park was opened to the public on October 25, 2014. The park is named after a local banker and philanthropist, who with his wife Jerry, left trust monies to Castle Rock in the mid-1990s. The Phillip S. Miller Activity Center is included in the park's 300 acres.

The Castle Rock Historical Museum is in the former Denver and Rio Grande Railway depot building on Elbert Street. This building is purported to have been built in 1875. It is made of rhyolite taken from local quarries. The museum depicts how Castle Rock has changed over the years.

Sports

From 1986 through 2006, a professional golf tournament was held in Castle Pines Village. The International, a PGA Tour event, was held in August at the Castle Pines Golf Club.

Events

Castle Rock star lighting

Since 1936, every Saturday before Thanksgiving, the Town of Castle Rock lights the 45 ft electric star upon Castle Rock. A lighting event is held downtown that night and is usually accompanied by a fireworks display. The star remains lit from the week before Thanksgiving to the end of the National Western Stock Show in January. This has changed multiple times; following World War II, it was changed to a V, also, the same year as the Denver Broncos being in the Super Bowl, it was changed to orange and blue. Throughout part of the lockdown in early 2020 due to COVID-19, the star was relit as a symbol of unity.

Notable people

Notable individuals who were born in or have lived in Castle Rock include:

  • Amy Adams (born 1974), actress
  • Kirsten Bomblies (born 1973), biologist
  • Kat Cammack - United States Representative for Florida's 3rd Congressional District
  • Jim Cottrell (born 1983), NFL linebacker
  • Gary Hallberg (born 1958), professional golfer
  • Beth Malone (born 1969), actress
  • Christian McCaffrey (born 1996), professional football player (running back)
  • Max McCaffrey (born 1994), professional football player (wide receiver)
  • Joe Oltmann, political activist and conspiracy theorist
  • Will Owen (born 1995), racing driver
  • Nelson Rangell (born 1960), jazz musician
  • Edward Seidensticker (1921–2007), Japanologist
  • Ann Strother (born 1983), WNBA player, coach

References

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