VOA标准英语2010年-Who Says America Doesn't Have Castles?(在线收听) |
This one's history is as colorful as its surroundings Ted Landphair | Washington, DC 07 June 2010 Cleveholm is the 42-room Tudor castle of Cleve Osgood's dreams. Cleve came from his name; holm from the Swedish word for home.
Beside a rushing Rocky Mountain trout stream lie two American rarities: a castle and a company town in which a single company - a single man, actually - once owned every building, even people's homes. By 1892, Cleve Osgood, a cousin of U.S. President Grover Cleveland, controlled several Rocky Mountain coal mines and the only steel mill in the West. Osgood was based back east in New York City, where he had bought an entire block, built a mansion on it, and become a cigar-smoking pal of other wealthy industrialists. These were the men whom many called the robber barons of America's Gilded Age. And Cleve Osgood also wanted a summer address as big as the West.
The residents were workers from Osgood's nearby plant that made superheated coal called coke. Redstone's name came from the red sandstone mountain right across the river. And towering over the town was Cleveholm, the 42-room Tudor castle of Osgood's dreams.
Down his own railroad spur off the main line out of Denver, he brought his New York friends in opulent private rail cars to see his mountain retreat. Cleve Osgood eventually lost control of both his steel company and the town.
In 2005, the century-old castle was sold at auction following a scandal in which investors were bilked out of $56 million dollars. One of the ringleaders was sentenced to 330 years in jail! Cleveholm is now in one owner's hands and still open to tours, and there's talk of turning the great Redstone castle into a grand hotel. |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2010/6/104318.html |