Union Colony Greeley began as the
Union Colony of Colorado, which was founded in 1869 by
Nathan C. Meeker, an agricultural reporter for the
New York Tribune, as an experimental utopian farming community "based on temperance, religion, agriculture, education and family values," with the backing of the
Tribunes editor
Horace Greeley, who had visited Colorado in the 1859
Pike's Peak Gold Rush and had popularized the phrase "
Go West, young man". A committee which included Meeker and former Civil War general
Robert Alexander Cameron traveled to Colorado to find a suitable site, and purchased 12,000 acres at the confluence of the
Cache la Poudre and
South Platte Rivers. The site, formerly known as the "Island Grove Ranch", included the area of Latham, an Overland Trail station, and was halfway between
Cheyenne, Wyoming and
Denver, Colorado along the tracks of the
Denver Pacific Railroad.
Latham Greeley is located just west of the area previously occupied by the
Overland Trail station originally called Cherokee City. The Cherokee City, Colorado, post office operated from November 25, 1862, until November 25, 1863, when the name was changed to
Latham. The Latham station, which was also known as Fort Latham, was named in honor of
Milton S. Latham, one of California's early senators. The stagecoach station was at the confluence of the
South Platte River and the
Cache la Poudre River. It is believed that the birth of the
first white child born in Colorado, a girl, occurred there. Fort Latham was the headquarters of the government troops during the Indian conflicts of 1860–1864. Latham served as the Weld County
seat from 1868 to 1870, when the county seat was moved to
Evans. and the Town of Greeley was incorporated on November 15, 1885. Automobiles were on the roads alongside horse drawn buggies by 1910. In 1922,
KFKA became one of the first radio stations to broadcast in the U.S. In June 2012, Greeley became the first city in the state of Colorado to implement SB11-273, known as the
Law of Common Consumption, allowing for patrons of the Downtown Greeley Entertainment District to buy drinks in "Go-Cups" from participating downtown establishments. On May 28, 2024, a severe hailstorm impacted the eastern side of the city, covering some areas in over one foot of hail (~30.5 cm) and causing one fatality. Mayor John Gates signed a local disaster declaration due to major flooding and hail. City officials stated that the cost of damage to the city was over $1.45 million. ==Geography==