On August 25, 1855, the
Kansas Territorial Legislature created
Arapahoe County to govern the entire western portion of the
territory. The county was named for the
Arapaho Nation of
Native Americans who lived in the region. In June 1858,
gold was discovered along the
South Platte River in
Arapahoe County (in present-day
Englewood) by
William Greeneberry Russell and Sam Bates who had been following up the June 22, 1850, discovery of gold on Ralston Creek in today's Jefferson County by Lewis Ralston, for whom the creek was named. This discovery precipitated the
Pike's Peak Gold Rush. The Doniphan Party upon arriving upon Clear Creek discovered markers left over from earlier mining in 1834 by the Estes Party, placed their own alongside and on November 29, 1858, founded the future county's first town of Arapahoe City upon the land southeast of today's West 44th Avenue and McIntyre Street (with West 44th running through the town). On June 16, 1859, its second town,
Golden, Colorado, was founded in the valley to the west. Many residents of the mining region felt disconnected from the remote territorial governments of
Kansas and
Nebraska, so they voted to form their own
Territory of Jefferson on October 24, 1859. The following month on November 28, 1859, the Jefferson Territorial Legislature organized 12 counties for the new territory, including
Jefferson County. Jefferson County was named for the namesake of the Jefferson Territory,
Thomas Jefferson, the principal author of the
Declaration of Independence and the nation's third
president.
Golden City was elected on January 2, 1860, as the
county seat of Jefferson County.
Robert Williamson Steele,
Governor of the
Provisional Government of the Territory of Jefferson from 1859 to 1861, built his home in the county at
Mount Vernon and later at
Apex. Originally Jefferson County's borders extended to the
40th parallel north, the
South Platte River (excluding the town of Highland) to the east, and to Bear Creek to the south. The Jefferson Territory never received federal sanction, but during his last week in office,
President James Buchanan signed an act which organized the
Territory of Colorado on February 28, 1861. That November 1, the new
Colorado General Assembly organized the 17 original counties of Colorado, including Jefferson County. The reorganized Jefferson County extended to most of its current borders and Golden continued as county seat. In 1908, the southern tip of Jefferson County was transferred to
Park County, reducing Jefferson County to its present length of . Several annexations by the
City & County of Denver and the 2001 consolidation of the
City & County of Broomfield removed the east and extreme northeastern corner of the county, respectively. ==Geography==