Colorado Territory U.S. President Ulysses S. Grant appointed John Routt as the
Governor of the
Territory of Colorado on March 29, 1875. Statehood had long been Colorado's primary interest.
Thomas Patterson and
Jerome Chaffee, in House Bill 435, initially provided for the creation of the Colorado state government. Routt's time as Territorial Governor was largely spent deliberating the contents of the Colorado state constitution.
State of Colorado After
Colorado was established as a state, the increasingly popular Routt easily won the gubernatorial election without making a single speech in public. As the first governor, Routt tackled the major issues Colorado was facing at the time, including violence in and around the city of
Creede, Colorado, as well as problems dealing with county valuations. Routt was also very popular among the female citizenry of the state because of his strong support for
women's suffrage - with nudges from his wife,
Eliza Pickrell Routt, a pioneer in the women's suffrage movement. At one point, he arranged a speaking tour for popular women's suffragist
Susan B. Anthony and personally escorted her around the state. When women in Colorado first became able to vote in 1893, his wife,
Eliza Pickrell Routt, became the first woman to register to vote in Colorado history. ==Later life==