Rufus and Lucinda Clark, with their daughter Mary, travelled by ox train to
Denver in April 1859 during the
Pike's Peak Gold Rush, arriving July 11. Clark
homesteaded 160 acres in Overland Park along the
South Platte River, near the site where
Montana City had stood the year before. Here, he grew vegetables to feed the growing number of Denverites. His success—including the delivery of $1,500 of potatoes to Denver in a single day—soon earned him the title of "Potato King of Colorado". By 1860, he was the "principal farmer" in Denver. Lucinda died in Denver in 1861. Already a heavy drinker, Clark's alcoholism worsened with his second wife's death. Clark was converted at a Denver
tent revival by the
United Brethren, dissuading him from further alcohol consumption. Prior to the conversion and afterwards, he was engaged in a variety of charitable ventures. After this, he branched his business ventures into real estate, acquiring almost 20,000 acres in what is now
Greenwood Village and
Cherry Hills Village. Though not a Methodist, Clark was approached by the
Methodist Episcopal Church in 1884 about supporting the
University of Denver's move from
downtown Denver and offered 40 acres of his land as a donation of land in what was then Arapahoe County. After raising the donation to 80 acres of his property and securing commitments in property and money from other landowners in the area, the university accepted Clark's offer. An additional 320 acres was purchased adjacent to Clark's donation for $75 an acre in 1886, bringing the university's holdings in the area to 400 acres. Clark conditioned this donation on the premises that the community would be laid out in a tree-lined grid and that the sale and production of alcohol would be prohibited, thereby avoiding replicating Denver's "moral and environmental pollution". This prohibition remains enforced in some modern home mortgages in the area, retaining covenants that prohibiting alcohol production and sale on-property. In portions of South Denver not gifted by Clark, the town priced liquor licenses at $3,500 per year, pricing out most alcohol-related ventures. A
municipal incorporation effort was organized by Clark, James Fleming, and Avery Gallup in early 1886 at the new university site of
South Denver in response to the saloons, dance halls, and gambling establishments near a racetrack in Denver's Overland Park, to allow the area to legally enforce
anti-vice laws. With help from others, the group created a petition and approached the 150 residents of the area in search of the 30 votes needed to establish the community. The Arapahoe County court declared South Denver an incorporated town on August 9, 1886. Fleming was elected mayor, Gallup was elected as one of five trustees, and Clark was elected treasurer in the September 4 city election; each were elected for a one-year term and presented a salary of $1 per term. Fleming and Clark were reelected to their posts on April 1, 1887. In 1899, Clark sold 2,050 lots in Evanston to the University of Denver for $110,000. The lots had been appraised at a value of $250,000; Clark stipulated that these lots be sold for a profit. Clark sold his remaining share of Evanston to William C. Johnston for $60,000 the same year. Clark used the proceeds from these sales to alleviate some of the University of Denver's debts and to rebuild a theological school named for Clark and his wife in
Shenge,
Sierra Leone. Despite Johnston's efforts to revive the area as an "elite, cultured university town", the concept of Evanston becoming a "Methodist colony" soon died. ==Legacy==