United States Geologist F.V. Hayden visited North Park briefly in August, 1868 in company of a small party of Army officers from Fort Saunders. The campsite he described on the Big Laramie River is where the Boswell Ranch was later established. They crossed the river at that point and entered North Park after following the Cherokee Trail twenty-five miles. The trail from Boswell angled across Beaver Creek and Bear Creek to Chimney Park and then turned southwest to the neck of the Park. It became North Park's main connection to the outside world.
In 1879, the year of the great fires, naturalist George Grinnell hired a teamster with a stout team and a Studebaker wagon to take him to North Park from Laramie. By then wagon trails were numerous in the Park, probably created by market hunters who, in turn, likely followed travois-trails made by Indians.
Stagecoach service between Laramie and North Park started in May, 1881 with tri-weekly trips by Concord coach to mining community of Teller City. The scheduled time for the trip was fifteen hours without any stoppage except for meals and to change horses.
After the mining activity at Teller slowed down the stages ran from Laramie to Walden. Travel time was about twelve hours with three drivers on the route and five changes of horses, coming and going.
The Laramie-Walden stage had the best record for continuous service of any in the west in 1907. At that time the mail had been carried six days each week for more than six years without missing a trip, although weather and roads had sometimes delayed the arrival of the stage until 2 or 3 in the morning.
That is a remarkable record considering the weather conditions the stage traveled in. The editor of the Walden newspaper once described the Laramie Plains as a place "where the wind blows 400 days out of the year--sometimes with a speed and force that turns over wagons and miles of barbed wire fence." During the winter months the stage would typically start from Laramie with a coach with wheels, transfer to a coach with sled runners at a point above Boswell when the snow got deep, and then transfer back to a coach with wheels when the snow ran out in North Park.
North Park had a public transportation system a century ago. From Walden local stages carried the mail to the various post offices scattered around the Park. Passengers could ride on the mail stages, so a traveler could get off the train in Laramie or Granby, take the stage to Walden and the next day catch a ride with the local mail stage to any place in the Park mail was delivered.
During the winter months local travel was by team and sled, skis or snowshoes. Willow Creek Pass became an important travel route for North Park after the Moffat Railroad reached Hot Sulphur Springs in the fall of 1905. Dave Gresham established a road ranch for travelers near the top of the Pass. J.W. Welch, the Rand merchant, soon had two freight outfits running between Rand and Granby and tri-weekly stagecoach service between Walden and Granby started in the spring of 1908. Passengers left Walden at 6 a.m., spent the night at the Nixon cabins on Willow Creek Pass, and arrived in Granby at 11 a.m. the next morning.
Wagon loads of oats from the Yampa Valley were freighted into the Park over Buffalo Pass. Construction of a road over Rabbit Ears Pass was still several years away. Cameron Pass was a major transportation route in the days when Teller City was booming. By 1879 it was obvious that the Park would soon be settled and Fort Collins businessmen were urging that a road to North Park be built to secure the travel and trade of the region before a trade route developed through Laramie. A toll road was completed over Cameron Pass by 1881. There was a charge of $2 for each vehicle drawn by one horse, ox or mule passing through the toll gate at Rustic. A single span was $3 and any additional horses $1 each. Business was brisk for only a few years and the road was opened to free public travel in 1902, but by then the public was using the road over Ute Pass and the road over Cameron Pass soon fell into a state of disrepair.
While a few automobiles ventured into North Park each summer, there is no mention in the early newspapers of anyone in North Park owning one of the contraptions by the spring of 1909. There was one steam tractor in the Park and bicycles were popular.