A friend
of Otto Mears described him this way: "Mr. Mears is a man
who always said 'I can;' and he did." His accomplishments
are mind boggling. Mears' trading business led directly to his
building toll roads. His newspapers touted Saguache, Ouray,
and other new towns to bring more business across his toll roads
for his hardware stores. His political contacts enhanced his
friendship and ability to work with the Utes, but at the same
time he was a supporter of the forces that pushed the Utes out
of Colorado. His railroads helped move his goods to distribution
points, haul out ore from the mines and deliver it to his own
and others' mills. He used dirty politics to fight hard and
sometimes viciously to prevent unionization of his railroad
workers, but he was one of the first businessmen in the West
to institute profit sharing with his employees in the mines.
A visionary, yes, enigmatic, no doubt, but also a man of his
times. Otto Mears was an adventurous, poor, uneducated and underprivileged
immigrant from Russia who dreamed big dreams and made many of
them come true.
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