Mancos

Mancos
Mancos is located in southwest Colorado, between Durango and Cortez on US 160. It is five miles east of the entrance to Mesa Verde National Park, and about 40 miles northeast of the Four Corners Monument.

The 2010 Census revealed 1,336 residents in the Town, and about 3000 residents in the Mancos Valley.

The Mancos School District serves the Town and outlying areas. The building that houses the Mancos High School is the oldest school building in Colorado that is still used as a school. It is on the National Register of Historic Places.

The Town sits at 7,000 feet above sea level. The Mancos Valley is surrounded by the La Plata Mountains on one side, and the spectacular cliffs of Mesa Verde on the other. A few miles north is Jackson Gulch Resevoir (fishing), Mancos State Park (mountain biking), and Chicken Creek Cross-country Ski Area (also good for snowshoeing).

Due to its proximity to a variety of outdoor attractions, Mancos is a destination for tourists, as well as people just looking to “get away from it all.” Cool summers, snowy winters, Mancos receives about 300 days of sunshine per year. Fishing, hiking, camping, bicycling,and horse-back riding are all part of the norm. Five miles to the west is Mesa Verde National Park. Further west are Cortez and the Canyons of the Ancients National Monument.


Town History
The Town was founded in 1894, though cattle ranchers had been settling the Mancos Valley since the 1870s. Before then, the area had been a part of New Spain and Mexico, and had been inhabited by the Ute and Navajo people. The name “Mancos” comes from the famous Dominguez-Escalante Expedition of 1776, though the reason for the name remains unclear. Somewhere in the town is the point at which the Expedition crossed the Rio Mancos on its way to California from Old Mexico.

At the time it was founded, Mancos served as the primary commercial trading center for eastern Montezuma County, rivaling the Town of Dolores further north. At that time, the City of Cortez, now the County seat, was barely a bend in the wagon trail.

Mancos was a stop along the Denver, Rio Grande & Southern Railway, connecting to Durango to the east, and to the Telluride mining districts up north, via Dolores. Ranchers in the Mancos Valley provided beef, timber, and other agricultural products to the mining camps.

Credit: Official City of Mancos Website www.mancoscolorado.com
Mancos
Mancos
Mancos

Beds: 3
Baths: 3 Total
SqFt: 2,720

82

Listings Available

$162

Median Price/Per SqFt

$549,500

Median List Price

Listings Stats

Price RangePercentListings AvailableAction
$0 - $100K 3.66%3View Homes
$100K - $200K 3.66%3View Homes
$200K - $300K 12.20%10View Homes
$300K - $400K 12.20%10View Homes
$400K - $500K 12.20%10View Homes
$500K - $600K 8.54%7View Homes
$600K - $700K 4.88%4View Homes
$700K - $800K 2.44%2View Homes
$800K - $900K 3.66%3View Homes
$900K+ 36.59%30View Homes

Real Estate Links Our Domains