Buckhorn, Colorado

Buckhorn was a settlement in Larimer County, Colorado, 5 miles south of Masonville, Colorado, and along Buckhorn Creek. A post office operated there from 1878 to 1888.

Settlers of Buckhorn drove cattle on the land and cut down trees. They lived in simple cabins or hillside dugout huts. Described about 1880 "to be in extremely backward condition", it was subject to mountain lions, rattlesnakes, and flooding of Buckhorn Creek. Lewis Kern, the county assessor, stated the same year that settlers were doing well and flourishing.

G.W. Buffum and Albert Yule lived in Buckhorn by 1878. Yule was a rancher and a farmer of corn. Ben Milner and his wife Rose Rosebroook moved to Buckhorn in 1881 and established a ranch there. His widowed sister, Sarah Milner Smith and her children homesteaded and operated a ranch on the land. They were two of about six families who first settled Buckhorn. Sarah's sons Edward and Eugene Smith worked her ranch and established ranches in the Buckhorn area. Eugene Smith wrote the book Pioneer Epic about his life with his mother in Buckhorn.

The "Milner brothers" and other prospectors mined for gold at Buckhorn by 1880. Iron was also found at Buckhorn by May 1889.

The Union ditch, also called the Buckhorn Highline Ditch, was built to irrigate the land. The site is at 5607 ft in altitude.