Samuel Hitt Elbert

[3] He studied at Ohio Wesleyan University where he was a member of Beta Theta Pi.

[8] He attended the Republican National Convention in 1860 in Chicago, where Abraham Lincoln was nominated for president.

[7] Elbert was appointed Secretary of the Colorado Territory that year by Abraham Lincoln.

[4] Elbert was appointed as the sixth Governor of the Colorado Territory by President Ulysses S. Grant in 1873.

Elbert and Grant visited Central City, and met with a group of Ute leaders to create a treaty (Brunot Treaty of 1873) that would allow some of the Ute's land to be accessible to railroad and mining companies.

[6] Elbert spent a year in Europe, during which he became aware of the political and social conditions there.

[7] After a two-year courtship, Elbert married 18 year old Josephine Evans in June 1865.

She was the daughter of Territorial Governor John Evans[9] and Hannah Pedrick Canby.

Josephine gave birth to their only child, John Evans Elbert about late March 1868.

[11] After having been in failing health for some time,[12] Elbert died on November 27, 1899, in Galveston, Texas[7] and is buried at Riverside Cemetery in Denver,[3] as are Josephine and their son John.

[13] Grateful miners named Mount Elbert after the governor because he facilitated a treaty with the Ute tribe, which opened up more than 3,000,000 acres (12,000 km2) of Indian reservation to mining and railroad activity.

Evans Memorial Chapel built by John Evans after the death of his daughter, Josephine