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Fall Out Boy & Paramore Concert Tickets at Merriweather Post Pavilion in Columbia, MD in Baltimore, Maryland For Sale

Fall Out Boy & Paramore Concert Tickets at Merriweather Post Pavilion in Columbia, MD
Price: $600
Type: Tickets & Traveling, For Sale - Private.

Fall Out Boy & Paramore Tickets at Merriweather Post Pavilion
Columbia, MD
July 18, xxxx
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Fall Out Boy
Phones4u Arena (Formerly Manchester Arena)
Manchester, United Kingdom
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3/17/xxxx
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The Hydro At SECC
Glasgow, United Kingdom
Saturday
3/22/xxxx
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Monumentour: Fall Out Boy & Paramore
Xfinity Theatre (formerly Comcast Theatre)
Hartford, CT
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6/19/xxxx
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Nikon at Jones Beach Theater
Wantagh, NY
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6/21/xxxx
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Xfinity Center - MA (formerly Comcast Center)
Mansfield, MA
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6/22/xxxx
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Saratoga Performing Arts Center
Saratoga Springs, NY
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6/24/xxxx
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Molson Canadian Amphitheatre
Toronto, Canada
Wednesday
6/25/xxxx
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Susquehanna Bank Center
Camden, NJ
Friday
6/27/xxxx
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Monumentour: Fall Out Boy & Paramore
PNC Bank Arts Center
Holmdel, NJ
Saturday
6/28/xxxx
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Monumentour: Fall Out Boy & Paramore
Bank of New Hampshire Pavilion At Meadowbrook
Gilford, NH
Monday
6/30/xxxx
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Monumentour: Fall Out Boy & Paramore
Darien Lake Performing Arts Center
Darien Center, NY
Wednesday
7/2/xxxx
7:00 PM
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Monumentour: Fall Out Boy & Paramore
First Niagara Pavilion (Formerly Post Gazette Pavilion At Star Lake)
Burgettstown, PA
Thursday
7/3/xxxx
7:00 PM
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Monumentour: Fall Out Boy & Paramore
Marcus Amphitheater
Milwaukee, WI
Saturday
7/5/xxxx
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Monumentour: Fall Out Boy & Paramore
Verizon Wireless Amphitheater - MO
Maryland Heights, MO
Sunday
7/6/xxxx
7:00 PM
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Monumentour: Fall Out Boy & Paramore
DTE Energy Music Theatre
Clarkston, MI
Tuesday
7/8/xxxx
TBD
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Monumentour: Fall Out Boy & Paramore
Klipsch Music Center (Formerly Verizon Wireless Music Center - IN)
Noblesville, IN
Wednesday
7/9/xxxx
TBD
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Monumentour: Fall Out Boy & Paramore
First Midwest Bank Amphitheatre (formerly Tweeter Center-il)
Tinley Park, IL
Friday
7/11/xxxx
7:00 PM
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Woods Amphitheatre at Fontanel
Whites Creek, TN
Sunday
7/13/xxxx
TBD
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Monumentour: Fall Out Boy & Paramore
Merriweather Post Pavilion
Columbia, MD
Friday
7/18/xxxx
5:30 PM
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Monumentour: Fall Out Boy & Paramore
Hersheypark Stadium
Hershey, PA
Saturday
7/19/xxxx
7:00 PM
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Monumentour: Fall Out Boy & Paramore
Walnut Creek Amphitheatre (formerly TWC Music Pavilion)
Raleigh, NC
Tuesday
7/22/xxxx
7:00 PM
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Monumentour: Fall Out Boy & Paramore
PNC Music Pavilion - Charlotte (Formerly Verizon Wireless Amphitheatre)
Charlotte, NC
Wednesday
7/23/xxxx
7:00 PM
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Monumentour: Fall Out Boy & Paramore
Cruzan Amphitheatre (formerly Sound Advice Amphitheatre)
West Palm Beach, FL
Friday
7/25/xxxx
TBD
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Monumentour: Fall Out Boy & Paramore
MidFlorida Credit Union Amphitheatre At The Florida State Fairgrounds (formerly Live Nation Amphitheatre)
Tampa, FL
Saturday
7/26/xxxx
7:00 PM
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Fall Out Boy & New Politics
St. Augustine Amphitheatre
Saint Augustine, FL
Sunday
7/27/xxxx
TBD
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Farm Bureau Live at Virginia Beach (Formerly Virginia Beach Amphitheatre)
Virginia Beach, VA
Tuesday
7/29/xxxx
6:30 PM
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Aarons Amphitheatre At Lakewood (formerly Lakewood Amphitheatre)
Atlanta, GA
Wednesday
7/30/xxxx
7:00 PM
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Monumentour: Fall Out Boy & Paramore
The Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion
Spring, TX
Friday
8/1/xxxx
7:00 PM
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Monumentour: Fall Out Boy & Paramore
Austin360 Amphitheater
Austin, TX
Saturday
8/2/xxxx
7:00 PM
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Monumentour: Fall Out Boy & Paramore
Old Concrete Street Amphitheater
Corpus Christi, TX
Monday
8/4/xxxx
6:00 PM
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Monumentour: Fall Out Boy & Paramore
Gexa Energy Pavilion (Formerly Superpages.com Center)
Dallas, TX
Tuesday
8/5/xxxx
8:00 PM
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Monumentour: Fall Out Boy & Paramore
Isleta Amphitheater (formerly Hard Rock Pavilion)
Albuquerque, NM
Thursday
8/7/xxxx
7:00 PM
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Monumentour: Fall Out Boy & Paramore
Ak-Chin Pavilion (Formerly Desert Sky Pavilion)
Phoenix, AZ
Friday
8/8/xxxx
7:00 PM
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Monumentour: Fall Out Boy & Paramore
Oklahoma City Zoo Amphitheatre
Oklahoma City, OK
Sunday
8/10/xxxx
6:30 PM
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Monumentour: Fall Out Boy & Paramore
Red Rocks Amphitheatre
Morrison, CO
Tuesday
8/12/xxxx
7:00 PM
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Monumentour: Fall Out Boy & Paramore
The UCCU Center (Formerly Mckay Monumentour: Fall Out Boy & Paramores Center)
Orem, UT
Wednesday
8/13/xxxx
7:00 PM
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Fall Out Boy & New Politics
The Boulevard Pool at The Cosmopolitan
Las Vegas, NV
Friday
8/15/xxxx
7:00 PM
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Monumentour: Fall Out Boy & Paramore
Verizon Wireless Amphitheater - CA
Irvine, CA
Saturday
8/16/xxxx
7:00 PM
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Monumentour: Fall Out Boy & Paramore
Concord Pavilion (formerly Sleep Train Pavilion)
Concord, CA
Sunday
8/17/xxxx
7:00 PM
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EINVLKFJDLKFJDenver iRacing to beat the Golden investors, the company broke ground on its Cheyenne line on May 18, xxxx and took approximately two years to complete. The first train from Cheyenne arrived in Denver on June 24, xxxx. Two months later, in August xxxx, the Kansas Pacific completed its line to Denver and the first train arrived from Kansas. With the completion of the Kansas Pacific line to Denver, the Denver Pacific became integral to the first transcontinental rail link between the east and west coasts of America. While the Union Pacific line had been declared finished in xxxx with the Golden spike event in Utah, linking it with the Central Pacific Railroad, passengers were required to disembark the train and cross the Missouri River at Omaha by boat. With the completion of the Denver Pacific line, it was finally possible to embark a train on the east coast and disembark on the westThe Denver Pacific's rival, the Colorado Central line from Golden, was not completed until xxxx. By this time, Denver had established its supremacy over its rival as the population center and capital city of the newly admitted State of Colorado. The railroad brought residents, tourists, and much-needed supplies. In the xxxxs, it is estimated that the railroad brought 100 new residents to Denver each day. Population statistics bear thOn the brink of World War I, Denver mirrored the rest of the nation in wanting to stay neutral. But once America entered the war in xxxx, Denver contributed what it could to the war effort. Clothing and supplies were donated, children enrolled in agricultural and garden clubs to free up young men for the war, and mining and agricultural interests were expanded to support the troops and the nation. As prices for goods rose with the demand from the war effort farmers began planting crops in greater numbers and mining companies opened new mines for molybdenum, vanadium, and tungstenWith the United States fighting the Germans in Europe, anti-German sentiment in Denver was at an all time high. Before the war Germans had been a very prosperous immigrant group, who often congregated in their own ethnic clubs. They had enough political clout to have a law passed in xxxx that required German and gymnastics be taught in public schools, and until xxxx all of Colorado's laws were printed in English, Spanish, and German. The German's built churches and owned interests in mining and agriculture, but many in the temperance movement primarily associated them with the production and consumption of alcohol. Believing all evil began with the drink, prohibitionists cracked down on "un-American" activity and in xxxx alcohol was banned in the state. Many saloon owners and brewers lost their jobs and with the outbreak of World War I, many others were fired and ostracized. German stopped being taught in schools and many Germans abandoned their heritage to avoid conflicts.[42].[16]is out, for Denver's population soared from 4,759 in xxxx to over 35,000 by xxxx. In addition to bringing new residents, it put Denver on the map as a tourist destination and brought 1,067 visitors in its first month of operation. That first month also brought 13,000Around the same time Colorado gained the nickname "The World's Sanatorium" for its dry climate which was considered favorable for curing respiratory diseases, tuberculosis in particular. Many people came from the East Coast looking for a cure, bringing with them training and skills which expand the industrial base of Denver. A number of Jews eventually established two well-renowned hospitals to take care of their health needs and serve their community: National Jewish Hospital for Consumptives (now National Jewish Health) and the Jewish Consumptives' RelieIntent on transforming Denver into one of the world's great cities, leaders had wooed industry and enticed laborers to work in new factories. Soon, in addition to the elite and a large middle class, Denver had a growing population of German, Italian, and Chinese laborers, soon followed by African-Americans and Spanish-surname workers. Unprepared for this influx, the Denver Depression of xxxx unsettled political, social, and economic balances, laying the foundation for ethnic bigotry, such as the rise of the Ku Klux Klan and the Red Scare, as well as corruption andIn xxxx, financial panic swept the nation, and the silver boom collapsed. Denver was already suffering economically due to several successive years of droughts and harsh winters that had hurt the agricultural industry.[29] Agricultural distress, coupled with the withdrawal of foreign investors and the over-expansion of the silver mining industries, led stock prices to decline, banks to close, businesses to fail, and numerous farms to cease operation. With no federal insurance to support the money in the banks, many people lost their life savings.[30] As Denver banks closed, real estate values dropped, smelters stopped working, and Denver Tramway had trouble getting people to ride and pay their fares.[31] The Union Pacific Railroad, which had absorbed both the Denver Pacific and Kansas Pacific in the xxxxs, declareNational unemployment was estimated to be between 12% - 18% in xxxx.[32] Wages fell and a wave of severe strikes took place, notable in Colorado was the Cripple Creek miners' strike which lasted five months. As the silver mines began to close due to the continued drop in silver prices, unemployed miners and other workers from the Colorado mountains flooded into Denver in hopes of finding work. Because of the city's inability to take care of the jobless, some train companies began offering reduced or free fares for people wanting to travel from Denver. This effort contributed to the exodus from the city, and Denver's population dropped from 106,000 in xxxx to 90,000 in xxxx.[33]d bankruptcy. crime.[28]f Society.[27,000 pounds (5,900,000 kg) of freight. Denver now had the people and supplies it needed to flourish and solidify its dominance in thThe city's economy was gaining a more stable base rooted in railroads, wholesale trade, manufacturing, food processing, and servicing the growing agricultural and ranching hinterland. Between xxxx and xxxx, manufacturing output soared from $600,000 to $40 million, and population grew by a factor of 20 times to 107,000.[17] By xxxx, Denver had grown to be the 26th largest city in America, and the fifth-largest city west of the Mississippi River.[18] The rapid growth of these years attracted millionaires and their mansions, as well as povFrom Denver's start as a gold mining town through its transformation into a supplier of goods and services, it had always been a place where miners, workers, and travelers could spend their hard earned money. Saloons and gambling dens sprung up quickly after the founding. In xxxx, the Apollo Hall theater opened followed over the years by such notables as the Denver Theatre, home to the city's first opera performance in xxxx, and the Broadway Theatre which brought in internationally renowned performers, but none was quite as luxurious as the Tabor Grand Opera House builBuilt by Horace Tabor with the money he had made mining silver, the Tabor Grand Opera House in Denver was said to be the most opulent building and the best-equipped theater between Chicago and San Francisco at its opening. It occupied the entire block and was claimed to have single-handedly changed Denver's image of itself from a frontier boomtown to a world class city.[19] The following years saw many other grand buildings erected, including Union Station in xxxx, the 10-story Brown Palace Hotel in xxxx, and the Colorado State Capitol Building in xxxx as well as splendid homes for millionaires like the Croke, Patterson, Campbell Mansion at 11th and Pennsylvania and the now-demolished Moffat Mansion at 8th and Grant.[20] The city was beginning to take onThe xxxxs and xxxxs saw corruption as well as progress. Underworld bosses such as Soapy Smith and Lou Blonger worked side-by-side with city officials and police to profit from gambling and other criminal enterprises. There were a range of bawdy houses, from the sumptuous quarters of renowned madams such as Mattie Silks and Jenny Rogers to the squalid "cribs" located a few blocks farther north along Market Street. Edward Chase ran card games and regularly entertained many of Denver's most influential leaders. Gambling flourished and bunco artists exploited every chance to separate miners from their hard-earned gold. Business was good; visitors spent lavishly, then left town. As long as madams conducted their business discreetly, and "crib girls" did not advertise their availability too crudely, authorities took their bribes and looked the other way. Occasional cleanups and crack downs satisfied the demands forPrior to Colorado becoming a territory in xxxx, there were no functioning court system and justice was carried out by the public. Once a territory, a justice system was set up for the county but it wasn't until xxxx that Denver created a position for chief of police. These early lawmen had to deal with the Vigilance Committee, often called the Law and Order League, which took matters of law into its own hands. Elizabeth Wallace writes of these vigilantes, "A judge presided and the offender was tried by a group of his peers. Once given, the decision was final. Between xxxx and xxxx fourteen men were accused of murder and were brought before a jury of twelve men and at least one judge presiding. Six of the fourteen men were sentenced to death."[22Crime and corruption brought out others who wanted to combat it. Women's suffrage came early, in xxxx, led by married middle class women who organized first for prohibition and then for suffrage, with the goal of upholding republican citizenship for women and purifying society.[23] The Social Gospel was the religious wing of the progressive movement which had the aim of combating injustice, suffering and poverty in society. Protestants, Reform Jews and Catholics helped build Denver's social welfare system in the early 20th century by providing for the sick and hungry.[24] Thomas Uzzel, leader the Methodist People's Tabernacle, established a free dispensary, an employment bureau, a summer camp, night schools, and English language classes. The Baptist minister Jim Goodheart, city chaplain and director of public welfare in xxxx, set up an employment bureau and provided food and lodging for the homeless at the mission he ran. The United Way of America has roots in Denver, where in xxxx church leaders began the Charity Organization Society, which coordinated services and fund raising for 22 agencies.[25] Myron Reed, a leading Christian socialist, pastor of the affluent First Congregational Church and a leader in the city's Charity Organization Society, questioned that organization's efforts to distinguish the "worthy" from the "unworthy" poor, spoke out for the rights of labor unions as well as for African American and Native American rights while denouncing Chinese and eastern European immigrants as dependent tools of corporations who were lowering "American" standards of living.[26]] reform.[21] a "big city" image.t in xxxx.erty and crime.e region.[15] coast.s hAs a result, Evans, together with other local business leaders, partnered with East Coast investors to form a railroad company that would link Denver and the Colorado Territory with the national rail network. The company was incorporated on November 19, xxxx as the "DenvA new municipal charter was given to Denver in xxxx by the state legislature that decentralized much of the mayor's powers into six different administrative departments, two of which were elected, two appointed by the mayor, and the remaining two appointed by the governor. King writes "The plan gave the maximum of opportunity for [political] party groups and corporate control." The municipal board members appointed by the governor had complete financial control over the police, fire, and excise departments. Over half the expenditures of the city went through this board which gave the governor and his party much direct contrGovernor Davis Hanson Waite, elected in xxxx on a Populist Party reform platform, tried to overturn the corruption in Denver in xxxx by removing police and fire commissioners that he believed were shielding the gamblers and prostitutes that he believed were resulting from and also worsening the depression. The officials refused to leave their positions and were quickly joined by others who felt their jobs were threatened. They barricaded themselves in City Hall, and the state militia were sent to remove them. Federal troops were called in from nearby Fort Logan to intervene and quell the civil strife. Eventually Governor Waite agreed to withdraw the militia and allow the Colorado Supreme Court to decide the The Progressive Era brought an Efficiency Movement typified in xxxx when the city and Denver County were made coextensive. In xxxx Robert W. Speer was elected mayor and initiated several projects that added new landmarks, updated existing facilities, or improved the city's landscape including the City Auditorium, the Civic Center and the Denver Museum of Nature and Science.[35] City leaders went to Washington D.C. and after assuring the politicians there that Denver was no longer a frontier town, secured the first major party convention in a western state, the xxxx Democratic National Denver pioneered the juvenile court movement under Judge Ben Lindsey, who gained national fame for his efforts. Through his efforts, an act was passed creating a juvenile court in Denver which represented an important advance in relation of the law to children.[37] In xxxx, Emily Griffith, a Denver school teacher, opened the Opportunity School which featured language and vocational instruction as both day classes and night classes so that non traditional learners would have the opportunity for self-improvement. Also during this period Denver's park system was expanded and land in the mountains was acquired for a future mountain park system.[16] Cattle pens began to spring up around the existing railroad depots as farmers began shipping their livestock to the existing meat packing industry in Kansas City and Chicago. Local ranchers wanted to concentrate on raising cattle rather than the logistics of shipping them east and in xxxx the first National Western Stock Show was held which quickly became the preeminent livestock show in the region. These events helped raise the national profile of Denver and live up to its nickname, the "Queen City of tLabor unions were active in Denver, especially the construction and printing crafts affiliated with the American Federation of Labor (AFL), and the railroad brotherhoods. After being welcomed at the xxxx Democratic National Convention, the AFL unions, who formed the Denver Trades and Labor Assembly, generally supported Democratic candidates.[38] In early xxxx, members of the Industrial Workers of the World, known as the Wobblies, conducted a free speech fight in Denver. City authorities had refused to allow IWW organizers to speak to people on street corners. Union members challenged the policy, with the aim of filling the jails to put pressure on city leaders. The Wobbly tactic, which they had employed successfully for half a decade throughout the North and West, clogged the courts so they couldn't handle anything but free speech cases. Taxpayers complained that they were being forced to feed "whole armies of jailed Wobblies."[39] In her autobiography, Emma Goldman wrote of twenty-seven IWW members, arrested during the Denver free speech fight, who were "tortured in the sweat-box for refusing to work on the rock-pile. On their release they marched through the streets with banners and songs..."[40] The union eventually won the right to speak to workers, and within a year had formed two Denver "branches."[41]he Plains."Convention.[36]case. The court ruled that the governor had authority to replace the commissioners, but he was reprimanded for bringing in the militia, in what became known as the "City Hall That the governor, elected by the entire state, had so much power over the workings of Denver was not lost on the citizens of the city. As the economy faltered, the inefficiency and divisions of the new six department system became more evident. The electorate became disillusioned with the major political parties and in xxxx the first non-partisan mayor in Denver's history was elected, T. S. McMurray. Reelected in xxxx, he was ultimately defeated in xxxx in by the "big mitt", a ballot-stuffing campaign. Dissatisfaction with the major political parties that controlled the state legislature led to a "home rule" movement. In xxxx an amendment to the state constitution was passed that allowed cities to adopt home rule and Denver became a consolidatedThe U.S. economy began to recover in xxxx and while jobs slowly began to trickle back into Denver, real estate prices remained depressed through xxxx. Throughout the depression, the one constant industry was agriculture. A developed irrigation infrastructure and increasing crop diversification led to a stable food industry throughout the state. Without the jobs brought by the production and processing of food, the depression in Denver would have been much worse. Denver gained back the population it had lost during the depression, mainly through the annexation of neighboring towns, and ended the century with a population of more than 133,000.[4] city?county.[4]War".[34]ol over Denver.[4]er Pacific Railway and Telegraph Company." The sense of urgency for the Denver boosters was enhanced by the formation of a rival, the Colorado, Clear Creek and Pacific Railway (later the Colorado Central Railroad), by W.A.H. Loveland and citizens of nearby Golden, with the intention of linking that city directly with Cheyenne and making Golden the natural hub of the terrWithin several days, the company sold $300,000 in stock, but were unable to raise further funds to begin construction. The efforts seemed to be on the brink of failure when Evans was able to persuade Congress to grant the company 900,000 acres (3,600 km2) of land on the condition that the company build a line connecting the Union Pacific line in Wyoming with the existing Kansas Pacific line, which then extended only as far west as central Kansas.itory.ome to a variety of sports teams and belongs to a select group of U.S. cities with teams from four major sports. Denver submitted the winning bid to host the xxxx Winter Olympics, but subsequently withdrew giving it the dubious distinction of being the only city to back out after winning a bid to host the Olympics. The Denver Broncos of the National Football League, who are currently coached by John Fox, have been able to draw crowds of nearly 70,000 since their American Football League origins in the early xxxxs and continue to draw fans today to their current home Sports Authority Field at Mile High. The team has advanced to the Super Bowl six times and won back-to-back titles in xxxx and '99. The Broncos are owned by Pat Bowlen. In the xxxxs and xxxxs, one of the top priorities of former Mayor Federico Peña was bringing major league baseball to the city, an effort which culminated in the creation of the Colorado Rockies as an expansion franchise in xxxx and the opening of Coors Field in xxxx. The Rockies advanced to the playoffs in xxxx, but were eliminated in the first round. In xxxx, their late-season winning streak saw them advance to the playoffs as a wild-card entrant, advance to and win the NL Championship Series and bring the World Series to Denver for the first time. Denver is also home to the Colorado AvaMany individuals within the prohibition movement associated the crime and morally corrupt behavior of the cities of America with their large immigrant populations. In a backlash to the new emerging realities of the American demographic, many prohibitionists subscribed to the doctrine of ?nativism? in which they endorsed the notion that America was made great as a result of its white Anglo-Saxon ancestry. This fostered xenophobic sentiments towards urban immigrant communities who typically argued in favor of abolishing prohibition.[43] These sentiments led many in Denver to join the Ku Klux Klan (KKK) both because it opposed foreign immigration and because it defended prohibition.[44] Roman Catholic immigrants, particularly of Irish or Italian descent, were often the target of KKK discrimination. These communities gradually became Americanized, and the KKK quickly lost influence especially during KKK member Clarence Morley's term as governor from xxxx-xxxx. As Prohibition lingered on many citizens saw the negative effects: toxic bootleg liquor, corruption, bribery, and binge drinking. Colorado voters suspended the state?s Prohibition laws on July 1, xxxx, and while racism and discrimination against a new wave of Mexican and African-American immigrants persisted, the KKK was never again a significant force in Colorado politics.lanche, a National Hockey League team that relocated from Quebec City in xxxx. They have won two Stanley Cups (xxxx and xxxx) while in Denver and play at Pepsi Center, which also hosts the Denver Nuggets of the National Basketball Association, and the Colorado Mammoth of the National Lacrosse League. The Major League Soccer team Colorado Rapids play in Dick's Sporting Goods Park, an 18,000 seat stadium opened for the xxxx MLS season, located in Commerce City, a suburb of Denver.[120] and won the MLS Cup in xxxx. In xxxx Denver established a professional outdoor lacrosse team, the Denver Outlaws. They play in Sports Authority Field at Mile High and are sanctioned by Major League Lacrosse. In xxxx, The Denver Outlaws won the Western Conference Championship.