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And for those who want geographically accurate souvenirs, there are options. The outside of the Capitol has not one, not two, but three markers commemorating the altitude: the words "One Mile Above Sea Level," which were carved into the fifteenth step in 1947, after thieves made off with a plaque that said the same thing; a revisionist marker installed on the eighteenth step in 1969; and a revised revisionist marker put on the thirteenth step in 2003, as Denver settled down. So far, there's been no move to re-measure the row of purple seats installed at Coors Field back in 1995, although this fall's World Series bid surely elevated things there for a time.
And the city also plans to create a Mile High Trail in City Park. For now, though, that trail consists of a nail in a tree on the west lawn of the Denver Museum of Nature & Science, marking a point 5,280 feet above sea level. Less accessible, but more elegant, is the purple line that Mayor John Hickenlooper, a geologist in a former life, had painted at a point that's exactly a mile high — and about a foot beneath the ceiling of his office on the third floor of the Denver City and County Building.
You can come up with your own mile-high trail by studying Denver on www.earthtools.org. The Mile High Club locations we've managed to pinpoint: Gaetano's, at 38th and Tejon; the Denver Pavilions; the Bonfils Theatre in the Denver Performing Arts Complex — and the Westword office, at 969 Broadway.
No pictures, please.