Mount Elbert\nElbert, Mount\n{| border="1" bgcolor="#ffffff" cellpadding="5" align="right" width="305" style="margin-left:3px"\n!bgcolor=#e7dcc3 colspan=2|Mount Elbert\n|-\n|bgcolor=#e7dcc3|Elevation:||14,440 ft (4,401 m)\n|-\n|bgcolor=#e7dcc3|Latitude:||39° 07′ 03.90″ N\n|-\n|bgcolor=#e7dcc3|Longitude:||106° 26′ 43.29″ W\n|-\n|bgcolor=#e7dcc3|Location:||Colorado, USA\n|-\n|bgcolor=#e7dcc3|Topo map:||USGS Mount Elbert\n|-\n|bgcolor=#e7dcc3|Range:||Rocky Mountains\n|-\n|bgcolor=#e7dcc3|First ascent:||1874 by H. W. Stuckle\n|-\n|bgcolor=#e7dcc3|Easiest route:||hike\n|}\n Mount Elbert, in Colorado is the highest peak in the Rocky Mountains. Elbert is the second highest mountain in the continental United States after Mount Whitney in California, and is but 65 feet shorter than Whitney's 14,505 feet. Elbert is a fairly easy climb, and popular with hikers. It is located in the Saguache Range (also spelled Sawatch), west of Leadville, Colorado. |
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"Imitation is the sincerest form of television." - Fred Allen (1894-1956) |
