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Gold was discovered in Colorado in
1859, and drew over 100,000 men and women to the state in hope of
finding their fortune. These became the gold rush days of Colorado; the
days of the instant millionaire, like Horace and Baby Doe Tabor,
Colorado’s Glory Days.
The earliest gold deposits found were
the placer deposits in the gravels along the streams. Gold was mixed
among the stream alluvium and in some cases could be literally picked
from the streambed. At first, the gold was washed from the gravels by
using a shallow gold pan. Later, the sections of streams that yielded
gold from panning were staked as placer claims under the Mining Law of
1872. To wash larger amounts of gravel and find more gold, water was
diverted from the stream for use with sluice boxes. Large amounts of
gravel were put into the upper end of the sluice box and water washed
the gravels down the sluice box back into the stream. As in the smaller
gold pan, the heaver gold settled out of the gravels into the bottom of
the sluice box along boards on the bottom called riffles. Many of these
placer deposits played out quickly.
Later, minerals like lead, zinc and
silver, as well as gold, were discovered in mineralized outcrops, ledges
and small surface veins in the higher peaks of the Colorado Rocky
Mountains. These mineral outcrops were often the source of the
downstream placer deposits, and when the miners found this out, the race
to find the mother-lode was on. With each discovery, boom towns like
Central City, Georgetown, Leadville, Cripple Creek, Chihuahua and
Telluride sprang up overnight. Populations swelled and then rapidly fell
as the veins were found and then played out.
Small mines and prospect holes dot
almost every high peak in Colorado. Each one is the result of the dream
of finding wealth under the ground. The work was often brutal and back
breaking. Many were at high elevation, where the weather was both cold
and snowy much of the year. John L. Jerome Hart notes in his 1931
booklet entitled Fourteen Thousand Feet, A History of the Naming and
Early Ascents of the High Colorado Peaks;
“Miners will go to any place where
they think they will find ore; A fact which is shown by the finding
of prospect holes on almost every mountain in the state.”
Many of these small workings and
prospects were not accessible by road. Developed before automobiles, the
miners used horses, mules or walked to their claims. Because of the
transportation difficulty, they spent a lot of lonely hours at a small
cabin or tent near their mines. Some of the more productive mines had
the money to upgrade the transportation to allow wagons to access the
mine and haul the valuable ore to a mill or smelter.
Despite the difficult working and
living conditions at many of these small mines and prospects in the high
peaks, the beauty was often spectacular. Shaped by wind, water or
glaciers, these high mountain basins were very rocky, steep and rugged.
The gray granite slopes are resplendent with red and yellow streaks
indicating the presence of valuable minerals below the surface. The high
mountain peaks shine in the sun under a clear blue sky. The air was
crisp and clean and the silence was deafening. Many of these prospects
were located above timberline or on very steep, rocky slopes and the
views were incredible. In the spring, summer and fall, the high mountain
meadows were alive with the color of mountain flowers like the Colorado
columbine, Indian paintbrush and primrose.
As a geologist and mining engineer, my
dad came to Colorado after World War II. Looking for mining
opportunities, he and a partner discovered one of the many small mines
in the Rocky Mountains which was discovered in the 1880’s. This small
mine was located at 12,000 feet in a small, glaciated mountain basin
near the Continental Divide. The first year, Dad and his partner walked
into the mine, just like many of the prospectors of Colorado’s gold rush
days. They wanted to make sure the ore values were as described by
earlier reports prior to spending limited capitol resources on
rebuilding the old wagon road. Once they reopened the old workings, they
found a very rich vein of lead, zinc and silver and rebuilt the original
wagon road so trucks could haul the ore to smelters in Leadville or
Denver. Reopening the mine, Dad and his partner worked the Orphan Boy
for 4 years amid some of the most spectacular scenery in the world.
My family and I visit this mine during
the summer or fall each year. It is a way of reconnecting with a past
generation as well as being an excellent day trip into the Colorado
mountains. Looking out from the dump of the Orphan Boy, a camera just
does not reflect the true beauty I see with my eyes and my soul.
I worked with my dad for over 20
years, and we visited the Orphan Boy numerous times. Our discussions
about his days working at the mine conveyed his true love of mining. He
visited most of the small prospects and mines in the area because of his
fascination with mining. Dad loved life and the Colorado mountains, and
like many before him, felt at peace in them. My dad and his partner,
while working the Orphan Boy mine, were able to experience some of the
same feelings, emotions and joys the first miners did who came to
Colorado during Colorado’s Glory Days.
H. Court Young, Geologist, author and publisher
©February, 2007, The Orphan Boy, A Love Affair with Mining
http://www.orphanboymine.com
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The Orphan Boy, A Love Affair with Mining
by H. Court Young
ISBN: 1-893478-02-5
258 pages, softcover
Price $19.95
plus shipping
Includes a CD of historical maps and mining documents related to this
special mine
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