Online Encyclopedia

LEADVILLE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V16, Page 322 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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LEADVILLE  , a

city and the county seat of Lake county,
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Colorado, U.S.A., one of the highest (mean
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elevation c . 10,150 ft.) and most celebrated
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mining " camps " of the
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world . Pop . (1900) 12,455, of whom 3802 were
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foreign-born; (1910 census) 7508 . It is served by the
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Denver & Rio Grande, the Colorado &
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Southern and the Colorado Midland
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railways . It lies amid towering mountains on a terrace of the western flank of the Mosquito Range at the head of the valley of the
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Arkansas
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river, where the river cuts the valley between the Mosquito and the Sawatch (Saguache) ranges . Among the peaks in the immediate environs are Mt . Massive (14,424 ft., the highest in the state) and Elbert
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Peak (14,421 ft.) . There is a
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United States fish hatchery at the
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foot of Mt . Massive . In the spring of 1860 placer gold was discovered in California Gulch, and by
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July 186o Oro City had probably 10,000 inhabitants . In five years the
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total yield was more than $5,000,000; then it diminished, and Oro City shrank to a few
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hundred inhabitants .

This

settlement was within the
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present limits of Leadville . In 1876 the output of the mines was about $20,000 . During sixteen years " heavy sands " and
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great boulders that obstructed the placer fields had been moved thoughtlessly to one side . These boulders were from enormous lead carbonate deposits extremely rich in
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silver . The
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discovery of these deposits was made on the hills at the edge of Leadville . The first
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building was erected in
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June 1877; in December there were several hundred miners, in
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January the
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town was organized and named; at the end of 1879 there were, it is said, 35,000 inhabitants . Leadville was already a chartered city, with the usual organization and all public facilities . In 188o it was reached by the Denver & Rio Grande railway . In early years Leadville was one of the most turbulent, picturesque and in all ways extraordinary, of the mining camps of the West . The value of the output from 1879 to 1889 totalled $147,834,186, including one-fifth of the silver production and a third of the lead consumption of the country . The decline in the price of silver, culminating with the closing of the India mints II and the repeal of the Sherman Law in 1893, threatened Leadville's future . But the source of the gold of the old placers was found in 1892 .

From that

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year to 1899 the gold product rose from $262,692 to $2,183,332 . From 1879 to 1900 the camp yielded $250,000,000 (as compared with $48,000,000 of gold and silver in five years from the Comstock, Nevada, lode; and $6o,00.,000 and 225,000 tons of lead, in fourteen years, from the
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Eureka, Nevada, mines) . Before 1898 the production of
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zinc was unimportant, but in 1906 it was more valuable than that of silver and gold combined . This increased output is a result of the establishment of concentrating mills, in which the zinc content is raised from 18 or 20% in the raw ores to 25 or 45% in the concentrates . In 1904, per ton of Lake county ore, zinc was valued at $6.93, silver at $4.16, lead at $3.85, gold at $1.77 and copper at $.66 . The copper
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mined at Leadville amounted to about one-third the total mined in the state in 1906 . Iron and manganese have been produced here, and in 1906 Leadville was the only place in the United States known to have produced
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bismuth . There were two famous labour strikes in the " diggings " in 1879 and 1896 . The latter attracted
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national attention; it lasted from the 19th of June 1896 to the 9th of March 1897, when the miners, being practically starved out, declared the strike off . There had been a riot on the 21st of September 1896 and militia guarded the mines for months afterwards . In January 1897 the mines on Carbonate Hill were flooded after the removal of their pumps . This strike closed many mines, which were not opened for several years .

Leadville

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stocks are never on the
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exchange, and " flotation " and " promotion " have been almost unknown . The ores of the Leadville
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District occur in a blue
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limestone formation overlaid by porphyry, and are in the form of heavy sulphides, containing copper, gold, silver, lead and zinc; oxides containing iron, manganese and small amounts of silver and lead; and siliceous ores, containing much silver and a little lead and gold . The best grade of ores usually consists of a mixture of sulphides, with some native gold . Nowhere have more wonderful advances in mining been apparent—in the
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size and character of furnaces and pumps; the development of
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local smelter supplies; the fall in the cost of
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coal, of
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explosives and other mine supplies; the development of railways and diminution of freight expenses; and the general improvement of economic and scientific methods—than at Leadville since 1880 . The increase of output more than doubled from 1890 to 1900, and many ores once far too low in grade for working now yield sure profits . The Leadville smelters in 1900 had a capacity of 35,000 tons monthly; about as much more local ore being treated at Denver,
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Pueblo and other places . See S . F . Emmons, Geology and Mining Industry of Leadville, Colorado, monograph United States
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Geological Survey, val . 12 (1886), and with J . D . Irving, The Downtown District of Leadville, Colorado, Bulletin 320, United States Geological Survey (1907), particularly for the discussion of the origin of the ores of the region .

End of Article: LEADVILLE
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