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Alice
It was in 1881 that the first important gold
discoveries were made in the Upper Fall River Mining District.
The first title of 7 placer claims and 4 lode claims located
on 930 acres was granted by the United States of America on
December 4, 1884 to the Alice Mining Co., founded October
25, 1881. The name of Alice comes from the wife of George
Taylor who had worked the property prior to the Alice Mining
Company. R.O. Phillips, the president of the Alice Mining
Co., was also the secretary of the Lincoln Land Co., a subsidiary
of Burlington Railroads. The land around the Alice Mine was
worked as placer claims, which strips the top from several
acres of land at a time and is then washed in order to find
the mineral. A stamp mill was erected to crush other ores,
and several thousand dollars in gold, silver, and lead were
taken out that first year.
John Kaminky was one of the earliest miners
to reside in the area. John Kaminky married Ethel Wright,
who was teaching at the Alice School, on June 10, 1912. John
was on the School Board at the time. The young couple moved
to a three room cabin located above Silver Lake, to the east,
on a lonely, windy hill.
The cabin was near John's Sierra Nevada mining
properties. The Charlie Dow cabin was located just to the
south, the only close neighbor. Mr. Dow was working the Blanche
and Columbine claims.
Three daughters were born in the Kaminky home,
Rosalie in 1913, Elizabeth in 1915, and Alice in 1917. The
family moved into the Slater home in Alice in the fall of
1919, for Ethel was to teach in the Alice School that year,
and Rosalie was to enter her first grade in school. Son John
was born in 1921, and Ethel took him to school with her until
a replacement was found to take over her classes. Ethel taught
in Alice again in 1924-25, earning $900.00 a year. She was
also the postmistress for two years. The family moved to Idaho
Springs in 1925 so Rosalie could enter high school. John spent
part of the winters at his mines and the family spent some
summers at their cabin in Alice. The cabin was sold in 1942
at the time of John's death for $100.00.
However, as depth was attained in the Alice
Mine, the ore became more heavily mineralized and unfit for
the mill. Operations generally proved unprofitable and ceased.
The Alice Mining Co. began leasing of the Alice properties
to various individuals in 1890. The properties were never
worked profitably from this time, usually from lack of capital
and the inability to treat the low-grade ore profitably. In
May 1900, payment was defaulted and a public trustee put the
properties up for auction. The sale was held on June 24, 1901,
at the mill site, and C.O. Whedon bought the properties for
$6766.25, including the machinery. Whedon sold the properties
in 1902 to Silver Creek Mineral Co. who until 1929 would hold
some claim to the land. The Alice Gold Mill Corp. and the
Alice Development Co. owned the properties from 1908 to 1913.
An effort was made to sell stock in the company which resulted
in the publication of the two reports in our possession. The
properties went back to Silver Creek Mineral Co. in 1913 by
repossession due to failure to make payment by the Alice Gold
Mill Corporation. Very little evidence has been found to substantiate
any work being done or profits being made at the time of ownership
by the Alice Gold Mill Corp. or at any time after the initial
mining was done prior to 1890. The properties were again sold
in 1929 and in 1931, but were repossessed due to failure to
make payment. In 1934, the Yukon Gold Mining Co. purchased
the properties and leased the claims to the Porphyry Mines
which developed the mineral resources extensively between
1935 and 1939.
The Alice Mining Company build a 100-ton mill
and expected ore to average $4.00 to $4.50 a ton, with mining
costs expected to run 60¢ per ton and milling costs to
run about $1.50 a ton. The property was worked through an
open pit with chutes at intervals in the base to let ore through.
In 1936, the American Smelting and Refining Co., at the time
the world's leading smelter and refiner of metals, acquired
control of the Alice Mine, with plans to spend $400,000 in
the development of the mine. Thirty percent interests were
retained by the Porphyry Mines. The American Smelting and
Refining Co. was the country's largest shipper of ores in
1938. The end was near however; the war in Europe was soon
to make the quest for gold in Colorado only a bright memory.
From 1936 to 1946, the taxes were not paid on the Alice Mine
properties. The president of the Porphyry Mines, C. Sanford
Thayer, bought the properties back for the amount of the taxes
owed. Thayer sold some properties in 1947 to the St. Mary's
Lodge, Inc. which developed a dude ranch near Silver Lake.
The first housing development properties were sold in May
1960 to Winterland Incorporated. Various land promoters have
been involved in the area since.
The mines at Yankee, 94, and Lombard were the
primary source of minerals in the Upper Fall River Mining
District in the late 1800's and the early 1900's. Yankee was
first settled by northern sympathizers, thus the name of Yankee.
The post office at Yankee was established in 1893. '94 was
first settled in 1894 but was never incorporated. The post
office at Yankee was discontinued in 1910, and soon all signs
of Yankee disappeared. Only an occasional family lived at
'94. All mail was then sent to the post office at Alice which
was established in 1900. Alice was now the center of activity
in the area. The Alice School District #18 had been established
in 1896. The community around the school was taking on the
look of permanency. The Alice School District and the post
office were in existence until 1927 when mining all but shut
down in the area. Both the school and the post office reopened
again in 1935 when mining activities were renewed. However,
the mining activities were short lived as by 1939 the area
was almost totally deserted.
Electricity to the area arrived in 1902, being financed by
the Burlington Railroad. Fall River road underwent improvements
in 1905 and ore shipments were then sent to Idaho Springs
rather than Central City. The mining operations of families
living in the area were the primary suppliers of minerals
from around 1910 to the 1930's.
The Thomas Slater family was another family
that settled in the area in the late 1800's. The current home
of Don Speed was built by the Slaters. Catherine, the only
child of Thomas and Margaret, was born in 1889. Thomas worked
in various mines in the area. Thomas also had a cabin to the
north of Silver Lake. He was in the cabin when it was hit
by a snow slide. He fell and hit his head on the stove, but
received only minor head injuries. Thomas Slater died in Denver
in 1935. Catherine Slater was the first to teach at the Alice
school built in 1906, she was 19 years old. She then went
to college in Greeley to earn her degree, and returned to
teach at the Alice school from 1913 to 1917, earning $80.00
a month in 1917. Catherine was also postmistress for one year.
Catherine married Clarence Edwin Alexander in 1919. The Alexander
family was associated with the Planet Group of mines on Gold
Hill. The Slater and Alexander family's left Alice around
1919, and the Kaminky family moved into their home.
Another prominent family in Alice was the Steuarts.
George Steuart was born January, 1862 in Meadville, Pennsylvania.
He was an engineer on the Colorado & Southern Railroad
around 1880, working on the branch running out of Denver to
Leadville. George purchased the Puritan Mine property in 1901
from W.S. and James Gow for the cash price of $15,000.00.
George build a large frame house on the road to the glacier
where he lived with his mother until his marriage to Alice
Bannister on June 4, 1903. Alice Bannister was born September,
1879 in Des Moines, Iowa. She came to Idaho Springs to visit
friends, and met George at a concert in that town. The power
house at the mouth of the Mayflower Tunnel was build by George,
and housed the air compressor and black smith shop. A water
wheel nearby was powered by water from St. Mary's Lake which
ran through a 950 foot pipeline, 10 inches in diameter, with
a drop of 280 feet. Ore from the Puritan Mine was reportedly
valued at $100.00 per ton in 1901. The first child of the
Steuarts' was Alice Dorothy, born July, 1904. Margaret was
born May, 1906 and George was born November, 1907. All three
children, and most children in the area, were delivered at
home by Dr. Frazier of Idaho Springs. Catherine Slater was
the children's teacher and they attended the Alice School
for three years before going to Denver for school, only living
at Alice in the summer. George R. Steuart did most of the
surveys for the mines in the area at the time, and drew the
maps. The Steuart home burned down in 1922. Everything was
lost in the fire which was by an arsonist. Castle de Gow and
Air Castle mining claims were owned by Edward and George Reynolds,
cousins of George Steuart. They purchased their holdings from
the Gow brothers also, coming from Pennsylvania around 1910.
George Steuart was no longer mining by this time. After the
fire he moved to Erie, Pennsylvania to work for Standard Stoker
for several years. He invented partes for stoking coal on
trains, and rode the trains checking to see if stokers worked
properly. He was still working for Standard Stoker at the
age of 80 when he was struck and killed by a car in Denver
(1942). Alice Steuart died in Denver in 1959.
Silver City and Fall River
Up to the time of discovery of silver and gold
in the County of Clear Creek, the Arapahoe and Ute Indians
used the canyon only as a passage way to South Park in the
Granby area. The hot springs located near Soda Creek were
considered by both tribes to be neutral, sacred ground. The
peace and solitude of the area ended in 1859 when George Jackson
discovered gold along the south fork of Clear Creek. The rush
was on; and in 60 years the Clear Creek area would yield more
than $100 million worth of gold. The first discovery of minerals
found along Fall River, named for the falls along the way,
was in 1860 in the form of silver lodes. Nearly 8000 miners
swarmed into the area, picking and shoveling the earth and
blazing the trees to mark the claims. 7000 claims were filled
in the Fall River area that year and the newly founded town
of Silver City, located near the head of Silver Creek, boasted
1000 men living in tents and brush huts. The Upper Fall River
Mining District was established in July, 1860, and the town
of Silver City was surveyed and plated in September of that
year. The rush was short-lived however. Most of the miners
were jobless individuals, a product of the financial panic
of 1857. They knew nothing about mining nor how to survive
in the wilderness. At this time there was no way of processing
silver profitably. So, due to lack of knowledge and the expense
of transportation and milling costs, most mines in the Fall
River area were soon abandoned. Silver City existed for only
the summer of 1860. The town of Fall River, or Spanish Bar,
which began at the junction of Clear Creek and Fall River,
continued to prosper. In 1860, it boasted a hotel, post office,
and several shops and residences, two large mills and several
smaller ones. In 1866 county residents had the choice of Fall
River or Idaho Springs as the county seat. The camp reached
its peak in the 1880's when discoveries rich in free gold
were made.
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