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Yankee Hill
Reprint from Colorado
Ghost Towns-Past and Present
By today's standards, the building of a town
on the top of cold, wind-swept, barren Yankee Hill seems as
out of place as putting a cow on the front porch. There are
frosts nearly every night on this high prominence which divides
Clear Creek County from Gilpin County. Although the much used
wagon and stagecoach road from Central City to Georgetown
traversed Yankee Hill at a much earlier time, little serious
thought was given to the mining potential of the area until
rich gold float was found there, near the surface, in the
1890s. Beginning then, a tent city started to take form, housing
some 200 persons who had come to conquer the peaks and to
unlock any great treasure chest that might lie buried there.
Within four to five months, the tent city had virtually disappeared
as large numbers of log cabins were erected.
Both the hill and the town that later grew up
on it were named by northern sympathizers during the Civil
War. As a community, Yankee Hill was known as a peaceful,
law abiding place. Although Central City was only 7 miles
away, the men preferred to brawl in Denver once a month, on
pay day. Only one saloon, a small one, ever flourished at
Yankee Hill. While this would seem to present a sociological
paradox, research has failed to turn up any alternative information
beyond the fact that the beer glasses in the local saloon
were small while the Denver booze jugglers served their product
in 36 ounce glasses. The pay of a miner at this time was not
great. With seeming pride in the character reputations they
enjoyed at home, the men of Yankee Hill did their carousing
in the gin mills, love stores and gambling halls of Denver.
Yankee Hill itself was always a peaceful place.
For the pioneer who settled at Yankee Hill,
there was a magnificent view of Saint Mary's Glacier and the
front range. Because of its altitude, the bill was nearly
always a very cold place in winter. During one particularly
bad period, a blizzard started on April 22, 1902, and the
stagecoach, carrying both mail and passengers, was 5 hours
late. When the coach finally pulled in at Yankee Hill, the
driver was actually coated with ice.
After some initial slowness, an electric line
was finally extended to Yankee Hill by way of Fall River Canyon.
Its wires reached the town on July 28, 1902, financed for
some reason by the Burlington Railroad Company. Almost exactly
a year later the Colorado Telephone Company ran its wires
up to the town from the other side. From Black Hawk, the lines
were installed to Apex and then across the mountains for the
last 7 miles to Yankee Hill. To facilitate shipment of ore
to the refineries at Idaho Springs, work was done on the road
through Alice and Fall River Canyon, beginning in 1905. Long
before the arrival of these socially desirable improvements,
the Denver Times for July 21, 1899, reported that all cabins
at Yankee Hill were full. In addition to privately owned dwellings,
some of the mining companies also put up quarters of one sort
or another to shelter their unmarried workers. The North Star
Mine had a fine, large boarding house. Captain H. I. Seeman
of the Yankee Consolidated Company had several cabins "suitable
for occupancy by married miners and their families. Single
men who were employed by the same company were taken care
of in one of the boarding houses, run by private parties.
Yankee Hill was located within the boundaries
of the Northwest Lincoln Mining District. Financial backing
for the many mines came principally from New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania
and California capitalists. Here as elsewhere, a mining association
was organized at a rather early stage of the town's life.
On May 14, 1900, the Denver Republican reported
the formation of this group in order to fight claim jumpers
and to advertise the camp. This latter goal was probably conceived
in desperation, since very little paying ore was actually
taken out in proportion to the vast amounts of money invested
there.
It was thought for a time that a road to the
smelters at Idaho Springs would result in prosperity through
shorter and less costly hauling of unrefined ores to the mills.
The previously mentioned Fall River road had been improved
with this in mind. But a majority of the absentee owners and
managers seem to have lived in Gilpin County rather than in
Clear Creek County. As a result most of the refining was done
at the more distant Black Hawk installations.
Despite these seemingly insurmountable odds,
a rather amazing number of mining ventures tried to make a
go of it at Yankee Hill. The Gold Anchor was turning out ores
worth $600.00 to the ton at one time, but not for long. While
boisterously counting their chickens before they were hatched,
the Gold Anchor people built their own concentrator in 1905.
The nearby Pioneer Mill, erected according to the same sort
of speculation, was a 5 stamp operation. Great improvements
were also planned by Captain H. I. Seeman, president and manager
of the Yankee Consolidated Mining, Milling and Tunneling Company.
He hoped to erect a new shaft house on the rich Lombard property
which produced ores worth $400.00 to the ton. A horse-powered
boiler, an air compressor, and new drills were purchased.
This company employed between 50 and 100 men at the Lombard.
It owned about 80 properties around Yankee Hill. A few of
the Consolidated holdings were silver producers. Captain Seeman
had his own company-owned assay office in the town.
According to the Daily News of March 16, 1899,
a one fourth interest in the Stone Wall mine was sold to Denver
parties for $2,000. A company was quickly formed with $10,000
in working capital. Although the camp had been inactive under
adverse circumstances, the turn of the century brought a false
boom that resulted in many old properties, idle for years,
starting up with a lively work program. Among these were the
Pay Dirt Mine, owned by a Dr. Shaw of Denver; the Seminole
Group, made up of a group of 5 claims; the Eureka, owned by
George Ebert of Denver; and the North Star, which was the
property of Albert B. Sanford, also of Denver. A group of
California men opened up the mines of Alice, just below Yankee
Hill on the Fall River side. Between Alice and the top of
the hill, the Ninety Four Tunnel was drilled and a small settlement
grew up around it.
At the peak of the boom, three shifts were at
work around the clock in the Manhattan Tunnel. Among mines
in the district that became producers of a sort were the Portland
No. 1, Klondyke Tunnel, Meadowlark, Isabella, Curfew, Chesapeake
Tunnel, Cumberland, Faust, Pennsylvania, and the Surprise,
owned by the Lincoln Mining Company.
With the passage of time, even the gargantuan
optimism of the newspapers and of the professional promoters
could not conceal the fact that mining futures at Yankee Hill
left much to be desired. Within the span of the few years
that the fever lasted, long hauls to the mills ate up too
much of the profits from ores that were only moderately gold
bearing anyway.
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