Publication Date: 1879
Seller: Geographicus Rare Antique Maps, Brooklyn, NY, U.S.A.
Map
Good. Some toning and wear on old fold lines with slight loss at some fold intersections. Laid on original linen. Stable. Accompanies original binder. Size 27.25 x 38.25 Inches. A rare and impressive 1879 Sizer / Baldwin map of Leadville, Colorado, and the California Gulch mining district at the dawn of the Colorado Silver Boom (1879-1893). The map reveals a cacophony of overlapping mining claims, underscoring the complexity and lawlessness of American mineral rushes, where ambitious prospectors intentionally and unintentionally laid claims to land without official recognition or proper surveys. A Closer Look Coverage embraces the California Gulch Mining District roughly between Evans Creek and Iowa Creek, including California Gulch, White's Gulch, and Stray Horse Creek. The town of Leadville is prominent on the left, and the ghost town of Oro City appears on the right; Adlaide City is between them. In all three towns, streets, smelters, iron works, sampling works, and reduction works are noted. Throughout, hundreds of claims are defined, some overlapping, each named. Where claims have been officially registered with a patent, the number is attached. Circles mark producing mines. Leadville, Colorado Leadville was first settled by gold prospectors in 1859 during the Pike's Peak Gold Rush. They founded the nearby town of Oro City, just to the left of center here. Early miners complained of black sand that clogged the sluice boxes, making gold extraction difficult, until they discovered that the 'sand' was actually cerussite, a lead mineral with an extremely high silver content. Prospector Horace Tabor was quick to recognize that silver, not gold, was the richer discovery. He and August Meyer subsequently founded Leadville in 1877, marking the early days of the Colorado Silver Boom. Prospectors rushed into town, establishing hundreds of claims (as shown here). Within three years, Leadville had gas lighting, water mains, twenty-eight miles of streets, five churches, three hospitals, six banks, and a school for 1,100 students. Colorado Silver Boom The Colorado Silver Boom officially began in 1879, the year this map was issued, with the discovery of major silver deposits at Leadville. It was Colorado's second great mineral boom, following the 1859 Pike's Peak Gold Rush. Some $82,000,000 in silver was mined during the peak boom years. It was more than just rich silver deposits that fueled the boom. In 1878, Congress passed legislation mandating regular large-scale government purchases of silver bullion, creating a reliable and inflated market. The Silver Boom created enormous wealth in Colorado, fostering the fast development of several cities, including Leadville, Pueblo, and Denver. The excess of silver in the economy led to the 'Free Silver' debate, which divided eastern coastal banking states and western mining states. Ultimately, when the Sherman Silver Purchase Act was repealed in 1893, silver bullion lost nearly half its value, precipitating the run on U.S. Treasury gold stock known as the Panic of 1893. The Panic not only ended the Colorado Silver Boom, it also led to a global economic collapse of banks and railroads, a staggering loss of individual wealth, and contributed to the destabilization of several countries. Provenance: T. W. Robinson The map accompanies its original binder with the signature of its original owner, T.W. Robinson, inside the front cover. Robinson was a mining engineer who graduated from M.I.T. in 1876. He must have set out to make his fortune in Leadville shortly after graduating. By March 1879, he was a supervisor and part owner of the American Mining and Smelting Company, whose works were then under construction. In 1883, we find him in Pueblo; then, in 1884, he relocated to Illinois to become the superintendent of the Joliet Works of Illinois Steel. We find no further record of him. Publication History and Census This map was issued in January 1879. It was drafted by Frank L. Sizer and lithographed.