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The Mining community of the Gunnison Valley

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The gold and silver people found was short lived. ... As Gold and silver became hard to find in area, coal was discovered in the area. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Mining community of the Gunnison Valley


1
The Mining community of the Gunnison Valley
  • A Community of tough people

2
A brief History of Mining in the Gunnison Valley
  • Mining was not an easy occupation in the
    Gunnison Valley due to the rough landscape (high
    mountains) and long cold winters. Despite these
    hardships, people came into the valley with hopes
    of striking it rich. Some did and some did not
    but the overall effect was long lasting on the
    Valley. Even today evidence of the mining
    community still dots the mountains of the upper
    Gunnison Valley.

3
Why did the mining community come to the Gunnison
Valley?
  • The mining community came in search of gold and
    silver. Starting in the early 1860s miners came
    into the valley with hopes of finding gold and
    silver. But because of the mountains and the
    location of the Gunnison Valley early miners
    found it hard to strike it rich. The Following
    quote demonstrates this idea.
  • I am very sorry to see such excitement and so
    many people flocking to our mining regions- some
    with barley enough money to pay their way to
    their places of destination for many must be
    disappointed, and there may be still more suffer
    from want but it said, and we are having the
    fact illustrated, that there is nothing more
    captivating to the imagination. Denver Tribune
    June 2, 1879

4
Early mining in the Gunnison Valley
  • The first miners in the valley were in search of
    gold and were called placer miners or hard
    rock miners. Hard rock mining was the reason
    people came to the valley but not the reason they
    stayed. The gold and silver people found was
    short lived. Towns that were built around hard
    rock mining were called boom towns because they
    seemed to grow over night and die over night when
    silver could know longer be found. Examples of
    boom towns include, Ruby-Irwin, Elkton,
    Pittsburgh, and Cloud City. These towns were
    located in the upper Gunnison Valley north of
    present day Crested Butte.
  • In 1893 the government stopped using silver in
    the production of money. This caused the demand
    for silver to drop, thus causing the end of the
    Great silver panic.
  • As Gold and silver became hard to find in area,
    coal was discovered in the area. The only
    problems with coal was the high cost to ship it
    out of the valley.
  • By November 24, 1881 the rail road finally
    reached Crested Butte and made it possible for
    coal to be shipped out of the Valley for a profit
    and to provide energy for people in and out of
    the valley.
  • By 1885 coal became the major mining product of
    the Gunnison Valley.

5
As coal became King
  • As levels of hard rock mining decreased the
    amount of coal mining increased. New towns were
    established around large deposits of coal. Most
    of these towns went the way of the silver and
    gold boom towns and disappeared as the deposits
    of coal were removed. The town of Crested Butte
    began as a supply town for the hard rock mining
    towns to the north but coal was soon discovered
    in and around town. The town grew quickly with
    the arrival of the Denver Rio Grand railroad
    in 1881. Because of the railroad large amounts of
    coal were shipped out of the valley and provided
    money for the Gunnison Valley. The coal industry
    lasted until 1952 when the price of coal dropped
    and mining it became to expensive.

6
How much money did the miners make?
  • In 1862 over one million dollars worth of gold
    was said to have been taken from the valley
  • In 1879 mines in the Ruby-Irwin boomtown where
    selling for as much as 100,000 dollars.
  • Coal miners wages were between 1.00 to 4.50 a
    day.

7
This picture is an example of hard rock miners in
the late 1800s
8
Reasons why mining was hard in the Gunnison Valley
  • Getting themselves and equipment into the
    Gunnison Valley
  • The mountains of the Gunnison Valley and its
    location on the western slope of the Colorado
    Rockies made it hard for people to get to the
    area.
  • Location and environment
  • The elevation of the Gunnison Valley ranges from
    8000 to 14,000 feet. The high elevation causes
    the winters to be long and harsh.
  • The winter weather of the Gunnison Valley is long
    and harsh. Subzero temperatures and deep snow and
    kept miners out of the mountains until the summer
    month.
  • The actual location of the mines in the mountains
    made them easy targets for destruction from large
    avalanches.
  • The Ute Indians lived in the area and were
    considered hostile.

9
Example of a high mining camp
10
How the Mining Community lived in the Gunnison
Valley
  • Because the minerals that the miners were after
    were located high in the mountains the life of a
    miner was not easy. They had to set up camp in
    very high locations. The famous boom town of
    Ruby-Irwin was located at an elevation that is
    above 10,000 feet and experiences very harsh
    winters with large amounts of snow.
  • Getting equipment to this upper elevations was
    not an easy task. Deep snow kept miners from
    reaching the boom towns until the middle summer
    months. Because of this miners would ski into
    these areas with as much as 100 pounds on their
    backs. Avalanches were a terrible hazard to the
    miners because of the location of their towns.
    Near the boom town of Pittsburgh located north of
    present day Crested Butte avalanches would
    regularly destroy the town and became the reason
    the mine was deserted by 1896.

11
How the Mining Community lived in the Gunnison
Valley
  • Hard rock miners worked on there own for the most
    part and the money they made was dependant on the
    amount of ore (silver) they could find.
  • During the age of coal miners worked for a coal
    mining company. The Colorado Coal and Iron
    Company ran the coal mining operations in the
    area of present day Crested Butte. Miners were
    paid between 1.00 to 4.50 a day to work in the
    mines.
  • The work days were long and hard and dangerous.
    A lot of the work was done by hand, which means
    that miners used their bodies to do the work
    instead of relying on machinery.

12
The dangers of coal mining
  • Coal mining was a dangerous job. Miners dug
    shafts into the earth in search of coal.
    Sometimes the mine shafts collapsed crushing the
    miners that were inside them.
  • Other times mines had explosions in side them
    caused by the release of natural gas that is in
    the ground.
  • On such disaster occurred on January 24, 1884 in
    the Jokerville mine out side of present day
    Crested Butte. 54 Crested Butte miners were
    killed when natural gas was released from the
    coal beds and exploded.
  • Avalanches and cold weather were always a danger
    to the miners in the Gunnison Valley.

13
Why the Mining Community is not in the Gunnison
Valley any more.
  • Hard rock mining ended by the early 1900s
    because minerals became hard to find and
    because the demand for silver had declined.
  • Coal mining ended by 1952 because of its distance
    from Pueblo Colorado were the coal mills were
    located and because coal was discovered in areas
    that were less remote and closer to the mills.
  • In 1952 with the end of coal mining, the Denver
    and Rio Grand railroad pulled there railroad out
    of the valley.

14
Contributions the mining community has had on the
Gunnison valley.
  • Mining is what first brought people to the
    Valley.
  • If gold and silver would not have been found
    in the 1850s, the large amounts of people that
    came to the valley would not have come.
  • The railroads
  • Because of the need to transport large loads
    of gold, silver and coal, the railroad was
    brought into the valley which in turn brought
    more people.
  • Ranching
  • Because people of the mining community
    needed to eat, cattle ranchers began to thrive by
    raising cattle to feed the miners.

15
Contributions the mining community has had on the
Gunnison valley
  • Roads
  • The mining community built roads all over the
    Gunnison Valley. Many of these roads still exist
    and are used by all of us. The United States
    Forest service has kept the condition of many of
    these roads up so they can be used by us to drive
    into the high country. Roads like Washington
    Gulch, Slate River, Scholfield Pass, Paradise
    Divide, and many more are all here today because
    of the mining community.
  • Pollution and environmental destruction
  • The mining community cut down large amounts
    of trees to build their houses and for roads.
    They dug large mines all over the mountains that
    are still present today in the form of old
    abandon mining structures. These areas are
    littered with old trash and machinery. Mining
    itself produces mine tailings that can get into
    the water and can be harmful when consumed by
    humans.
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