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From the Archive: The First Book Written on Western Frontier Mining

By Robert Sorgenfrei

When one thinks of mining on the Western frontier, the California gold rush, the Comstock Lode, or the Colorado gold rush come immediately to mind.

Numerous books chronicle events that took place in these regions. Written in the latter half of the 19th century, they largely determine our historical perception of mining in the West.

But when was the first book on Western mining written? The answer may be a surprise. It was written in 1819, and did not document precious metal mining, but rather lead mining in what was to become Missouri.

In 1803, Thomas Jefferson purchased the Louisiana territory from France and overnight, nearly doubled the size of the United States.

The purchase also planted the idea for Manifest Destiny, which proclaimed that the country’s borders should span the continent. The Louisiana Purchase meant new lands to explore and settle and natural resources to exploit.

Lead had been discovered in the late 17th century in the Louisiana territory and had been mined on a small scale by French settlers throughout the 18th century.

After the purchase, Americans poured into the territory and soon were developing lead mines in what is now western Missouri. (The mines in southwestern Missouri that would produce large amounts of lead had yet to be discovered). Western Missouri, on the edge of the far-western frontier of the time, was seen by some as having great potential for the development of a mineral industry. One such person was Henry Rowe Schoolcraft.

Schoolcraft was born in 1793 near Albany, N.Y., into a well-to-do family. Although he never attended college, he was well read and amassed a sizable library in the sciences and was interested in mineralogy.

In 1808, he took over management of the family-run glass factories in New York, New Hampshire and Vermont.

This venture ended in 1817, when he declared bankruptcy. Soon after, Schoolcraft headed west. Because of his interest in mineralogy, he began investigating mining and smelting operations. He published his observations in A View of the Lead Mines of Missouri in 1819.

Missouri at that time was the far-western frontier and had been part of the United States just over 15 years. Schoolcraft found the region rich in mineral resources, particularly lead, which had a wide variety of uses.

He envisioned Missouri as equal in mining potential to Saxony, Germany’s major mining region. His book urged that Missouri be developed using the more advanced mining practices found in Europe. He describes U.S. mining practices prior to the technical advances of the latter half of the 19th century.

"The method of raising the ores and the processes pursued in separating the metal are, upon the whole, extremely simple.

A pick axe and shovel are the only tools in use for removing the earth, and the drill, rammer and priming rod are added when it is necessary to blast.

Having determined on the spot for digging, the process commences by measuring off a square of about 8 feet, and throwing out the earth, spar, and gravel, until the miner sinks beneath the depth he can throw the earth.

A practiced hand will pitch his earth clear out of the pit from a depth of 10, 12, and even 15 feet. At this depth, a common windlass and bucket is placed over the centre of the pit, and the digging continued by drawing up the earth, spar, and ores, if any are found, in the manner pursued in sinking a well.”

Schoolcraft goes on the say that digging a shaft continues as long as promising ore is encountered. If the ore is not of good quality, the pit is abandoned and work starts again somewhere else. He noted that no one had exceeded a depth of 80 feet and that no doubt there was far richer ore at greater depth.

Schoolcraft’s book is important, if for no other reason, because it shows just where American mining was at the beginning of the 19th century. It offers a startling comparison of how mining had advanced by century’s end.

But the book contains more than just descriptions of primitive mining operations. Some of Schoolcraft’s observations were prophetic and he anticipated issues that would later confront the mining industry.

Schoolcraft realized that much of the mining operation was inefficient and that smelting techniques were crude and wasteful. To deal with such problems, Schoolcraft advocated the establishment of a mining school along European lines that would teach and train experts.

Schoolcraft saw a fledgling industry in disorder and advocated that the government step in and regulate it.

He felt mining laws of the day were too restrictive and wanted to repeal the three-year lease the government granted for mining on public land.

He also proposed that an office of inspector of mines be started in the territory with a trained chemist in charge to establish some kind of order and to publish accurate statistics on mineral production. All of these things came to pass in later decades.

Although Henry Rowe Schoolcraft wrote the first book on Western frontier mining, he is best known in history as an ethnologist and Indian agent.

He served for 19 years in the federal Indian service, serving as an Indian agent. He became an expert on Native American tribes living along the Great Lakes and wrote several books about them.

His best known is a six-volume work entitled Historical and Statistic Information Respecting the …Indian Tribes of the United States (1851-1857). Although uneven in quality, it remains a standard reference work. Schoolcraft died in 1864 after a long illness.

Robert Sorgenfrei is librarian/archivist, Russell L. & Lyn Wood Mining History Archive, Arthur Lakes Library.

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Feature Articles from Past Issues

February 2001
Peoplewatch Brownlee '75, Tyler '87, First Book on Western Frontier Mining
Robots on Tour (PDF Format), Ethics Across the Curriculum (PDF Format)

September 2000
New Department Heads

May/August 2000
Mission to Bangladesh, Korea: Behind the Front Lines, Dinosaurs Were Here

March/April 2000

In Their Own Words: Mines Men in the Korean War, Spelunking in Lechuguilla Cave
Gilbert '97 is Part of Peace Effort in Kosovo.

July/August 1999
Did Douglas Fairbanks Attend Mines?

November/December 1999
Johnson Analyzes Hull of USS Arizona, Pyrotechnics - Chad Carr '91, Horan Makes a Movie

September/October 1999
Remembering Mines, Profiles - Douglas Poole and Searching Siberia


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