fbpx
Wikipedia

Congress Mine

The Congress Mine is a gold mine located at the ghost town of Congress, Arizona on the southeastern slope of the Date Creek Mountains, approximately 18 miles north-northeast of Wickenburg, Arizona at an elevation of about 3,000 feet (Lat. 34.216 – Long. -122.841). The nearest community, four miles away, is modern Congress, formerly known as Congress Jct railroad station or Martinez Post Office. The Congress Mine produced substantial quantities of gold and was considered one of the most productive gold mines in Arizona.[1][2]

The town of Congress with the mine in the background, c.1914.

The gold found in the mine was primarily small veins embedded in white quartz with inclusions of iron pyrite (fool's gold), iron, and sulfur. The Congress vein was considered a peculiar formation, characterized as "a dike of green stone trap." The ore ran through this dike and the dike was found throughout the entire geographical ledge. The most valuable ore-bearing rocks could be found lodged on or near a foot wall in the ledge usually in drifts 12 to 15 feet high. The vein had a dip of 22 degrees and was usually about 15 feet wide. The vein was accessed by shafts dug (often quite deep) into the areas around the ledge.[3]

History

Following the placer gold rush to the nearby Weaver district in 1863–34, prospectors began scouring the surrounding hills for gold lodes. In the 1860s miners organized the Date Creek Mining District (later renamed the Martinez district) after discovering gold in the Date Creek Mountains. One of the early prospectors was Dennis May, who would later discover the Congress Mine, but not until twenty years of sporadic, small scale operations in the immediate area. According to the Martinez Mining District records held by the Sharlot Hall Museum, Prescott, May first co-located a claim on the "Date Creek Lode" in 1870. By 1880, he was working what would become the Congress mine, staking with two prospector partners the Niagara claim June 26, 1880, followed by the adjacent Congress claim March 25, 1884. From Buffalo, New York and in Arizona since 1866, May was a typical single-blanket prospector. In the early 1880s he was able to sell some other claims through mine promoter Frank Murphy, and began a more thorough working of the Congress group of claims. Here he found his bonanza.

May, again through promoter Frank Murphy, sold the Congress group in 1887 to Joseph "Diamond Jo" Reynolds for $30,000. Properly capitalized as the Congress Gold Company, a stamp mill was built and the mine opened. In 1891, while visiting his mine with Frank Murphy, the colorful Diamond Jo Reynolds died. Reynolds, childless, willed a part ownership of the mine to Murphy, who shut it down while promoting and building the railroad from Ash Fork on the Santa Fe mainline (across northern Arizona) to Phoenix via Prescott and via a point near the Congress mine. In 1894, with the railroad nearing completion of construction, Murphy and the Reynolds estate sold the Congress gold mine to a group of Tombstone mine owners (Tombstone's silver boom was bust). Headed by E.B. Gage, formerly superintendent of the Grand Central in Tombstone, the company relocated its miners and mill men to open the Congress. Financing came from the Grand Central backers, principally N.K. Fairbank of Chicago and Charles D. Arms and partners of Youngstown, Ohio. As superintendent they hired William F Staunton, formerly of the Tombstone M&M Co., who expanded operations, expanded the mill to 40 stamps, introduced the cyanide process, and turned the Congress into territorial Arizona's biggest gold producer.

In 1900, the number 1 shaft had reached a depth of 2,700 feet and was the deepest shaft in the Arizona Territory. The shafts generally ran at an angle of 22-22.5 degrees to follow the vein. In 1900, the mine consisted of about 30 separate claims of which the principle producers were the Congress, the Niagara and the Why Not, and had by then produced more than $5,000,000 (in 1900 dollars) worth of gold.[3] Around this time the monthly payroll of the mine was reported to have about 400 miners.[4]

In May 1901 the Congress Mine was visited by then President William McKinley on a tour of the country. The tour was orchestrated by Arizona Territorial Governor Nathan Oakes Murphy and brother Frank M. Murphy, who had re-acquired an interest in the Congress Mine. The tour helped promote Murphy's new company, the Development Company of America (DCA), which was organized to buy and develop properties. Murphy's DCA acquired the Congress, but retained the management of E.B. Gage and W.F. Staunton, both of whom later became prominent in the DCA. A week before president McKinley's visit, Staunton had completed the second 40 stamp mill and expanded the roasting and cyanide works. The Congress became the DCA's steady dividend producer.[5]

In 1902, miners struck over reduction of pay, and over the right to organize a miners' union. The Western Federation of Miners had entered the district, with rumors of violence (the company's water pump was later dynamited by persons unknown). The company introduced low paid miners from Mexico. The strike failed, but territorial legislation was passed for an eight-hour work day.

In 1902, a competing syndicate from New York acquired a claim to property adjacent to the Congress Mine which was earlier ignored by the engineers of the Congress Gold Company as being devoid of precious minerals. This turned out to be a big oversight and the Senate Mine was developed. This caused great anxiety to the stockholders of the Congress Gold Mining Company and they began to acquire adjoining claims and nearby land. This proved to be a successful strategy as other gold veins were discovered.[6]

More gold was discovered in previously ignored areas near the Congress Mine in 1902. Four more ore bearing ledges were discovered near the main (Congress) shaft which by this time had reached a depth of 3,200 feet. These ledges followed the same general geology as the previously discovered ore deposits running at an angle near 22 degrees.[6]

The gold-bearing ore became scarcer the deeper the miners went and work underground diminished while the tailings were reprocessed. The owners of the mine then decided to prospect within the existing shafts for new veins of gold-bearing rocks.[7] In 1905 a new offshoot vein was discovered at a level of 2,050 feet in the number 5 shaft. A horizontal shaft was dug to follow this vein.[8][9] By this time the Congress Shaft had reached a depth of 4,000 feet with a few of the other shafts passing the 3,000 foot level.[10] By 1906, with the discovery of new veins, the Congress Mine was again in full production. The ore near the 4,000 foot depth was reported to be richer than the veins at the lesser depths. At this time equipment included 12 hoists with steam engines ranging from 20 to 200 horsepower, a reduction plant with an 80 stamp mill, a new concentrating plant, a cyanide plant consisting of a roasting furnace and seven 90-ton leaching tanks and three 200-ton leaching tanks for non roasted ore.[11]

In ensuring years, high-grade ores became harder to find and harder to get to and more work was done on the processing of tailings for the low-grade ores it contained. The Congress paid its last dividend in 1910 and company president Frank Murphy ordered the operation closed down. The Congress mine operated for the first three months of 1911 and then closed while the parent company which had concentrated on developing other properties, primarily at Tombstone (Tombstone Consolidated) and at Silver Bell copper district (Imperial Copper) ran into financial difficulties. The DCA, unable to pay its bonds, and its subsidiaries collapsed in 1911 with the Phelps Dodge and Guggenheims' ASARCO interests picking up the pieces.[12][13][14] As the Congress played out, competing claims around it continued to be found and worked, though not to the same degree of success as the Congress Mine.[15][16]

In 1912 the bankrupt Development Company of America (DCA) lost the Congress Mine but to the Frank M. Murphy interests. His attorney, T.G. Norris, began to sell off parts of the property including the rights to the mine dump and tailings, to other mining concerns.[17] In 1913 the only activity at the mine was speculative, mostly centered on possible leases for reworking the tailings and dumps of discarded ore left over from the primary mining of the main shafts. It was reported that most of the machinery still stood at the site, looking as if it could start up again any time, "at the blowing of the whistle." The town of Congress, Arizona was "hanging on" but with the majority of the mining activity stilled, a good number of residents (either miners or those associated with mining businesses) began moving to more active areas. Much of the news concerning the Congress Mine by this time began to shift focus from, "What is to come," to, "What once was."[18] A few hopeful reports were printed from time to time that the Congress Mine would be re-opened.[19] Sadly for the people of Congress, Arizona, these reports were erroneous and the most common reports were details of the equipment being removed from the mine complex to be utilized elsewhere. Also by this time, the mine was most commonly called the "Old Congress Mine," to distinguish it from other mines with the same name, particularly the re-opened Congress Mine near Silverton, Colorado.[20][21][22] By 1914 the vast majority or reports concerning the Congress Mine centered on possible schemes to rework the tailings. No potential work within the mine itself was reported.[23][24]

With Frank Murphy's death in 1917, any hope of reopening was gone. The estate sold the physical plant, mills, and mine railroad equipment shortly thereafter. As World War I progressed, references to the Old Congress Mine became almost non-existent and by the end of the war the only references to be found were in articles about news makers who were once associated with the Congress Mine. The heyday of one of the greatest gold mines in Arizona was over. A brief revival occurred with the rise of gold market values during the 1930s, when Frank Murphy's widow sold out her interest. The best history of the mine was published by family friend and former supt. Staunton in the Engineering & Mining Journal November 13, 1926.

Discovery and ownership

Successful mines have many fathers while a borrasca is an orphan. The Congress is no different. In 1903, a man named Ben Bartlett recounted on his death bed that he had discovered the Congress in the early 1870s. Some later sources say that Bartlett abandoned the mine, some say May and partner Edward Gilbert paid Bartlett $150 for the claim. Dennis May died in Phoenix on October 17, 1907.[25] In his 1907 obituary, a later partner reportedly said May had re-staked an abandoned claim that became the Congress. Be that as it may, Dennis May was the first person to energetically develop the prospect into a small mine. The scale of production was minimal; May used a simple arrastra to work a few tons of ore.[25][26][27][28][29] Later, May bought a farm near Buffalo, New York, but returned to prospect the Arizona desert, while Bartlett later became a laborer in the Congress mine. Ben Bartlett died February, 1903.[30]

Frank Morrill Murphy, a Prescott, Arizona mining promoter, acted as a broker for the sale of the Congress mine to Joseph "Diamond Joe" Reynolds of Chicago. In 1887, their Congress Gold Company built a ten stamp mill (later expanded to twenty stamp mill) and produced $600,000 over the next four years.[31] Frank Murphy, brother of Arizona Territorial Secretary (1889–90) and Governor (1890–93, 1898–1902) Nathan Oakes Murphy, became a trusted friend of Joseph "Diamond Jo" Reynolds and was superintendent of the Congress mine after Mr. Reynolds purchased it. He was still the superintendent at the time of "Diamond Jo" Reynolds' death (he was at Mr. Reynolds' bedside at the mine when he died, and inherited a share of the property).[32][33][34] Joseph "Diamond Jo" Reynolds died of pneumonia at the age of 71 on February 21, 1891 in his tent at the Congress Mine in Arizona. After his death, his estate was valued at between $8 and $10 million, completely debt free. His widow, Eleanor Morton Reynolds, became one of the executors of Joseph "Diamond Jo" Reynolds' estate and after his death she sold the mine in 1894 (they had no children heirs).[26][35] Joseph "Diamond Jo" Reynolds had championed a railroad between Prescott and Phoenix, running through Congress, to reduce shipping costs to and from the mine. Immediately after his death, Frank Murphy concentrated on getting the railroad built and the Santa Fe, Prescott and Phoenix Railway reached Congress in 1894, then Phoenix in 1895.[26][36]

A group from Tombstone took an option on the Congress in March 1894. They incorporated the Congress Gold Mining Company in 1895, and consummated the purchase of the mine from "Diamond Jo" Reynolds' estate. Since his death in 1891 the mine had been shut down. The principals in the new company when incorporated were C.D. Arms, Eliphalet Butler Gage, (a successful mine manager in Tombstone in the early days) as president, N.K. Fairbank, and Frank M. Murphy. The capital stock was valued at $1,000,000.[3][26][34]

In 1900, it was reported that the Congress Mine had been sold again, this time to a syndicate headed by ex-Senator Warner Miller of New York for $3,000,000. This was later proven a false claim.[37][38][39]

On April 5, 1901, the Congress Mine was sold to a syndicate headed by John William MacKay for $5,000,000. This was also false. Actually Frank Murphy and partners, Gage and partners, and others formed a holding company modeled after United States Steel Corporation. Called the Development Company of America, it acquired properties and developed them across the Southwest and northern Mexico. The DCA organized a subsidiary, the Congress Consolidated Mines Company, Limited, to acquire and manage its Congress holdings. Listed as the principal sellers were Frank M. Murphy, E.B. Gage and N.K. Fairbanks; not surprisingly, the buyers were Murphy, Gage, Fairbank et al. who made up the officers of the new corporation. At the time of the sale it was reported that the management would stay the same and that the former owners would retain some interest in the mine.[26][40]

The Development Company of America with Frank Murphy as president, headquartered in New York City, also owned the Poland Mine Company, Imperial Copper Company (Silver Bell district west of Tucson), Tombstone Consolidated Mines Company of Tombstone, Arizona, vast timber lands in Chihuahua, the Christmas copper mines near Ray, a major smelter at SASCO to work the coppers ores of Silverbell/Imperial, and lesser properties. Under these subsidiaries were a number of mine railroads, mills, and undeveloped lands. At Congress they operated the mining railroad which ran 2 1/2 miles to the Congress Mine from Congress Junction, on Murphy and partner's Santa Fe, Prescott & Phoenix Railroad.[26][41][42][43]

In 1912 the bankrupt Development Company of America sold the Imperial to a mining conglomerate headed up by the Guggenheim family; the Tombstone Con to the Phelps Dodge Corporation; and the Christmas, Congress, and other properties to the Murphy interests. After his death in 1917, his widow Ethel Meaney Murphy and the estate with the assistance of her attorney T.G. Norris divested themselves of the property by the mid-1930s.[44][45]

People associated with the mine

  • Charles D. Arms : A member of the syndicate that purchased the Congress Mine from the estate of Joseph "Diamond Joe" Reynolds in 1894. He died in 1896 and his heirs continued active in the Congress and DCA. One of his daughter's homes is the Arms Family Museum of Local History in Youngstown, Ohio. He had previously made money in Ohio coal and iron, then speculated in Deadwood, Leadville, Tombstone and Aspen before the Congress.[3]
  • N. K. Fairbanks : Came into the Tombstone speculations of C D Arms and later with Murphy's railroad and mining investments, including the Congress. Chicago industrialist was one of the richest men of his time. Fairbank, Arizona, now a ghost town, named for him.[40]
  • Eliphalet Butler Gage : A prominent mine manager in early Tombstone, he had attracted Arms and Fairbank into the rich Grand Central mine. They followed him to Congress in 1894, and led in the 1901 reopening of the old Tombstone mines through their Tombstone Consolidated mining company, a DCA subsidiary. Resigned presidency of Congress, Tombstone and other DCA operating companies in 1909 and died 1913 in California.[40][46]
  • Edward F. Gilbert : According to a 1907 account, reportedly with Dennis May, rediscovered or purchased the Congress Mine in 1883 (but mining district records do not confirm this). Abandoned his share due to the evidently low grade of the surface ores. Died in Kingman in July, 1907.[28]
  • Professor M. Goodloe : selected by Staunton to follow him as General Superintendent, Congress Mines, then up through the ranks of the DCA Company[8]
  • Ben Goodrich : General Counsel for the Development Company of America, parent company of the Congress Mines Company.[14]
  • Sam Gunn : Mine Foreman, Congress Mines Company[8]
  • John William MacKay : Head of the mining syndicate that reportedly bought the Congress Mine in 1901, but report false.[26][40]
  • Victor L. Mason : Vice President of the Development Company of America, parent company of the Congress Mines Company. Personal secretary of Secretary of War Russell Alger during the Spanish–American War, later Senator Alger, who was a major investor in the Murphy railroads and mines, including the Congress Con. Mason represented Alger's interests and also served as the assistant secretary of the Republican National Committee. Died in an early plane crash 1912.[14]
  • Frank Morrill Murphy : Brokered the sale of the mine from Dennis May, discoverer, to Joseph "Diamond Joe" Reynolds. Made superintendent by Mr. Reynolds; inherited a share of the mine upon Reynold's death 1891. The Congress helped Murphy become Arizona's first self-made millionaire. He would hold an interest in the mine until his death in 1917. Builder (1892–95)of the Santa Fe, Prescott and Phoenix Railway from Ash Fork through Prescott to Phoenix which served Congress, AZ, and its many branches west to Parker and on into California, east to Ray, to Crown King and Poland, and shorter lines. Was principle organizer of the Development Company of America, which "acquired" the Congress in 1901.[40] As president of DCA, 1901–12, was CEO over Congress. He was also a back room political deal maker and the brother of Arizona Territorial Secretary and Governor Nathan Oakes Murphy. He died in Prescott, 1917, still owning the Congress.
  • Joseph "Diamond Jo" Reynolds : Chicago businessman and Mississippi River steamboat man who purchased the mine from its discoverer, Dennis May. Mr. Reynolds died in 1891 while at the mine.[35]
  • W. F. Staunton : Graduate Columbia School of Mines. Successful supt of the Tombstone Mining & Milling Co, transferred to Congress in 1894 following the silver crash of 1893. Superintendent 1894–1901, when he was elevated under the DCA organization as general manager over its many interests, including the Congress Con. Later operated other mines in California and Arizona, notably the Verde Central at Jerome. Died in California 1947. His vast collection of papers, memoir, correspondence, etc. at the University of Arizona Special Collections provide an insider's view of the Congress mine, 1890s–1930s.

Mine-related deaths

  • Alfred Jackson, Miner 12-21-1899[47]
  • A. L. White, Weather Observer 9-28-1896[48]

See also

References

  1. ^ Arizona Silver Belt newspaper article, January 28, 1904, http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84021913/1904-01-28/ed-1/seq-3/
  2. ^ Bisbee Daily Review newspaper article, August 4, 1904, http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84024827/1905-08-04/ed-1/seq-3/
  3. ^ a b c d Arizona Silver Belt newspaper article, May 10, 1900, http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84021913/1900-05-10/ed-1/seq-1/
  4. ^ Arizona Silver Belt newspaper article, January 18, 1896, http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84021913/1896-01-18/ed-1/seq-2/
  5. ^ Bisbee Daily Review newspaper article, Sept. 9, 1904, http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84021913/1901-05-09/ed-1/seq-1/;also[permanent dead link] see Territorial Times (Prescott Corral of Westerners) May 2008 article on McKinley visit.
  6. ^ a b Arizona Silver Belt newspaper article, November 20, 1902, http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84021913/1902-11-20/ed-1/seq-3/
  7. ^ Bisbee Daily Review newspaper article, Aug. 4, 1905, http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84024827/1905-08-04/ed-1/seq-3/
  8. ^ a b c Arizona Silver Belt newspaper article, May 11, 1905, http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84021913/1905-05-11/ed-1/seq-3/
  9. ^ Arizona Silver Belt newspaper article, Nov. 23, 1905, http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84021913/1905-11-23/ed-1/seq-2/
  10. ^ Arizona Silver Belt newspaper article, Aug. 31, 1905, http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84021913/1905-08-31/ed-1/seq-2/
  11. ^ Bisbee Daily Review newspaper article, Nov. 13, 1906, http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84024827/1906-11-13/ed-1/seq-6/
  12. ^ Mohave County Miner newspaper article, Jan. 13, 1912, http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84024828/1912-01-13/ed-1/seq-5/
  13. ^ Bisbee Daily Review newspaper article, Jan. 13, 1912, http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84024827/1912-01-13/ed-1/seq-6/
  14. ^ a b c Bisbee Daily Review newspaper article, March 25, 1910, http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84024827/1910-03-25/ed-1/seq-1/
  15. ^ Mohave County Miner newspaper article, Feb. 17, 1912, http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84024828/1912-02-17/ed-1/seq-1/
  16. ^ Daily Arizona Silver Belt newspaper article, Nov. 20, 1908, http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn87082863/1908-11-20/ed-1/seq-4/
  17. ^ Mohave County Miner newspaper article, Nov. 2, 1912, http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84024828/1912-11-02/ed-1/seq-4/
  18. ^ Mohave County Miner newspaper article, May 3, 1912, http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84024828/1913-05-03/ed-1/seq-5/
  19. ^ Mohave County Miner newspaper article, July 7, 1912, http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84024828/1913-07-12/ed-1/seq-5/
  20. ^ Tombstone Epitaph newspaper article, July 13, 1913, http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn95060905/1913-07-13/ed-1/seq-2/
  21. ^ Bisbee Daily Review newspaper article, Oct. 1, 1913, http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84024827/1913-10-01/ed-1/seq-8/
  22. ^ Tombstone Epitaph newspaper article, June 10, 1917, http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn95060905/1917-06-10/ed-1/seq-3/
  23. ^ Bisbee Daily Review newspaper article, Oct. 29, 1913, http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84024827/1913-10-29/ed-1/seq-8/
  24. ^ Tombstone Epitaph newspaper article, March 22, 1914, http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn95060905/1914-03-22/ed-1/seq-2/
  25. ^ a b Bisbee Daily Review newspaper article, Oct. 18, 1907, http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84024827/1907-10-18/ed-1/seq-8/
  26. ^ a b c d e f g Bisbee Daily Review newspaper article, Sept. 9, 1904, http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84024827/1904-09-09/ed-1/seq-3/
  27. ^ Mohave County Miner newspaper article, May 27, 1907, http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84024828/1907-04-27/ed-1/seq-1/
  28. ^ a b Mohave County Miner newspaper article, Oct. 19, 1907, http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84024828/1907-10-19/ed-1/seq-2/
  29. ^ The Coconino Sun newspaper article, February 28, 1903, http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn87062055/1903-02-28/ed-1/seq-7/
  30. ^ Arizona Silver Belt newspaper article, March 5, 1903, http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84021913/1903-03-05/ed-1/seq-3/
  31. ^ Arizona Silver Belt newspaper article, March 7, 1901, http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84021913/1901-03-07/ed-1/seq-7/
  32. ^ Arizona Republican newspaper article, May 30, 1890, http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84020558/1890-05-30/ed-1/seq-2/
  33. ^ Arizona Republican newspaper article, Feb. 27, 1891, http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84020558/1891-02-27/ed-1/seq-4/
  34. ^ a b Tombstone Epitaph newspaper article, March 10, 1895, http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn95060905/1895-03-10/ed-1/seq-2
  35. ^ a b Arizona Republican newspaper, http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84020558/1891-03-26/ed-1/seq-1/
  36. ^ Tombstone Epitaph newspaper article, Opt. 4, 1914, http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn95060905/1914-10-04/ed-1/seq-2/
  37. ^ Tombstone Epitaph newspaper article, March 10, 1900, http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn95060905/1900-06-03/ed-1/seq-4/
  38. ^ Arizona Silver Belt newspaper article, June 7, 1900, http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84021913/1900-06-07/ed-1/seq-1/
  39. ^ Arizona Silver Belt newspaper article, June 21, 1900, http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84021913/1900-06-21/ed-1/seq-1/
  40. ^ a b c d e Arizona Silver Belt newspaper article, April 11, 1901, http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84021913/1901-04-11/ed-1/seq-1/
  41. ^ Bisbee Daily Review newspaper article, April 16, 1905, http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84024827/1905-04-16/ed-1/seq-10/
  42. ^ Bisbee Daily Review newspaper article, Jan. 22, 1908, http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84024827/1908-01-22/ed-1/seq-5/
  43. ^ Bisbee Daily Review newspaper article, Feb. 9, 1908, http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84024827/1908-02-09/ed-1/seq-10/
  44. ^ Bisbee Daily Review newspaper article, Nov. 12, 1912, http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84024827/1912-11-12/ed-1/seq-6/
  45. ^ The Coconino Sun newspaper article, Nov. 16, 1912, http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn87062055/1912-11-22/ed-1/seq-2/
  46. ^ Arizona Silver Belt newspaper article, August 3, 1905, http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84021913/1905-08-03/ed-1/seq-2/
  47. ^ Arizona Silver Belt newspaper article, December 21, 1899, http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84021913/1899-12-21/ed-1/seq-7/
  48. ^ Arizona Silver Belt newspaper article, October 8, 1896, http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84021913/1896-10-08/ed-1/seq-1/

Further reading

  • Philip Varney (2005). Arizona Ghost Towns and Mining Towns: A travel guide to history. Phoenix: Arizona Highways. 136 pages. ISBN 978-1932082463
  • Heatwole, Thelma (1991) [1951]. "Cleator: In the Bradshaws". Ghost Towns and Historical Haunts in Arizona. Phoenix: American Traveler Press. pp. 44–46. ISBN 978-0914846109.

34°12′03″N 112°51′03″W / 34.20083°N 112.85083°W / 34.20083; -112.85083

congress, mine, gold, mine, located, ghost, town, congress, arizona, southeastern, slope, date, creek, mountains, approximately, miles, north, northeast, wickenburg, arizona, elevation, about, feet, long, nearest, community, four, miles, away, modern, congress. The Congress Mine is a gold mine located at the ghost town of Congress Arizona on the southeastern slope of the Date Creek Mountains approximately 18 miles north northeast of Wickenburg Arizona at an elevation of about 3 000 feet Lat 34 216 Long 122 841 The nearest community four miles away is modern Congress formerly known as Congress Jct railroad station or Martinez Post Office The Congress Mine produced substantial quantities of gold and was considered one of the most productive gold mines in Arizona 1 2 The town of Congress with the mine in the background c 1914 The gold found in the mine was primarily small veins embedded in white quartz with inclusions of iron pyrite fool s gold iron and sulfur The Congress vein was considered a peculiar formation characterized as a dike of green stone trap The ore ran through this dike and the dike was found throughout the entire geographical ledge The most valuable ore bearing rocks could be found lodged on or near a foot wall in the ledge usually in drifts 12 to 15 feet high The vein had a dip of 22 degrees and was usually about 15 feet wide The vein was accessed by shafts dug often quite deep into the areas around the ledge 3 Contents 1 History 1 1 Discovery and ownership 2 People associated with the mine 2 1 Mine related deaths 3 See also 4 References 5 Further readingHistory EditFollowing the placer gold rush to the nearby Weaver district in 1863 34 prospectors began scouring the surrounding hills for gold lodes In the 1860s miners organized the Date Creek Mining District later renamed the Martinez district after discovering gold in the Date Creek Mountains One of the early prospectors was Dennis May who would later discover the Congress Mine but not until twenty years of sporadic small scale operations in the immediate area According to the Martinez Mining District records held by the Sharlot Hall Museum Prescott May first co located a claim on the Date Creek Lode in 1870 By 1880 he was working what would become the Congress mine staking with two prospector partners the Niagara claim June 26 1880 followed by the adjacent Congress claim March 25 1884 From Buffalo New York and in Arizona since 1866 May was a typical single blanket prospector In the early 1880s he was able to sell some other claims through mine promoter Frank Murphy and began a more thorough working of the Congress group of claims Here he found his bonanza May again through promoter Frank Murphy sold the Congress group in 1887 to Joseph Diamond Jo Reynolds for 30 000 Properly capitalized as the Congress Gold Company a stamp mill was built and the mine opened In 1891 while visiting his mine with Frank Murphy the colorful Diamond Jo Reynolds died Reynolds childless willed a part ownership of the mine to Murphy who shut it down while promoting and building the railroad from Ash Fork on the Santa Fe mainline across northern Arizona to Phoenix via Prescott and via a point near the Congress mine In 1894 with the railroad nearing completion of construction Murphy and the Reynolds estate sold the Congress gold mine to a group of Tombstone mine owners Tombstone s silver boom was bust Headed by E B Gage formerly superintendent of the Grand Central in Tombstone the company relocated its miners and mill men to open the Congress Financing came from the Grand Central backers principally N K Fairbank of Chicago and Charles D Arms and partners of Youngstown Ohio As superintendent they hired William F Staunton formerly of the Tombstone M amp M Co who expanded operations expanded the mill to 40 stamps introduced the cyanide process and turned the Congress into territorial Arizona s biggest gold producer In 1900 the number 1 shaft had reached a depth of 2 700 feet and was the deepest shaft in the Arizona Territory The shafts generally ran at an angle of 22 22 5 degrees to follow the vein In 1900 the mine consisted of about 30 separate claims of which the principle producers were the Congress the Niagara and the Why Not and had by then produced more than 5 000 000 in 1900 dollars worth of gold 3 Around this time the monthly payroll of the mine was reported to have about 400 miners 4 In May 1901 the Congress Mine was visited by then President William McKinley on a tour of the country The tour was orchestrated by Arizona Territorial Governor Nathan Oakes Murphy and brother Frank M Murphy who had re acquired an interest in the Congress Mine The tour helped promote Murphy s new company the Development Company of America DCA which was organized to buy and develop properties Murphy s DCA acquired the Congress but retained the management of E B Gage and W F Staunton both of whom later became prominent in the DCA A week before president McKinley s visit Staunton had completed the second 40 stamp mill and expanded the roasting and cyanide works The Congress became the DCA s steady dividend producer 5 In 1902 miners struck over reduction of pay and over the right to organize a miners union The Western Federation of Miners had entered the district with rumors of violence the company s water pump was later dynamited by persons unknown The company introduced low paid miners from Mexico The strike failed but territorial legislation was passed for an eight hour work day In 1902 a competing syndicate from New York acquired a claim to property adjacent to the Congress Mine which was earlier ignored by the engineers of the Congress Gold Company as being devoid of precious minerals This turned out to be a big oversight and the Senate Mine was developed This caused great anxiety to the stockholders of the Congress Gold Mining Company and they began to acquire adjoining claims and nearby land This proved to be a successful strategy as other gold veins were discovered 6 More gold was discovered in previously ignored areas near the Congress Mine in 1902 Four more ore bearing ledges were discovered near the main Congress shaft which by this time had reached a depth of 3 200 feet These ledges followed the same general geology as the previously discovered ore deposits running at an angle near 22 degrees 6 The gold bearing ore became scarcer the deeper the miners went and work underground diminished while the tailings were reprocessed The owners of the mine then decided to prospect within the existing shafts for new veins of gold bearing rocks 7 In 1905 a new offshoot vein was discovered at a level of 2 050 feet in the number 5 shaft A horizontal shaft was dug to follow this vein 8 9 By this time the Congress Shaft had reached a depth of 4 000 feet with a few of the other shafts passing the 3 000 foot level 10 By 1906 with the discovery of new veins the Congress Mine was again in full production The ore near the 4 000 foot depth was reported to be richer than the veins at the lesser depths At this time equipment included 12 hoists with steam engines ranging from 20 to 200 horsepower a reduction plant with an 80 stamp mill a new concentrating plant a cyanide plant consisting of a roasting furnace and seven 90 ton leaching tanks and three 200 ton leaching tanks for non roasted ore 11 In ensuring years high grade ores became harder to find and harder to get to and more work was done on the processing of tailings for the low grade ores it contained The Congress paid its last dividend in 1910 and company president Frank Murphy ordered the operation closed down The Congress mine operated for the first three months of 1911 and then closed while the parent company which had concentrated on developing other properties primarily at Tombstone Tombstone Consolidated and at Silver Bell copper district Imperial Copper ran into financial difficulties The DCA unable to pay its bonds and its subsidiaries collapsed in 1911 with the Phelps Dodge and Guggenheims ASARCO interests picking up the pieces 12 13 14 As the Congress played out competing claims around it continued to be found and worked though not to the same degree of success as the Congress Mine 15 16 In 1912 the bankrupt Development Company of America DCA lost the Congress Mine but to the Frank M Murphy interests His attorney T G Norris began to sell off parts of the property including the rights to the mine dump and tailings to other mining concerns 17 In 1913 the only activity at the mine was speculative mostly centered on possible leases for reworking the tailings and dumps of discarded ore left over from the primary mining of the main shafts It was reported that most of the machinery still stood at the site looking as if it could start up again any time at the blowing of the whistle The town of Congress Arizona was hanging on but with the majority of the mining activity stilled a good number of residents either miners or those associated with mining businesses began moving to more active areas Much of the news concerning the Congress Mine by this time began to shift focus from What is to come to What once was 18 A few hopeful reports were printed from time to time that the Congress Mine would be re opened 19 Sadly for the people of Congress Arizona these reports were erroneous and the most common reports were details of the equipment being removed from the mine complex to be utilized elsewhere Also by this time the mine was most commonly called the Old Congress Mine to distinguish it from other mines with the same name particularly the re opened Congress Mine near Silverton Colorado 20 21 22 By 1914 the vast majority or reports concerning the Congress Mine centered on possible schemes to rework the tailings No potential work within the mine itself was reported 23 24 With Frank Murphy s death in 1917 any hope of reopening was gone The estate sold the physical plant mills and mine railroad equipment shortly thereafter As World War I progressed references to the Old Congress Mine became almost non existent and by the end of the war the only references to be found were in articles about news makers who were once associated with the Congress Mine The heyday of one of the greatest gold mines in Arizona was over A brief revival occurred with the rise of gold market values during the 1930s when Frank Murphy s widow sold out her interest The best history of the mine was published by family friend and former supt Staunton in the Engineering amp Mining Journal November 13 1926 Discovery and ownership Edit Successful mines have many fathers while a borrasca is an orphan The Congress is no different In 1903 a man named Ben Bartlett recounted on his death bed that he had discovered the Congress in the early 1870s Some later sources say that Bartlett abandoned the mine some say May and partner Edward Gilbert paid Bartlett 150 for the claim Dennis May died in Phoenix on October 17 1907 25 In his 1907 obituary a later partner reportedly said May had re staked an abandoned claim that became the Congress Be that as it may Dennis May was the first person to energetically develop the prospect into a small mine The scale of production was minimal May used a simple arrastra to work a few tons of ore 25 26 27 28 29 Later May bought a farm near Buffalo New York but returned to prospect the Arizona desert while Bartlett later became a laborer in the Congress mine Ben Bartlett died February 1903 30 Frank Morrill Murphy a Prescott Arizona mining promoter acted as a broker for the sale of the Congress mine to Joseph Diamond Joe Reynolds of Chicago In 1887 their Congress Gold Company built a ten stamp mill later expanded to twenty stamp mill and produced 600 000 over the next four years 31 Frank Murphy brother of Arizona Territorial Secretary 1889 90 and Governor 1890 93 1898 1902 Nathan Oakes Murphy became a trusted friend of Joseph Diamond Jo Reynolds and was superintendent of the Congress mine after Mr Reynolds purchased it He was still the superintendent at the time of Diamond Jo Reynolds death he was at Mr Reynolds bedside at the mine when he died and inherited a share of the property 32 33 34 Joseph Diamond Jo Reynolds died of pneumonia at the age of 71 on February 21 1891 in his tent at the Congress Mine in Arizona After his death his estate was valued at between 8 and 10 million completely debt free His widow Eleanor Morton Reynolds became one of the executors of Joseph Diamond Jo Reynolds estate and after his death she sold the mine in 1894 they had no children heirs 26 35 Joseph Diamond Jo Reynolds had championed a railroad between Prescott and Phoenix running through Congress to reduce shipping costs to and from the mine Immediately after his death Frank Murphy concentrated on getting the railroad built and the Santa Fe Prescott and Phoenix Railway reached Congress in 1894 then Phoenix in 1895 26 36 A group from Tombstone took an option on the Congress in March 1894 They incorporated the Congress Gold Mining Company in 1895 and consummated the purchase of the mine from Diamond Jo Reynolds estate Since his death in 1891 the mine had been shut down The principals in the new company when incorporated were C D Arms Eliphalet Butler Gage a successful mine manager in Tombstone in the early days as president N K Fairbank and Frank M Murphy The capital stock was valued at 1 000 000 3 26 34 In 1900 it was reported that the Congress Mine had been sold again this time to a syndicate headed by ex Senator Warner Miller of New York for 3 000 000 This was later proven a false claim 37 38 39 On April 5 1901 the Congress Mine was sold to a syndicate headed by John William MacKay for 5 000 000 This was also false Actually Frank Murphy and partners Gage and partners and others formed a holding company modeled after United States Steel Corporation Called the Development Company of America it acquired properties and developed them across the Southwest and northern Mexico The DCA organized a subsidiary the Congress Consolidated Mines Company Limited to acquire and manage its Congress holdings Listed as the principal sellers were Frank M Murphy E B Gage and N K Fairbanks not surprisingly the buyers were Murphy Gage Fairbank et al who made up the officers of the new corporation At the time of the sale it was reported that the management would stay the same and that the former owners would retain some interest in the mine 26 40 The Development Company of America with Frank Murphy as president headquartered in New York City also owned the Poland Mine Company Imperial Copper Company Silver Bell district west of Tucson Tombstone Consolidated Mines Company of Tombstone Arizona vast timber lands in Chihuahua the Christmas copper mines near Ray a major smelter at SASCO to work the coppers ores of Silverbell Imperial and lesser properties Under these subsidiaries were a number of mine railroads mills and undeveloped lands At Congress they operated the mining railroad which ran 2 1 2 miles to the Congress Mine from Congress Junction on Murphy and partner s Santa Fe Prescott amp Phoenix Railroad 26 41 42 43 In 1912 the bankrupt Development Company of America sold the Imperial to a mining conglomerate headed up by the Guggenheim family the Tombstone Con to the Phelps Dodge Corporation and the Christmas Congress and other properties to the Murphy interests After his death in 1917 his widow Ethel Meaney Murphy and the estate with the assistance of her attorney T G Norris divested themselves of the property by the mid 1930s 44 45 People associated with the mine EditCharles D Arms A member of the syndicate that purchased the Congress Mine from the estate of Joseph Diamond Joe Reynolds in 1894 He died in 1896 and his heirs continued active in the Congress and DCA One of his daughter s homes is the Arms Family Museum of Local History in Youngstown Ohio He had previously made money in Ohio coal and iron then speculated in Deadwood Leadville Tombstone and Aspen before the Congress 3 N K Fairbanks Came into the Tombstone speculations of C D Arms and later with Murphy s railroad and mining investments including the Congress Chicago industrialist was one of the richest men of his time Fairbank Arizona now a ghost town named for him 40 Eliphalet Butler Gage A prominent mine manager in early Tombstone he had attracted Arms and Fairbank into the rich Grand Central mine They followed him to Congress in 1894 and led in the 1901 reopening of the old Tombstone mines through their Tombstone Consolidated mining company a DCA subsidiary Resigned presidency of Congress Tombstone and other DCA operating companies in 1909 and died 1913 in California 40 46 Edward F Gilbert According to a 1907 account reportedly with Dennis May rediscovered or purchased the Congress Mine in 1883 but mining district records do not confirm this Abandoned his share due to the evidently low grade of the surface ores Died in Kingman in July 1907 28 Professor M Goodloe selected by Staunton to follow him as General Superintendent Congress Mines then up through the ranks of the DCA Company 8 Ben Goodrich General Counsel for the Development Company of America parent company of the Congress Mines Company 14 Sam Gunn Mine Foreman Congress Mines Company 8 John William MacKay Head of the mining syndicate that reportedly bought the Congress Mine in 1901 but report false 26 40 Victor L Mason Vice President of the Development Company of America parent company of the Congress Mines Company Personal secretary of Secretary of War Russell Alger during the Spanish American War later Senator Alger who was a major investor in the Murphy railroads and mines including the Congress Con Mason represented Alger s interests and also served as the assistant secretary of the Republican National Committee Died in an early plane crash 1912 14 Frank Morrill Murphy Brokered the sale of the mine from Dennis May discoverer to Joseph Diamond Joe Reynolds Made superintendent by Mr Reynolds inherited a share of the mine upon Reynold s death 1891 The Congress helped Murphy become Arizona s first self made millionaire He would hold an interest in the mine until his death in 1917 Builder 1892 95 of the Santa Fe Prescott and Phoenix Railway from Ash Fork through Prescott to Phoenix which served Congress AZ and its many branches west to Parker and on into California east to Ray to Crown King and Poland and shorter lines Was principle organizer of the Development Company of America which acquired the Congress in 1901 40 As president of DCA 1901 12 was CEO over Congress He was also a back room political deal maker and the brother of Arizona Territorial Secretary and Governor Nathan Oakes Murphy He died in Prescott 1917 still owning the Congress Joseph Diamond Jo Reynolds Chicago businessman and Mississippi River steamboat man who purchased the mine from its discoverer Dennis May Mr Reynolds died in 1891 while at the mine 35 W F Staunton Graduate Columbia School of Mines Successful supt of the Tombstone Mining amp Milling Co transferred to Congress in 1894 following the silver crash of 1893 Superintendent 1894 1901 when he was elevated under the DCA organization as general manager over its many interests including the Congress Con Later operated other mines in California and Arizona notably the Verde Central at Jerome Died in California 1947 His vast collection of papers memoir correspondence etc at the University of Arizona Special Collections provide an insider s view of the Congress mine 1890s 1930s Mine related deaths Edit Alfred Jackson Miner 12 21 1899 47 A L White Weather Observer 9 28 1896 48 See also Edit Arizona portalSasco Arizona Castle Hot Springs Arizona References Edit Arizona Silver Belt newspaper article January 28 1904 http chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn84021913 1904 01 28 ed 1 seq 3 Bisbee Daily Review newspaper article August 4 1904 http chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn84024827 1905 08 04 ed 1 seq 3 a b c d Arizona Silver Belt newspaper article May 10 1900 http chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn84021913 1900 05 10 ed 1 seq 1 Arizona Silver Belt newspaper article January 18 1896 http chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn84021913 1896 01 18 ed 1 seq 2 Bisbee Daily Review newspaper article Sept 9 1904 http chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn84021913 1901 05 09 ed 1 seq 1 also permanent dead link see Territorial Times Prescott Corral of Westerners May 2008 article on McKinley visit a b Arizona Silver Belt newspaper article November 20 1902 http chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn84021913 1902 11 20 ed 1 seq 3 Bisbee Daily Review newspaper article Aug 4 1905 http chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn84024827 1905 08 04 ed 1 seq 3 a b c Arizona Silver Belt newspaper article May 11 1905 http chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn84021913 1905 05 11 ed 1 seq 3 Arizona Silver Belt newspaper article Nov 23 1905 http chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn84021913 1905 11 23 ed 1 seq 2 Arizona Silver Belt newspaper article Aug 31 1905 http chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn84021913 1905 08 31 ed 1 seq 2 Bisbee Daily Review newspaper article Nov 13 1906 http chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn84024827 1906 11 13 ed 1 seq 6 Mohave County Miner newspaper article Jan 13 1912 http chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn84024828 1912 01 13 ed 1 seq 5 Bisbee Daily Review newspaper article Jan 13 1912 http chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn84024827 1912 01 13 ed 1 seq 6 a b c Bisbee Daily Review newspaper article March 25 1910 http chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn84024827 1910 03 25 ed 1 seq 1 Mohave County Miner newspaper article Feb 17 1912 http chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn84024828 1912 02 17 ed 1 seq 1 Daily Arizona Silver Belt newspaper article Nov 20 1908 http chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn87082863 1908 11 20 ed 1 seq 4 Mohave County Miner newspaper article Nov 2 1912 http chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn84024828 1912 11 02 ed 1 seq 4 Mohave County Miner newspaper article May 3 1912 http chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn84024828 1913 05 03 ed 1 seq 5 Mohave County Miner newspaper article July 7 1912 http chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn84024828 1913 07 12 ed 1 seq 5 Tombstone Epitaph newspaper article July 13 1913 http chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn95060905 1913 07 13 ed 1 seq 2 Bisbee Daily Review newspaper article Oct 1 1913 http chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn84024827 1913 10 01 ed 1 seq 8 Tombstone Epitaph newspaper article June 10 1917 http chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn95060905 1917 06 10 ed 1 seq 3 Bisbee Daily Review newspaper article Oct 29 1913 http chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn84024827 1913 10 29 ed 1 seq 8 Tombstone Epitaph newspaper article March 22 1914 http chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn95060905 1914 03 22 ed 1 seq 2 a b Bisbee Daily Review newspaper article Oct 18 1907 http chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn84024827 1907 10 18 ed 1 seq 8 a b c d e f g Bisbee Daily Review newspaper article Sept 9 1904 http chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn84024827 1904 09 09 ed 1 seq 3 Mohave County Miner newspaper article May 27 1907 http chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn84024828 1907 04 27 ed 1 seq 1 a b Mohave County Miner newspaper article Oct 19 1907 http chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn84024828 1907 10 19 ed 1 seq 2 The Coconino Sun newspaper article February 28 1903 http chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn87062055 1903 02 28 ed 1 seq 7 Arizona Silver Belt newspaper article March 5 1903 http chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn84021913 1903 03 05 ed 1 seq 3 Arizona Silver Belt newspaper article March 7 1901 http chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn84021913 1901 03 07 ed 1 seq 7 Arizona Republican newspaper article May 30 1890 http chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn84020558 1890 05 30 ed 1 seq 2 Arizona Republican newspaper article Feb 27 1891 http chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn84020558 1891 02 27 ed 1 seq 4 a b Tombstone Epitaph newspaper article March 10 1895 http chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn95060905 1895 03 10 ed 1 seq 2 a b Arizona Republican newspaper http chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn84020558 1891 03 26 ed 1 seq 1 Tombstone Epitaph newspaper article Opt 4 1914 http chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn95060905 1914 10 04 ed 1 seq 2 Tombstone Epitaph newspaper article March 10 1900 http chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn95060905 1900 06 03 ed 1 seq 4 Arizona Silver Belt newspaper article June 7 1900 http chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn84021913 1900 06 07 ed 1 seq 1 Arizona Silver Belt newspaper article June 21 1900 http chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn84021913 1900 06 21 ed 1 seq 1 a b c d e Arizona Silver Belt newspaper article April 11 1901 http chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn84021913 1901 04 11 ed 1 seq 1 Bisbee Daily Review newspaper article April 16 1905 http chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn84024827 1905 04 16 ed 1 seq 10 Bisbee Daily Review newspaper article Jan 22 1908 http chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn84024827 1908 01 22 ed 1 seq 5 Bisbee Daily Review newspaper article Feb 9 1908 http chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn84024827 1908 02 09 ed 1 seq 10 Bisbee Daily Review newspaper article Nov 12 1912 http chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn84024827 1912 11 12 ed 1 seq 6 The Coconino Sun newspaper article Nov 16 1912 http chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn87062055 1912 11 22 ed 1 seq 2 Arizona Silver Belt newspaper article August 3 1905 http chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn84021913 1905 08 03 ed 1 seq 2 Arizona Silver Belt newspaper article December 21 1899 http chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn84021913 1899 12 21 ed 1 seq 7 Arizona Silver Belt newspaper article October 8 1896 http chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn84021913 1896 10 08 ed 1 seq 1 Further reading EditPhilip Varney 2005 Arizona Ghost Towns and Mining Towns A travel guide to history Phoenix Arizona Highways 136 pages ISBN 978 1932082463 Heatwole Thelma 1991 1951 Cleator In the Bradshaws Ghost Towns and Historical Haunts in Arizona Phoenix American Traveler Press pp 44 46 ISBN 978 0914846109 34 12 03 N 112 51 03 W 34 20083 N 112 85083 W 34 20083 112 85083 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Congress Mine amp oldid 1166757852, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.