![]()
by Calvin W. Gower
Spring, 1973 (Vol.
39, No. 1), pages 58 to 74
Transcribed by Christopher H. Wynkoop; digitized with permission
of
the Kansas State Historical Society.
NOTE: The numbers in brackets are links to footnotes for this
text.
IN
JUNE, 1860, a correspondent for the Lawrence
Republican, writing from what is now Denver, Colo.,
declared: "Eastern Kansas-especially Leavenworth-is very
largely represented here. It is difficult, during business
hours, to walk half a square in Denver, without meeting some
familiar face from your section." Many residents of Kansas
territory went to the so-called Pike's Peak gold fields from
1858 to 1860, and this migration created some alarm in
eastern Kansas which was already suffering from the
depression of the late 1850's. However, the Pike's Peak gold
rush, which significantly affected the political and
economic situation in Kansas, did not drain a massive
portion of the population out of eastern Kansas. Instead,
the gold rush may have directly and indirectly helped to
increase the population in Kansas by the time congress made
the area a state in 1861. [1]
The Territory of Kansas
extended from the western border of Missouri to the crest of
the Rocky mountains and included much of present-day eastern
Colorado. The "Pike's Peak gold rush" was a misnomer, since
the early gold seekers traveled to the mouth of Cherry creek
in present-day Denver, and even the later moves into the
mountains were to areas other than that around Pike's Peak.
Although the distance from the eastern border of Kansas to
Cherry creek was over 600 miles, settlers in Kansas lived
closer than most Americans to the gold region. A number of
these people moved to Denver and vicinity from 1858 through
1860. They engaged in many different occupations, both in
eastern Kansas and in the gold fields, with many of them
ignoring gold seeking and, instead, developing business
establishments there. Also, people from Kansas were leaders
in setting up churches in the gold region. In addition,
former residents of Kansas participated in political
activities and in town promotion moves in the newly opened
area. Definitely, gold seeking was not the only attraction
which stimulated the migration of some of these individuals.
These Kansans ranged from a mid-19th century feminist, Julia
Archibald Holmes, to a person who became one of the
wealthiest men in Colorado, Horace A. W. Tabor. This
migration was a significant development in the history of
Kansas territory, and probably is of some importance in
helping to explain the moves to gold regions in general.
In the summer
and autumn of 1858 three parties went from eastern Kansas to
the gold region, but the large numbers of hopeful fortune
seekers did not leave until the spring of 1859. One of the
first groups of prospectors to go to the mining area in 1858
was a party consisting primarily of men from Lawrence.
Nevertheless, possibly the best-known member of this group
in later years was a woman, Julia Archibald Holmes. Her
father, John Archibald, had been a member of the first party
sent out to Kansas by the New England Emigrant Aid Company,
and settled in Lawrence. James H. Holmes came to the
Osawatomie community in 1856 and joined the radical wing of
the Free-State party under John Brown. Julia Archibald
married Holmes in 1857, and she and her husband and her
brother, Albert, joined the Lawrence group in the spring of
1858 to journey to the mountains. [2]
Julia Holmes
was an advocate of increased rights for women. Among other
reforms, she was interested in dress reform, and thus on her
trip to far western Kansas she wore a bloomer outfit,
consisting of a calico dress reaching a little below the
knees and calico bloomers. In August, 1858, Julia Holmes and
her husband climbed Pike's Peak, and she is credited as the
first white woman to do so. [3]
Some members
of the Lawrence party began laying out townsites and
securing claims at the mouth of Cherry creek in September,
1858. Two other Kansas groups which proceeded to the gold
region in 1858 were the Leavenworth or Larimer party and the
Lecompton group made up of Arapahoe county officials. Both
joined forces before they reached Cherry creek. The Larimer
party consisted of prospectors from Leavenworth. The
Lecompton group was supposed to establish a county
government in the gold fields. Several members of these
parties became prominent in gold field affairs. Best known
of the Larimer party both at the time it made the trip to
the Pike's Peak gold fields and in later years was William
Larimer, Jr. He came west from Pennsylvania in 1854 and
settled in Nebraska. In Pennsylvania he had been a business
man and a major general in the Pennsylvania militia. In 1858
he went to Kansas and in the autumn of that year went to the
Pike's Peak area. He was a friend of Horace Greeley and Sam
Houston, and was active in the Civil War. Larimer spent the
last years of his life in Kansas and from 1867 to 1870 was a
member of the Kansas state senate. [4]
In the gold
fields William Larimer was one of the chief founders of
Denver and a prominent leader in the newly developed area.
At a meeting held in Denver in August, 1859, to discuss such
important matters as the Pacific railroad and the telegraph
questions Larimer was one of the speakers. In July, 1860,
Larimer headed the committee to arrange for the celebration
of the Fourth of July, and in the fall of 1860 he ran for
the office of delegate to congress from Jefferson territory.
In the early spring of 1861 Larimer was reportedly one of
those under consideration for the governorship of the new
Territory of Colorado. [5]
The names of
members of the Larimer party and of some of those of the
Lecompton group appeared in connection with various matters
in the gold fields from time to time during 1859-1860.
Shareholders in the Denver City Company in March, 1859,
included William H. H. Larimer, William Larimer, Jr., R. E.
Whitsitt, Fulsom Dorsett, and M. M. Jewett (all of the
Larimer company), and Hickory Rogers, E. W. Wynkoop, Hampton
L. Boon, H. P. A. Smith, and J. L. McCubbin (members of the
Lecompton group). Many of these Larimer and Lecompton party
men as well as other Kansans participated in the
incorporation of several towns besides Denver in the gold
fields. Included among the towns incorporated within the
present-day boundaries of Colorado by Kansans in 1859 and
1860, were Auraria, Denver, El Paso, Jefferson, Montana,
Pennington, Rochester, St. Charles, Saratoga, and Sopris
City. Some of the Kansans involved in the incorporations
included S. F. and L. N. Tappan, J. J. Ingalls, S. O.
Hemenway, W. J. King, A. Cutler, William O'Donnall, J. T.
Younker, L. I. Winchester, E. W. Wynkoop, William Larimer,
Jr., and C. Lawrence. [6]
Primarily through the Lawrence, Larimer, and Lecompton
parties Kansas residents had considerably helped to open the
gold fields in 1858.
However, in
1859 many more Kansans journeyed to the gold region than had
gone there in the previous year. Various Kansas newspapers
described the many departures. Leavenworth, the largest town
in Kansas at that time, contributed a considerable number of
emigrants. In February a party consisting of a man and his
wife and child and several others left that town for the
gold fields. Thomas Hazen, who owned the news depot at the
post office in Leavenworth, announced in March that he was
selling out because he intended to travel to the gold
fields. Another business firm, that of Anderson &
Snider, broke up in April because Snider decided to go to
the gold region. The Leavenworth Times announced
May 10 that the emigration to Pike's Peak was continuing and
noted, "Several of the latest departures are old residents
of Leavenworth. . . ." Two more businessmen of Leavenworth
left to seek their fortunes in the Rocky mountain region in
the latter part of 1859. Clay Thompson sold his stock of the
O. K. Grocery, and Charles R. Thorne announced in August
that he and M'lle. Haydee and Sisters (a theatrical troupe)
would make their last appearance at the National Theatre on
August 15 and then go to the gold region. Two former
residents who returned to Leavenworth in the autumn of 1859
were M. M. Jewett and F. R. Ford but both planned to go back
to the mining area in the spring of 1860.
[7]
|
Several
people departed from Lawrence for the gold fields in the
fall of 1858, and in February, 1859, Cpt. A. Cutler, city
engineer of Lawrence, led a company west. Sometime in 1858
or 1859 William Quantrill, who in 1863 led the guerrilla
sack of Lawrence, went to the Pike's Peak area to escape
indictment for grand larceny and robbery. C. Stearns
advertised in April, 1859, "WISHING TO GO TO THE MINES, I
will lease for one year, MY STORE, No. 25 Massachusetts
Street." Late in that year F. E. LaHay who owned a farm five
miles from Lawrence advertised it for sale or rent, since he
intended to go to the diggings the following spring.
[8]
A travel
circular for points West in 1860,
Denver and
Auraria in 1860 as sketched in
The
emigration from Leavenworth continued as 1860 advanced. In
April George W. Houston left with a company. Houston was a
former deputy register of deeds. In addition, three
newspaper men, Buckingham and Anderson of the Times
and Pope of the Herald, went to seek their fortune.
The Right Reverend Dr. Miege, the Roman Catholic bishop of
Leavenworth, George W. Purkins, chairman of the territorial
central Democratic committee, and J. C. Murphy, member of
the last territorial legislature from Leavenworth, passed
through Manhattan on the way to the gold fields in May.
Other prominent Leavenworth citizens who went to the gold
fields in 1860 were Scott J. Anthony, former register of
deeds of the county, George W. McLane, once editor of the
Leavenworth Daily Ledger, Fox Diefendorf, a land
agent, L. L. Weld, a lawyer and a writer, L. L. Todd,
formerly with Smoot & Russell's bank, Benson and
Schollkoff, formerly bankers, and M. A. Clark, of the
banking firm of Clark, Gruber & Co. |
The number of Lawrence people in the diggings is very large, including many families. I sometimes felt inclined to wonder, while meeting so many of your old familiar faces, whether you had anybody left at home! Nearly all of your former citizens, whom I met, seemed well satisfied. So far as I am aware, they all conduct themselves creditably, with a single exception. One well known former denizen of Lawrence was warned out of Denver last winter, for stealing turkeys! Thus
large numbers of Kansans moved to the gold fields during the
rush period. Some of these returned during the winters and
remained in eastern Kansas. Some visited the eastern part in
the winters but returned to the gold fields in the following
spring. Some did nothing but mining; others engaged in other
types of business in the gold region. The latter formed an
important segment of the business people of that area. |
Calvin W. Gower, native of Colorado, with a Ph. D. degree from the University of Kansas, Lawrence, is professor of history at St. Cloud State College, St. Cloud, Minn. 1. A. D. Richardson to the editor, June 16, 1860, Lawrence Republican, June 28, 1860; for more on the political and economic effects of the gold rush on Kansas see: Calvin W. Gower, "The Pike's Peak Gold Rush and the Smoky Hill Route, 1859-1860," Kansas Historical Quarterly, v. 25 (Summer, 1959), pp. 158-171, and "Kansas Territory and the Pike's Peak Gold Rush: Governing the Gold Region," ibid., v. 32 (Autumn, 1966), pp. 289-313. [Back] 2. Agnes Wright Spring, ed., A Bloomer Girl on Pike's Peak, 1858, Julia Archibald Holmes . . . (Denver, 1949), pp. 5-7, 9. [Back] 3. Ibid., pp. 8-9, 16; Lawrence Republican, October 7, 1858. [Back] 4. Calvin W. Gower, "Kansas Territory and the Pike's Peak Gold Rush," unpublished doctoral dissertation, University of Kansas, 1958, pp. 8-11. The members of the Lecompton party were H. P. A. Smith, Edward W. Wynkoop, John W. St. Matthew, John Larimer, Hickory Rogers, Joseph McCubbin, Lucillius I. Winchester, and Hampton L. Boon. These men were sent to organize a Kansas county (Arapahoe county) government in the gold fields, but they encountered a considerable amount of opposition. The members of the Larimer party were C. A. Lawrence, Fulsom Dorsett, R. E. Whitsitt, M. M. Jewett, William Larimer, Jr. and William H. H. Larimer.-Herman S. Davis, comp., Reminiscences of General William Larimer and of His Son William H. H. Larimer . . . (Lancaster, Pa., 1918), pp. 47-48; John W. Jordan, ed., Colonial and Revolutionary Families of Pennsylvania . . . (New York, 1911), pp. 1510-1512. [Back] 5. Denver Rocky Mountain News, August 27, 1859, June 27, August 22, 1860; Leavenworth Daily Times, March 2, 1861. Jefferson territory was a "provisional government" established by some people in the gold region because of the ineffectiveness of Kansas government in that area. [Back] 6. "Copy of the Records of the Denver City Company from December, 1858, to March, 1861," pp. 31-32, Document division, Denver Public Library, Denver; Gower, "Kansas Territory and the Pike's Peak Gold Rush," pp. 90-91; Kansas Historical Collections, v. 12, p. 471. [Back] 7. Leavenworth Daily Times, February 24, March 24, April 19, May 10, July 14, August 13, November 1, 16, 1859. The migration to the gold fields was from both the towns and the farms of Kansas, but since better records exist on the flow of people from the towns this feature of the movement has received more attention. However, mention of moves from rural areas does occur below. In addition, when writers discussed the general emigration from a certain town, they undoubtedly often meant from the town and its vicinity. [Back] 8. Lawrence Herald of Freedom, September 4, 1858, October 15, 1859; Lawrence Republican, February 24, April 21, 1859; W. A. Johnson, "Early Life of Quantrill in Kansas," Kansas Historical Collections, v. 7, p. 213. [Back] 9. Topeka Tribune, December 23, 1858, February 3, May 5, 1859; Leavenworth Daily Times, April 5, 1859. [Back] 10. Lecompton Kansas National Democrat, April 14, July 28, September 1, 1859. [Back] 11. Elwood Weekly Press, September 25, October 9, 1858, November 26, 1859; Denver Rocky Mountain News, May 14, 1859; Atchison Freedom's Champion, September 18, 1858; Wyandotte Western Argus, October 9, 1858; Emporia News, February 19, April 16, October 15, 1859; T. C. Wells to his father, May 14, 1859, Thomas C. Wells, "Letters of a Kansas Pioneer, 1855-1860," Kansas Historical Quarterly, v. 5 (November, 1936), p. 398. Little evidence exists to substantiate any contention that the Pike's Peak gold rush caused a widespread labor shortage in Kansas. One reason none occurred probably was that many of those who emigrated to far western Kansas only stayed a few months, but even more important was the fact that during the first part of 1859 a heavy migration to eastern Kansas took place. [Back] 12. "The Diary of James R. Stewart, Pioneer of Osage County . . . Part Three: May, 1858-July, 1859," Kansas Historical Quarterly, v. 17 (August, 1949), pp. 267, 282-284, 287-290. [Back] 13. A. D. Richardson to the editor, November 3, 1859, Lawrence Republican, November 17, 1859; A. D. Richardson to the editor, November 10, 1859, in ibid., November 24, 1859; A. D. Richardson to the editor, November 7, 1859, in ibid., December 1, 1859; Lawrence Herald of Freedom, February 26, 1859. The "jayhawking" did lessen in 1859, but the importance of the gold rush in this decline is difficult to determine. Growing domination in the area by Free-Staters plus weariness over the fighting were probably the chief factors in the abatement of raiding. [Back] 14. Leavenworth Daily Times, February 14, March 23, 1860; Leavenworth Weekly Herald, March 17, 31, 1860; "Platte" to the editor, March 31, 1860, ibid., March 17, 1860. [Back] 15. Leavenworth Daily Times, April 11, July 21, 1860; Leavenworth Weekly Herald, April 14, May 12, 1860; Manhattan Express, May 5, 1860; A. D. Richardson to the editor, June 16, 1860, in Lawrence Republican, June 28, 1860; A. D. Richardson to the editor, July 3, 1860, in ibid., July 26, 1860; A. D. Richardson to the editor, August 7, 1860, in New York Daily Tribune, August 21, 1860. [Back] 16. Atchison Freedom's Champion, May 12, 1860; "K." to the editor, May 29, 1860, in ibid., June 9, 1860; "K." to the editor, June 15, 1860, in ibid., June 30, 1860. [Back] 17. Lawrence Republican, May 3, 1860; A. D. Richardson to the editor, June 22, 1860, in Lawrence Republican, July 5, 1860; A. D. Richardson to the editor, July 10, 1860 in ibid., July 26, 1860; A. D. Richardson to the editor, June 26, 1860, in ibid., July 19, 1860. [Back] 18. Emporia News, May 19, 1860; Denver Rocky Mountain News, March 28, 1860; Lecompton Kansas National Democrat, May 10, August 9, 1860; Topeka Tribune, May 5, 1860; Wyandotte Western Argus, May 12, 1860; Manhattan Express, April 7, 1860; Fort Scott Democrat, quoted in the Leavenworth Weekly Herald, March 10, 1860; Council Grove Kansas Press, April 16, 30, 1860; Burlington Neosho Valley Register, July 28, 1860; A. J. Dawson to "Gentlemen," December 15, 1858, Leavenworth Weekly Herald, January 29, 1859; Marysville Platform, quoted in the Leavenworth Weekly Herald, April 7, 1860; St. Louis Missouri Democrat, quoted in the Topeka State Record, May 26 1860; Leavenworth Weekly Herald, May 12, 1860. [Back] 19. Denver Rocky Mountain News, May 16, June 6, 1860; Denver Rocky Mountain Herald, May 26, June 9, 1860; Joseph C. G. Kennedy (superintendent of the census), Population of the United States in 1860; compiled From the Original Returns of the Eighth census . . . (Washington, 1864), pp. xxxiv, 549. The migration of Kansans to Missouri probably consisted to a large extent of former Missourians returning home or of discouraged emigrants traveling to the nearest area which had been settled for some time (in contrast to Kansas). The drought which began in Kansas in June, 1859, probably induced some of these people to go to Missouri. [Back] 20. Lecompton Kansas National Democrat, April 5, 1860; letter to the editor, June 18, 1860, in Denver Rocky Mountain News, July 4, 1860; A. D. Richardson to the editor August 7, 1860, in Lawrence Republican, August 23, 1860. [Back] 21. Nolie Mumey, History of the Early Settlements of Denver, (1599-1860), With Reproductions of the First City Directory . . . (Glendale, Calif., 1942). Pages 22-28 constitute the reproduced Denver City and Auraria, The Commercial Emporium of the Pike's Peak Gold Regions, in 1859, directory. [Back] 22. Letter to the editor, August 11, 1859, Leavenworth Weekly Times, August 27, 1859; Denver Rocky Mountain News, September 22, 1859. [Back] 23. Atchison Freedom's Champion, March 3, 10, May 5, September 1, 22, 1860. Several items describe Spotswood & Jacobs sending the goods, but no item clearly states that the firm established a store; Leavenworth Weekly Herald, April 21, 1860; Leavenworth Daily Times March 6, April 7, June 14, 15, 1860; Denver Daily Rocky Mountain News, September 1, 1860; Denver Rocky Mountain News, June 6, 27, 1860; Denver Rocky Mountain Herald, May 12, June 16, 1860; O. Hemenway to the editor, April 19, 1860, in Lecompton Kansas National Democrat, May 10, 1860; Lawrence Republican, May 31, 1860; "Jones" to the editor, August 9, 1860, in Leavenworth Daily Times, August 20, 1860. [Back] 24. Denver Rocky Mountain News, August 20, 27, September 3, 17, 22, 1859, February 1, August 22, October 17, 1860; Denver Daily Rocky Mountain News, November 14, 1860; Raymond W. and Mary Lund Settle, Empire on Wheels (Stanford, Calif., 1949), p. 52. [Back] 25. Percival G. Lowe, Five Years a Dragoon ('49 to '54), and Other Adventures on the Great Plains (Kansas City, Mo., 1906), pp. 354-356; Percival G. Lowe to Moses Hallett, August 24, 1899, letter of Percival G. Lowe, "George Washington Clayton and Early Merchandising in Denver," Colorado Magazine, Denver, v. 19 (July, 1942), pp. 136-139. [Back] 26. Leavenworth Weekly Times, February 12, 1860; "Events in the History of Trinity M. E. Church," prepared by Peter Winne from material sent by the Rev. Jacob Adriance, The Trail, Denver, v. 7 (February, 1914), pp. 10-12; Denver Rocky Mountain News, February 22, 1860; Leavenworth Weekly Herald, March 24, 1860. Chivington later led the Colorado troops in the Sand Creek massacre. [Back] 27. Peter Winne, "Historical Gleanings," The Trail, v. 8 (August, 1915), p. 10; "Diary of Reverend A. T. Rankin, 1859-1860," Manuscript division, Colorado State Historical Society library, Denver; Denver Daily Rocky Mountain News, September 7, 1860; Leavenworth Weekly Herald, June 16, 1860. [Back] 28. [Mrs. Albert D. Richardson, ed.] Garnered Sheaves From the Writings of Albert D. Richardson . . . (Hartford, Conn., 1871), pp. 18, 32-33, 43-44; Leavenworth Daily Times, November 29, 1859; Denver Rocky Mountain News, March 14, 1860; Lawrence Republican, November 8, 1860. [Back] 29. Gower, "Kansas Territory and the Pike's Peak Gold Rush," pp. 143-146; Roy Franklin Nichols, The Disruption of American Democracy (New York, 1948), pp. 117, 121; A. T. Andreas and W. G. Cutler, History of the State of Kansas . . . (Chicago, 1883), p. 167; Albert D. Richardson, Beyond the Mississippi . . . (Hartford, Conn., 1873), pp. 102-103; diary of David Kellogg, "Across the Plains in 1858," The Trail, v. 5 (January, 1913), p. 10; Davis, comp., Reminiscences of General William Larimer . . ., p. 144; Denver Rocky Mountain News, November 3, 1859, February 1, August 22, 1860; St. Joseph (Mo.) Gazette, quoted in the Denver Daily Rocky Mountain News, January 9, 1861. [Back] 30. Portrait and Biographical Record of Denver and Vicinity, Colorado . . . (Chicago, 1898), pp. 129, 137-138; David Karsner, Silver Dollar, The Story of the Tabors (New York, 1932), pp. 8-9, 15, 28; Lewis Cass Gandy, The Tabors, a Footnote of Western History (New York, 1934), pp. 29, 31, 37, 41, 85, 87. [Back] 31. LeRoy R. Hafen, "Lewis Ledyard Weld, and Old Camp Weld," The Colorado Magazine, v. 19 (November, 1942), pp. 201-202; Richard E. Leach, "Richard E. Whitsitt," The Trail, v. 4 (November, 1911), pp. 16-18; Richard E. Leach, "Lewis N. Tappan," The Trail, v. 4 (December, 1911), pp. 19-21. [Back] 32. [O. L. Baskin, publisher] History of the City of Denver, Arapahoe County, and Colorado . . . (Chicago, 1880), pp. 310-311, 318, 326, 349, 380, 391, 394, 395, 451, 522, 523, 552, 561, 580, 594, 648. [Back] 33. George L. Anderson, "Some Phases of Currency and Banking in Territorial Kansas," Territorial Kansas . . . (Lawrence, 1954), pp. 103-107; Joseph G. Gambone, "Starving Kansas," The American West, Palo Alto, Calif., v. 8 (July, 1971), pp. 30-31. [Back] 34. Emporia News, October 23, 1858, April 16, 1859; Lawrence Herald of Freedom, January 8, June 18, 1859; White Cloud Kansas Chief, September 30, 1858; Lawrence Republican, June 16, 1859; Mound City Herald, quoted in the Leavenworth Weekly Times, June 18, 1859; Topeka Tribune, June 30, 1859; Elwood Free Press, quoted in the Lawrence Republican, July 7, 1859; Horace Greeley, An Overland Journey, From New York to San Francisco, in the Summer of 1859 . . . (New York, 1860), pp. 55, 73. [Back] |
