Forgotten Colorado Silver: Joseph Lesher’s Defiant Coins
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About this ebook
Robert D. Leonard Jr.
Author of over one hundred numismatic articles and three books, American Numismatic Society fellow Bob Leonard has studied private coinages since the 1960s. Founder of Ken Hallenbeck Coin Gallery, Colorado Springs, Ken Hallenbeck is a past president of the American Numismatic Association. Adna G. Wilde, Jr., also an ANA past president, published a groundbreaking study of Lesher Dollars in 1978, "Lesher Referendum Medals: Where Are They Today?"
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Forgotten Colorado Silver - Robert D. Leonard Jr.
Greenspan.
Chapter 1
THE CRIPPLE CREEK MINING DISTRICT
In the 1870s, while building a shed over a spring on Levi Welty’s ranch in El Paso County, Colorado, one of his sons was struck by a falling log near the stream. Startled, Levi moved suddenly, and his gun discharged, wounding his hand. The gunshot frightened a calf, which jumped into the stream and injured its leg. Afterward, Levi remarked, That sure is some crippled creek.
So they say. (Variants of this legend exist.) Whatever the origin, the name Cripple Creek stuck and was soon applied to the settlement that sprang up nearby and then to an entire district.
But there would have been no district except for the determination of one man: Bob Womack, a part-time cowboy and full-time drinker.
Grubstaked by a Colorado Springs dentist in 1890, Womack stayed sober long enough to dig a thirty-foot shaft with pick and shovel, searching for the source of an extremely rich ore sample he had discovered eleven years before. And he found it but—due to his reputation—was only able to sell a half interest in his discovery for $500. Though little notice was taken of Womack’s strike, other prospectors followed and established many rich mines. But Womack himself died virtually penniless on August 10, 1909.
As of 1900, the Cripple Creek District consisted of the cities of Cripple Creek and Victor, plus the nearby towns of Altman, Arequa, Independence and many others, though it seems to have had no definite boundary. In 1891, gold production barely registered at $499, but it soared to $583,010 the next year and $2,010,367 in 1893. Gold production exceeded $10 million in 1897 and, in 1899, $15 million. The all-time peak was $18,073,539 in 1900, after which a slow decline began. (Severe labor troubles crimped production in 1894 and 1903–4; see chapter 8.)
Robert Womack, discoverer of gold at Cripple Creek. Courtesy of Cripple Creek District Museum.
Cripple Creek and Victor panorama. Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division.
Though the principal product was gold, not inconsiderable amounts of silver were also extracted: 82,520 fine ounces in 1899, 80,166 in 1900 and 90,884 in 1901.
This production required the efforts of over 10,000 miners by 1893. Population of the Cripple Creek District grew to 25,000 by 1895, approaching 50,000 by 1900. The chief population centers were Cripple Creek, population 10,147 in 1900, and Victor—where the richest gold mines were—population 1,174. Both Cripple Creek and Victor were spread out over valleys, though the smaller Victor had a more compact business district. Population growth was such that in 1899, the Cripple Creek District, plus a considerable area to the north (but excluding Pikes Peak), was split off from El Paso County; a new county, Teller, was established, with the seat at Cripple Creek.
Bird’s-eye view, Victor, Colorado. Wikimedia Commons.
The Cripple Creek District, indeed the whole state of Colorado, was heavily Democratic then. In the 1900 presidential election, Teller County voted Democratic better than two to one; Democrat William Jennings Bryan carried the state by a plurality of nearly thirty thousand votes. And when Theodore Roosevelt visited Victor that fall while campaigning for vice president on the Republican ticket, he was prevented from speaking by local miners, and his party was actually stoned.
Chapter 2
PRIVATE COINS AND FREE SILVER
The Constitution provides that No State shall…coin money…[or] make any thing but gold and silver coin a tender in payment of debts
(Article I, Section 10). Why the latter is no longer true is a subject for another book, but a hint will be found in chapter 8.
Since the Constitution also gives Congress the power to coin money and regulate the value thereof (Article I, Section 8), one would naturally think that the federal government had a monopoly on all minting. But this assumption was tested in 1830 by Templeton Reid, an immigrant gunsmith and clockmaker in Milledgeville, Georgia. Gold had been discovered in the Cherokee Nation in 1828, and thousands of twenty-niners
converged on north Georgia the next year. At first, huge amounts were taken out: in Gilmer County, Zeke Spriggs stuffed so much gold dust in his pockets from a single day’s panning that his suspenders snapped. Most of the gold was illegally taken from lands of the Cherokee Nation; Georgia then annexed their territory in 1830 and expelled them.
Conveying all this gold to the mint in Philadelphia was problematic: it took a long time, and there was the risk of robbers. So Reid set up his own mint, coining $2½, $5 and $10 gold pieces. It soon failed, but not because it was unconstitutional (the Constitution forbade states to coin money but omitted any mention of persons); rather, some of these coins turned out to be worth significantly less than face value. This precedent being established, other private mints were founded in Rutherfordton, North Carolina, 1831; Salt Lake City, 1848; Oregon City, Oregon, 1849; San Francisco, 1849–54; Denver, Jefferson Territory (unofficial)/Kansas Territory, 1860; Tarryall Mines, Colorado, 1861; and Georgia Gulch, Colorado, 1861.
But in 1861, the Civil War broke out, and soon gold and then silver coins vanished from circulation. Many millions of anonymous copper cents (patriotic Civil War tokens
) were issued by manufacturers from Boston to Chicago. Realizing that this vast outpouring was actually legal, Congress prohibited the issue of one- and two-cent tokens on April 22, 1864, and followed up on June 8 with an act abolishing private coinage of any kind: any coins of gold or silver or other metals or alloys of metals, intended for the use and purpose of the United States or of foreign countries, or of original design…
Since then, the only exceptions permitted have been tokens good at a single issuer, with a value stated or implied (drink, bus fare, bridge toll, parking, videogame play, etc.). Obviously, minting private coins under such restrictions would be quite a challenge, and even if done, would anyone want them?
In time, the answer was yes. After France agreed to pay an indemnity of 5 billion francs to Germany in 1871, Germany adopted the gold standard, and the following year, it was joined by Sweden, Norway and Denmark. Millions of dollars of demonetized German silver coins were sold as bullion between 1873 and 1879. In 1873, the United States eliminated the silver dollar as currency, but because none were in circulation (greenback dollars remained below par until 1879), no notice was taken at the time of the Crime of 1873,
as it was later called by Western mining interests. The same decade saw silver production from the Comstock Lode rising, peaking in 1877.
These and other factors (including the Panic of 1873 and the Great Railroad Strike of 1877) combined to suppress the price of newly mined silver, and it fell from $1.322 per ounce (in greenbacks) in 1872 to $1.278 (in greenbacks) in 1874 and to $1.123 (in gold) in 1879. This decline led Western silver interests to demand price supports, and in this they were aided by those wishing to inflate the money supply (farmers, debtors) by the unlimited minting of silver into dollars (Free Coinage of Silver
).
Their efforts resulted in the Bland-Allison Act of 1878, which became law over President Hayes’s veto. It called for the Treasury to purchase not less than $2 million of silver every month and coin it into silver dollars. It was assumed that these dollars would go into circulation, but between 1878 and 1888, nearly 300 million silver dollars were minted, but only 50 million left the Treasury. (The balance were held as reserves for paper silver certificates, which did circulate.)
William Jennings Bryan as candidate for president, 1896.
But the price of silver continued dropping, to only $0.935 in 1889. So in 1890, the Sherman Silver Purchase Act was adopted. It called for the Treasury to buy 4.5 million ounces of silver every month (99 percent of 1890’s domestic production!), and these new coins and notes were redeemable in gold. While this had the desired effect of boosting silver prices—to $1.046 in 1890, $0.988 in 1891, but only $0.871 in 1892—it led to silver displacing gold as currency to the point that the nation’s gold reserve fell below $100,000,000 by June 1893—the minimum thought necessary to defend the paper money. By this time, the country was in the grip of the Panic of 1893.
President Grover Cleveland called a special session of Congress to repeal the Sherman Act, and it was repealed on November 1, 1893. At once, the price of silver collapsed, dropping to $0.635 in 1894 and $0.602 in 1899.
By 1896, however, Cleveland was so unpopular with rank-and-file Democrats that the Democratic National Convention, in an unprecedented step, rejected a resolution commending an administration of its own party. It turned instead to the charismatic William Jennings Bryan, a fierce advocate of Free Silver. But he was defeated, and when nominated again in 1900, he lost by an even larger plurality. Free Silver supporters had been thwarted.
Chapter 3
JOSEPH LESHER
Pioneer, Promoter and Minter
One of the best-known men in the Cripple Creek Mining District was Free Silver advocate Joseph Lesher. Born on July 12, 1838, on a farm in Ohio, one of eleven children, he was descended from German pioneers who settled in Pennsylvania before the Revolutionary War. As an adult, he stood five feet nine inches tall and had blue eyes, light hair and a fair
complexion.
In 1860, he left the family farm, then in Wood County, Ohio, to become a merchant.
Then came the Civil War and the Enrollment Act of 1863: all able-bodied male citizens and foreigners intending to become citizens between the ages of twenty and forty-five were required to register for military duty. The first draftees were called up on July 11. Joseph Lesher registered for the draft in Wood County by the July 1 deadline. He is clearly shown as married
—though he wasn’t then (a clerical error? or an attempt to evade service?). But he was not selected.
Not even a year later, on May 2, 1864, he enlisted in the Ohio National Guard as a corporal (Company K, Ohio 144th Infantry Regiment) for a one-hundred-day stint, along with his younger brother Aaron. (The governors of Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Iowa and Wisconsin offered to raise a force of volunteers to serve for one hundred days, to be outfitted and paid by the United States. These troops were to support the campaign of 1864 by relieving a large number of battle-hardened veterans from garrison and guard duty, allowing them to participate in the