A Mine to Make a Mine: Financing the Colorado Mining Industry, 1859-1902Entranced by visions of instant wealth, the fabled prospector and his trusty burro combed the hills of the Rocky Mountain West for that one huge deposit of pay ore. Close behind the prospector--and drawn by the same vision--came the speculator. Capital, a scarce though essential commodity on the frontier, was supplied by the speculators and made possible the development of a hardrock mining industry that helped shape the early history of the region. Between the Civil War and the turn of the century, the gold and silver mines of Colorado were a gaudy, unsavory, but important element in the American financial scene and in the economic history of the West. Joseph E. King, drawing upon contemporary sources, provides the first comprehensive and scholarly examination of eastern investors in Colorado and challenges the popular notion that eastern investors did little more than exploit the mines of Colorado. Not surprisingly, the prospector and the lusty boom towns he visited have often captivated the imagination of historians at the expense of the later stages in the development of a mineral industry. Professor King stresses the contributions of promoters, businessmen, and mining engineers in the development of the "Wild West." |
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Page 27
... economic expansion of the nation through thousands of plans and projects to make a fortune . To one degree or another every effort to gain public credence and capital investment for a new economic opportunity involved someone called the ...
... economic expansion of the nation through thousands of plans and projects to make a fortune . To one degree or another every effort to gain public credence and capital investment for a new economic opportunity involved someone called the ...
Page 55
... economic potential . Purely in terms of his accom- plishments as a financial intermediary , the dealer in mines brought money and interest to a new and struggling industry that could not have grown or survived without large injections ...
... economic potential . Purely in terms of his accom- plishments as a financial intermediary , the dealer in mines brought money and interest to a new and struggling industry that could not have grown or survived without large injections ...
Page 184
... economic hardships of the 1890s , the boosters turned to grumblers , complaining about discriminatory rate structures and accusing the railroads and smelters alike of bad faith and ill - will . From the standpoint of the mines , the ...
... economic hardships of the 1890s , the boosters turned to grumblers , complaining about discriminatory rate structures and accusing the railroads and smelters alike of bad faith and ill - will . From the standpoint of the mines , the ...
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A Mine to Make a Mine: Financing the Colorado Mining Industry, 1859-1902 Joseph E. King No preview available - 1977 |
Common terms and phrases
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