Here’s another collection of mining camp stories, set this
time in the gold fields of the Colorado Rockies, in the 1860s. The heyday of
the gold rush in Pine Valley has already passed, and the slopes of the surrounding
mountains show a history of abandoned prospect holes and mines. There is
already new growth among the stumps of trees once cut for timber.
Source: Oscar Fay
Adams, ed., A Dictionary of American Authors, 1904
Only die-hard prospectors continue to hang on here. A hotel
and a saloon are still in operation. Mail and the occasional passenger come in
by buckboard once a week, and inhabitants are snowbound during the winter
months.
Structure. The
stories are loosely connected, with a couple characters, Hank Ballard and
Baltimore Hatch, appearing in most of them. We meet Ballard in the first one,
“One Winter at the Gray Eagle Mine,” which tells of how he came to be the
foster parent of a small boy, Clay Dickey.
Ballard carries within him the memory of having been the last person to
see his partner and his partner’s wife alive. Both die in an avalanche, set off
by an explosion in the partners’ mine. Snow thunders down the mountainside,
crushing the young couple’s cabin. Only their infant son is found alive when
the community digs down through 20 feet of snow to find them.
Pine Valley |
Character. Ballard
and Hatch make an interesting contrast. In “A Prayer for Baltimore Hatch,”
Ballard loans $10 to Hatch, who wins big at faro and is affronted when Ballard
declines to split the winnings. He only wants back his $10. Baltimore is
insulted by this violation of his code of ethics.
Feeling guilty for holding onto what he regards as Ballard’s
share, he works out a way to relieve his conscience. At Christmas, he provides a turkey stuffed with gold nuggets and a diamond pin, plus a
watch on a gold chain inscribed to the boy, Clay. Thus, all is square again between
the two very different men, but the principles of neither have been compromised.
Tone. The stories
are a mix of harsh realism and sentiment. In “On His Honor,” a young man called
“the Kid,” appears in the Valley in poor health. He’s been sent by his family
to be superintendent of their mine, the Mississippi Belle.
Uninterested in the mine, he falls under the influence of
Baltimore Hatch’s faro layout, gambling away all his funds, while his health
worsens. Hatch takes to looking after him, seeing to his comforts, even
offering to winter with him in Cuba. The Kid, however, expires.
Quartz Mountain |
Women. Miners’ wives
are referred to with kindness as “women with whom vicissitudes had held close
communion and upon whom Time had bestowed no favors.” Julie, in “His Harvest,” is an exception at the camp in
Blind Horse Gulch. Her social standing is reflected in her appearance:
The fair hair, half uncoiled and
hanging loosely; a light-colored silk dress soiled with many spots of grease
and in disorder; the little slippers down at the heel; the cheeks inflamed, and
the skin flabby under the eyes; the dry lips parted, disclosing two rows of
pearls, the only beauty in harmony with the sweet laugh.
A drinker, her beauty faded, she has a curious hold on a
neighbor and prospector, Rocky Henderson.
Rocky is met in the street by a woman who has just arrived
in camp on the mail wagon, who calls him “Charlie,” but he declines to
acknowledge her. Word quickly gets around that she is his wife. The force of
public opinion in the camps is strong in the defense of a woman who, like
Rocky’s wife, has preserved her respectability.
Blind Horse Gulch |
The men at Blind Horse Gulch form a “committee” to set
matters right. Even Rocky’s partner, York Maxwell, walks out on him, calling
him a liar. Shame, confusion, or fear of something worse drives Rocky out into
the night. There he stumbles into a mine shaft and is found dead and
decomposing some days later by his partner.
Narrative style. France’s
fly-on-the-wall narration expects his readers to pay close attention, with a
willingness to connect any loose threads on their own. A prime example is the
final story, “And a Little Child Shall Lead Them,” in which some bags of ore
belonging to Hank Ballard go missing during the night in the dead of winter.
Julie lets him know with a note that she has knowledge of where the ore has
been hidden and who took it, but she won’t reveal the name of the thief.
Baltimore Hatch offers to help find the culprit, but in what seems like an unconnected development, he comes down with pneumonia and dies. And we’re given to wonder whether
Hatch contracted pneumonia while stealing Ballard’s ore himself.
Bald Mountain |
Wrapping up. Lewis
B. France (1833-1907) left a handful of his writings, chiefly dealing with
hiking and fishing in the mountains of Colorado. A Dictionary of American
Authors identifies him as a Denver lawyer and “littérateur.” A
novel, Over the Old Trail, was published
in 1895. A short collection of sketches, Scraps, appeared in 1899.
Pine Valley is
currently available at google books and Internet Archive, and for the nook. For
more of Friday’s Forgotten Books, click over to Patti Abbott’s blog.
Photo credits: From
the first edition
Coming up: Saturday
music, Merle Haggard
I particularly love the strongly Deco design of the cover.
ReplyDeleteLove your reviews, keep 'em coming!
Thanks, Veronica. Appreciated.
DeleteThat Julie sounds kind of hot actually. Or is that a sign that I hung around too many bars back in the day?
ReplyDeleteIf you were looking for a Julie, a bar is where you probably would have found her. Some things don't change.
DeleteAbsolutely great review, Ron. You should do these for a magazine. In fact, would you consider reviewing Westerns for White Cat Magazine? If you would, drop my editor, Charles P Zaglanis over at charlespzaglanis@whitecatpublications.com
ReplyDeleteSounds like a good collection of early western mining stories. The old photos are great.
ReplyDeleteIt's fascinating to read about mining and mining camp stories in the wild west. It brought out the best and worst of gold prospectors, more the latter I'd think. Some things seem so familiar like your mention of the "gold fields of the Colorado Rockies." Is it the same as the Colorado gold rush that I've heard about?
ReplyDeleteI'm guessing they are the same, Prashant. I believe Colorado followed California by about 10 years.
Delete