This collection of 13 short stories is a modest celebration
of miners' lives. They’re set in a fictional mining camp called Gold Bug, in
the mountains 40 miles from Boulder. While there are references to Colorado,
Stovall says in his preface that they might just as well have taken place in
California or Nevada.
He dedicates the book to the army of western miners, whom he
describes as “soldiers of honest toil.” The stories saw print previously in The
Daily Mining Record, published in Denver,
Colorado, 1893-1913.
Setting. They
take place almost entirely within the confines of the camp. Stovall takes us
down the mine, which extends on several levels many hundreds of feet beneath
the surface. The references to machinery, the various jobs the men perform, and
the overall operation of extraction are not explained for the novice reader.
The primary intended audience seems to be miners like the characters in the
stories and mining enthusiasts.
The action of several stories occurs in the Dewdrop Saloon,
which is the social center of the camp. On a typical night, a few men play
poker and faro, and others listen to the old-timers’ stories. The men’s only
connection with the outside world is the stagecoach, which travels daily to and
from Boulder and has a driver, Slivers, usually well oiled with whiskey.
The Dewdrop Saloon |
There is a boarding house where the men sleep in bunks. It
is run by an Old Woman, called Aunt Mollie, who also cooks meals for them. The
crushing mill runs day and night, maintaining a constant noise level. The rare
miner with a wife lives with her in a small cabin out of earshot of the
ribaldry in the saloon and beyond the range of the occasional high-spirited
gunshot.
Character. Almost to
a man, the miners are decent and hardworking. The ones with true grit are brave
and capable of unflinching heroism as they battle fires and cave-ins. In “The
Gold Bug Kid,” Hudson, the superintendent, hires a new young employee, Sam
Jimpson. The boy proves his worth to everyone but the foreman
Jackson, who is well known for hating women and kids.
On a fateful night, the underground pump station catches fire, and the three of them work against all odds to put it out. When the kid is injured by falling timber, Jackson admits that he’s underestimated the boy, begs to be forgiven, and sheds a tear.
On a fateful night, the underground pump station catches fire, and the three of them work against all odds to put it out. When the kid is injured by falling timber, Jackson admits that he’s underestimated the boy, begs to be forgiven, and sheds a tear.
Suicide |
Weakness of character is illustrated in the story “When the
Plunger Quit.” The plunger of the title is Mark Blevins, a young man who
arrives in Gold Bug on the same stage with a brother and sister, Dick and Lucy.
Dick is a ne’er do well who squanders his money in gambling with Blevins, who
intends to return his winnings but is too late to prevent Dick from committing
suicide.
Villainy.
Occasionally a man with a shady past finds work in Gold Bug, and the mean
streak in him is revealed. In “The ‘Dare Devil’” a hold-up man in red wig and
mask regularly robs the passengers of the stagecoach. As long as he leaves the
U.S. mail untouched, the stage driver makes no effort to stop him. Theft is
simply part of the cost of living in the West.
A dispute settled by a fistfight |
Red Head, as the thief is known, is discovered to be one of
the miners, going by the name of Buck Tyson. Not only that. Harry Fields, son
of the general manager, remembers him as a bully from his school days. Tyson
denies he’s the same person but starts taking pot shots at Fields, finally
challenging him to a fight during a dance at a nearby camp. Though he draws a
knife on Fields, Tyson gets soundly beaten.
Women. The fair sex
tends to have a civilizing effect on the camp. Lola Langhorn, a
dentist who arrives by coach one day, sets up a practice. The miners take a
sudden interest in oral hygiene and keep her quite busy. Meanwhile, preaching
temperance to them, she has the men abstaining from alcohol so thoroughly that
the Dewdrop nearly goes out of business.
In time, the miners trust her to provide a home for their
safe, in which they keep their savings. But her intentions are not all they seem. The Sunday finally comes when she fails
to make an appearance for one of her temperance sermons. And the men discover
that she has picked the lock on the safe and absconded with all the contents.
The arrival of Millie |
Romance. Many of the
stories involve romance with a pretty young woman who shows up at the camp and
stirs up the female-deprived men. In “Millie and the Thoroughbred,” it is the boss’s
daughter who arrives from San Francisco. The superintendent, Hudson, woos her
with gifts and flowers, but she prefers Jim Nason, the only man in camp with a
boiled shirt.
Hudson is a decent enough man, but he has a history of being
politely spurned by the opposite sex, which he is getting weary of. A dangerous
cave-in deep in the mine finds Hudson and Nason heroically working side by
side. Almost fatally injured, Nason is nursed back to health by Millie. With a
new respect for Nason, Hudson makes him a foreman and stands aside for Millie
and Nason to marry.
The Old-Timer telling stories |
Style. Stovall’s
storytelling is simple, uncluttered, and straightforward. There is a clarity
sometimes in his imagery that nicely captures a moment and there are moments of
wry humor. Where there is excitement, the pace is hard driving. Here, in “The
Tin Horn of Gold Bug,” a battle rages underground to save the mine from a
cave-in.
A dozen diggers were jamming in
the timbers, working madly in the candle-light. Back under the maw of the
break, were Simpson and Jerry. The whole mountain trembled, and the great
stulls groaned and cracked.
Wrapping up. Stovall
(d. 1941) seems chiefly to have been a magazine writer for mining industry
journals. He also published articles on travel and hunting in Oregon, with
fiction and poetry as a sideline. A novel set on the frontier of southern
Oregon, Suzanne of Kerbyville, was published in 1904. Another
Gold Bug story, “Because of Mazie,” appeared in Bret Harte’s Overland
Monthly (November, 1912). In the 1910s he
was selling stories and novels to Street & Smith’s Top-Notch magazine.
The Gold Bug Story Book
is currently available online at Internet Archive and for the nook. For more of
Friday’s Forgotten Books, click on over to Patti Abbott’s blog.
Sources:
Oregon: End of the Trail, Federal Writers Project, 1940
Image credits: Illustrations
from the first edition of the book, illustrator unidentified
Coming up: Wayne D. Dundee, Reckoning at Rainrock
There used to be a kind of "genre" of mining stories it seems. I recently read a bunch of poems set in the mining camps and they were very fine.
ReplyDeleteI've come across many of them. They seem to predate the romance of the open range. Interesting that DEADWOOD made it all new again, like it was inventing the genre.
DeleteThanks for this, Ron. I know a fair bit about mining machinery because I work for a paper that writes extensively about construction and infrastructure projects including mining equipment. So these stories should be an interesting read. Over the past few months I have come across a few novels set around western mining camps such as "Silver and Gold: A Story of Luck and Love in a Western Mining Camp" by Dane Coolidge which appears to be fairly popular on the ebooks network. I'm going to check this one out first.
ReplyDeleteDane Coolidge wrote and photographed fairly extensively about prospecting and mining in the West. I intend to sample that some day. Now I only know his cowboy/ranching material.
DeleteA correction, Ron: by "this one" I meant "The Gold Bug Story Book." I have a definite plan for short stories and novellas this year and the next: read as many as possible.
ReplyDelete