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American Mining Hall of Fame
2003 Inductee from Mining's Past

Thomas F. Walsh
1850-1910
Tom Walsh, a staunch, hard working
Irishman with a handsome red moustache, was born in Clonmel County,
Tipperary, apprenticed as a millwright and became a jack of all
trades carpenter. At
19, he migrated to Massachusetts, then to Golden, Colorado, where he
worked for the Colorado and Southern Railroad for two years and
caught "the mining fever," as he always called it.
In 1874,
he joined the Black Hills, South Dakota gold rush and there met
Smokey Jones, who offered him half interest in his Deadwood
prospect. On the advice of
experienced mining friends, Walsh turned down Jone’s offer, only
to later find out that it had become the fabulous Homestake gold
mine. This was a lesson he
was never to forget.
In 1877,
Walsh bought the Grand Hotel in Leadville, Colorado, married, sold
the hotel and then moved to Denver. By
now, with improved knowledge, experience and a keen mining
intuition, he decided to move to Ouray.
High above Ouray, in Imogene Basin, there were a number of
"barren” silver claims. Here
in 1881 Walsh recognized a rich gold telluride vein in an old tunnel
on the Gertrude claim. This represented his discovery of the rich
Camp Bird gold mine.
In 1902,
the mine was sold to a London syndicate for cash plus ore, plus
stock, and the Walshes led by John Hayes Hammond, lived in
Washington, D.C., as national and international celebrities.
Walsh’s daughter, Evalyn, married Edward Beal McLean, heir
to the Washington Post and Cincinnati Enquirer and they became
co-owners of the infamous
Hope diamond.
The
Walshes were friends of presidents and kings and Mr. Walsh
represented the United States with his family at the World
Exposition in Paris having been appointed to that position by the
President.
Ouray and Tom Walsh became wealthy together and
he saw to it that his miners were compensated better than what any
union could assure. Before he
died, he endowed the town a beautiful stocked library and saved the
community hospital from financial ruin. |