Gold Cube

unanimated
Showing posts with label lead. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lead. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 18, 2013

Emery County Growing in Favor as a Mining Section.

AROUND THE STATE
__________

  Emery County is steadily growing in favor as a mining section.  She's coming all the time, without pushing or boosting.  There's scarcely a mineral one can name that is not found in some parts of this county.  Heretofore it was considered that our mineral deposits were of too low a grade to profitably develop and work, notwithstanding the fact that low grade mining propositions have been the greatest dividend payers.  The Hecker property, however, in the Summerville District, east of here, of which Harvey Hardy is superintendent, promises to change the color of outside opinion respecting mining conditions here.  The Hecker is producing more really high grade ore and reports say there is plenty of it.  A sackful of ore, gathered from 200 feet of the outcropping ledge, was assayed this week and gave returns of 233.2 ounces of silver and 67.1 percent lead.  Several other tests with almost as good results had been heretofore made.  It begins to look as though the mountains east of us contained tons of treasure. 

Salt Lake Mining Review
February 15, 1902


Friday, December 13, 2013

Denver Miners Interested in Silver and Lead Ore in Eastern Utah.

CEDAR MOUNTAIN IS
SHOWING SOME ORE
__________

  Denver mining men are doling prospect work in the Cedar Mountains--in eastern Utah. Silver-lead ores have been discovered thus far and the formations show traces of copper and gold.  
  Among the local men who have been interested in that section of the state is former Sheriff Hardy of this city.  He has acquired much of the mineral bearing land, and says that while it is some distance from the Desert Switch, he feels confident, those interested can show capitalist that they have properties that can be made to pay with the installation of facilities for treating the second class product.  
  The Hecker Mining Company has also done a considerable amount of exploitation work, and reports fairly good results.  At this time it is said to be doing assessment work, and on the strength of the showing made, Denver miners have been attracted to that region.  Almost a score of Denverites are at work in the Cedar Mountains, and they say that they will devote the greater part of the winter to opening up some of the ledges they have located.  

Salt Lake Telegram
December 31, 1908 



Friday, December 6, 2013

Harvey Hardy Headed for Zion.

__________

  Manager Harvey Hardy of the Hecker group of silver and lead properties down near Woodside went through Price the first of the week, headed for Zion.  He told The Advocate that a small force of miners is being worked right along in development, though no small amount of ore is being piled on the dump. 

Eastern Utah Advocate 
July 12, 1902

Wednesday, December 4, 2013

Two Shafts Sunk by Hecker Mining Company.

THE HECKER IS GREAT
__________

  J. S. Daveler and C. F. Willsie of Lake City last week made an examination of the workings of the Hecker Mining Company, and they report the mine as being in a most gratifying condition.  This property consists of a group of five claims situated nine miles from Woodside, and is being developed under the supervision of Harvey Hardy.  Two shafts have been sunk within the past few months to a depth of sixty and forty feet respectively and from these shafts numerous crosscuts have been run clear across the vein, which is forty feet wide, and the entire distance has been through what is believed to be shipping ore, and about a carload of the ore is now in sacks ready for shipment.  Assays from hand samples which have been taken with a view of obtaining an average of the vein have yielded all the way from 30 to 62 percent lead, 4 percent copper and 68 to 238 ounces of silver to the ton.  

Eastern  Utah Advocate
May 8, 1902




Thursday, November 28, 2013

Work progressing at the Copper Boy Mine in Emery County.

COPPER BOY MINE
__________

Developments Progressing Satisfactorily at
this Emery County Property

  Work is said to be progressing very favorably at the Copper Boy Mine in Emery County under the direction of S. L. Boggs.  No stir is being made about the matter but a very good grade of ore is being encountered which carries good values in gold, copper, silver and lead.  About 1,000 feet of workings exist on the property which is located in the Summerville Mining District.  A small fortune of $6,000 was taken out several years ago from what might be called an open cut.  The ore then obtained carried 12 percent copper 40 percent lead and 119 ounces in silver per ton.  The work of sinking in the new shaft has been diligently pursued during the past few months until the present depth of 140 feet has been attained.  The indications are said to favor the belief that with depth a big body of ore will be obtained.,  In an old shaft which was sunk to a depth of 120 feet on the dividing line between the Uncle Sam and Lee claims a body of ore 6 feet wide has been exposed.  It is said, between well defined walls.  Some of this ore is said to run nearly 30 percent copper and to carry 66 ounces in silver to the ton.  A great deal of low grade ore also exists on the property which will prove a fine proposition for concentration should a mill ever be built upon it. 

Deseret News
January 25, 1900

Tuesday, November 26, 2013

The Copper Boy Mine.

THE COPPER BOY MINE
__________

   Under the magical influence of the rapid advance in copper quotations, the active demand for the red metal which has been so apparent of late, many of the old camps of Utah and the west are being born again, as it were, and in their resurrection, give every evidence that it will not be long before they will drop into line as heavy producers of the precious metals and that their old and abandoned mine will respond so readily to  the quickening touch of capital and labor that in the near future they can be classed among the bonanza propositions and dividend payers of this inter mountain region. 
   Twelve or fifteen years ago Summerville Mining District in Emery County, ten miles west of the Lower Crossing of the R. G. W. road was looked upon as one of the most promising camps in this western country.  In fact, Summerville enjoyed the distinction of being a lively and red-hot district and quite a little mining town sprang up as if by magic within its environments--a burn boasting a population of 400 or 500 souls, who found shelter in tents, stone cabins, while even tasty homes embellished the camp, which boasting of its stores, supply houses; as well as of four saloons, generally the true index of the prosperity of any mining region. 
   It was as Summerville that Sam Gilson made a stake when the camp was in the full flush of prosperity, and it was here that many property owners found the wherewith with which to increase their bank accounts, as heavy ore shipments ere the order of the day there and many a consignment of the precious metals found their way to the market from Summerville which were sold on controls showing values of from 50 to 1,500 ounces in the white metal, 40 percent lead and well up in gold to the ton, to say nothing of the copper contents of the mineral, which would amount to a considerable sum now but which then brought the miner nothing, or worse than nothing, as in those days the producer was often times required to pay for what copper occurred in his ores.
   With the decline in silver quotations a few years ago, the heavy drop in the price paid for lead, and the little value placed on copper, the promising district of Summerville began to lose its grip and like a frost-bitten rose it soon began to be known as "one of the have beens,"  only here and there a dismantled cabin, an abandoned mine, a neglected prospect being the only tangible evidence that in the past a lively mining camp had once found existence there, only a few claim-holders keeping up their annual assessment work, confident that in time the wave of prosperity would again surge over that section.  
   With the unprecedented demand for copper which has characterized the financial circles of the world for the past year or two, cane the turn of the tide, as far as Summerville was concerned, for old mining men, familiar with the mineralization of this section, returned to look u old mines and to locate new ones, and it as for copper, not gold or silver, that they were looking for and it was here that they found it in encouraging quantities, the ores of the district carrying paying values in the red metal.  
   With the resurrection of Summerville came its transformation from a gold and silver camp to a copper producing district.  From the ashes of the past a new camp sprang into existence, the merits of which have already been as a lodestone to the capitalist and investor, among the first attracted by its promising copper properties being S. L. Boggs, of this city, who, with a few friends carefully investigated its mineral zones, the result being that associated with acquaintances and with men who are always on the outlook for meritorious mines and prospects, a group of claims was secured, being the identical property on which Sam Gilson had made a raise years before, and a few months ago the property formed the basis for an incorporated organization designated in the articles of incorporation as the Copper Boy Mining Company. 
   The mineral belt on which the Copper Boy is located, THE REVIEW is informed, is prolific in its ledges, its dips ans spurs, the formation being in immense quartzite dyke, the principal ledge being true fissures with an east and west strike. 
   The most work and development, however, and this is limited, has been done on a six foot vein of blanket formation, from which, in the early history of the camp, the former owners of the property made shipments of four cars of ore which netted them something like $6,000, the mineral being sold on control assays showing values of 42 percent lead, 12 percent copper, 119 ounces in silver and $4.50 in gold to the ton. 
   The illustration of the mine given herewith shows the shallow open cut from which this small fortune was taken and also sows where the company is now sinking a shaft on a vertical vein.  This shaft is now only down below grass roots; it is only 20 or 25 feet in depth, and yet the bottom is in a nice body of mineral which carries encouraging values in silver and gold and which is heavily impregnated with copper, the belief being, and the indications showing good cause for the assumption that with depth the fissure vein will lead to a large body of pay ore in which copper will predominate. 
   Overlapping the blanket vein above described there is a large deposit of oxide gold bearing ore, which, it has been found, leaches well and can be successfully treated by the cyanide process of reduction.  
   Almost on the dividing line between the Lee and the Uncle Sam claims, embraced in the Copper Boy group, is the Hutch shaft which was sunk several years ago to a depth of 135 feet and it is stated that in these old working a six foot body of ore is exposed between well defined walls, one half of which, by careful sorting, will carry values of 29 percent copper, 66 ounces in silver and $1.50 in gold to the ton, while the balance of the ledge is a good concentrating product which can, with a mill, be handled on the ground at a good profit. 
   On the Lee claim, about 1,500 feet east of the Hutch shaft, the ledge outcrops boldly and at the surface there is a foot of mineral which assays 23.8 ounces in silver, 80 cents in gold and a strong trace in copper to the ton, it being evident, when the vein was first thrown p, that it carried excellent copper values, but which, with the action of the elements and years of exposure, have leached out, but so promising is the showing at this point that during the present season Manager Boggs will do some systematic development there, his time being fully occupied at the present time in sinking the new working shaft on the Uncle Sam claim as rapidly as possible, and also in sacking ore for shipment at the old Hutch shaft.  
   Quietly and with no whoop and hurrah, Mr. Boggs and is associates have been hard at work this spring in the development of the Copper Boy.  They do not claim that it is a mine, but they are convinced that it is a most promising prospect and good enough to warrant a little money in its exploitation, feeling confident that with development it will open out into a producer and a paying mine. 
   In his report on the Copper Boy, C. L. Gilson, refiner at De LaMars Golden Gate mill at Mercur, says: 

     "The property of the company consists of the following claims, viz: Lee, Uncle Sam, Silver and Rattler, or about eighty acres of land; these claims are located end to end along the outcrop of the vein for a distance of 6,000 feet or about 1 2/2 miles on the vein, which shows values in either gold, silver, copper or lead the entire distance." 

   General Formaton of the country--The Cretaceous in this region consists of a series of peculiarly resisting quartzitic sandstone (Dakota) at the base, succeeded by several thousand feet of clay shales, with a few sandstone and limestone, all of marine formation, (Exact from Geological Guide Book to the Rocky Mountains, by S. F. Emmons.) 
   Ore Deposits--The footwall of the veins is in an immense quartizite dyke running almost east and west, rising through stratified limestone and sandstone.  The mineral matter has come from below along the contact of this quartzite dyke to the stratified rock which forms the hanging wall, and all indications are favorable to the existence at a lower depth of an immense body of high grade ore, proven almost positively by the thorough mineralization of the outcrop of the vein, in gold, copper, silver and lead, all of which are found giving very high assays the entire distance of the outcrop. 
   Shipments--The discoverer of this mine shipped four carloads of ore, taking it from the outcrop along the vein on the Silver claim and in no place going down ever three feet from the surface.  Average smelter returns on this shipment, viz:  

Gold........................................................................$4.50 per ton
Lead........................................................................     42 percent per ton
Copper....................................................................     12 percent per ton
Silver......................................................................     119 ounces per ton

which netted him a little over $6,0-00, after paying mining, freight and smelting charges.  There are now very bright stringers of high grade copper and galena ore in the crevices from which this shipment was made.  From information received from the original locator of the mine and men who worked in the 135 foot shaft on the Uncle Sam claim, shipments of very high grade gold, copper and silver were made from the 75 foot level carrying higher values than the shipment made from the outcrop of the vein on the Silver claim' this should go to prove up the ground and show that at present there i a vein of very high grade ore for a distance of at least 1,500 feet, and also to prove that with depth the ore increases in value.  There cannot be a particle of doubt that an ore body exists, for all along the outcrop of the vein for a distance of 6,000 feet small pieces of ore can be picked up assaying $100 per ton. 
   About fifty pounds of chloride of silver was taken from one place that assayed 1,500 ounces in silver to the ton.  
   One of the great advantages of the Copper Boy mine is that it is not dependent upon the demand or market value of any one particular mineral, as its ore bodies carry gold, copper, silver and lead, and if one mineral is not in active demand the other is sure to be.  
   Active work is now going on at the mine.
   The company is capitalized for 300,000 shares of the par value of $1, with 100,000 shares in the treasury. 
__________

Salt Lake Mining Review 
June 15, 1899






Friday, November 15, 2013

Peter Frandsen in Salt Lake City.

IN EASTERN AND SOUTHERN UTAH
__________

  Peter Frandsen of Castle Dale spent the week in Salt Lake City on business connected with his mining property in the eastern portion of the county.  A sample of ore taken from it gave returns of 56 per cent lead, besides showing good values in silver.  

Eastern Utah Advocate
June 14, 1906

Sunday, November 10, 2013

Pleased with Showings

PROSPECTORS PLEASED
WITH THEIR SHOWINGS
__________

  Lars Frandsen came back to Price the other day from the Cedar Mountain country, where he left Ed Stewart, R. Pace and Jack Whiting working several claims recently located by himself and others.  They have a fourteen inch vein in place on one claims, says Frandsen, and this will be sunk to considerable depth.  The crowd will take up about twenty claims, locating among others the old Hoyt mine, worked as far back as 1892. 
  The twenty-two tons of ore recently shipped from there to Salt Lake City by Peter Frandsen of Castle Dale gave an average value of twelve dollars to the ton, says Lars Frandsen.  Provo parties were down there last week, figuring to put in a mill or leaching process, for the treatment of the ore, which carries lead, silver, gold and copper.  
  Lars Frandsen's claims are located about six miles west of Desert Switch.  There is plenty of water for milling and mining purposes.  Good springs of water flow the year around, while wood and coal may be had in close proximity. 

Eastern Utah Advocate
March 8, 1906




Thursday, November 7, 2013

Body of 55 Ounce Silver ore.

UNCOVERS A BODY OF
55 OUNCE SILVER ORE

  Peter Frandsen of Castle Dale is apparently opening up a mining property in Emery County some eight miles southwest of Desert Switch that will soon develop into a producing proposition.  Recent tests of ore from the property made from samples shipped to the U. S. Smelting Company at West Jordan show the ore to run as follows:  

  Sample No. 1 - Gold 0.02 oz, silver 55 ounces, copper 7.6 percent, iron 1.5 percent, silica 83.6 percent.  

  Sample No. 2 - Gold 0.01 oz, silver 23 ounces, copper 3.4 percent, lead 38 percent, iron 31 percent, silica 79.7 percent. 

  Sample No. 1 shows ore worth above $30 a ton and sample No. 2 goes better than $25 a ton.  Mr. Frandsen and his son-in-law Johnny Allred have located several claims and have opened up the property both by shaft and tunnel.  The deepest shaft is but 15 feet and a tunnel has been run on one vein about the same number of feet. 
  The ore body appears to be a wide one but not enough development work has been accomplished yet to ascertain its real extent.  No other development work has been done in the same vicinity so that future value of the property depends wholly upon what develops with further exploitation upon it.  Mr. Frandsen has two men at work there now.  Several visitors have looked at the property and all are well pleased with the present showing. 
  The smelting company has offered Mr. Frandsen $12 per ton for the ore laid down at Desert Switch basing their price from tests of samples sent. 
  Negotiations are now pending with other smelters.  Offers have been made but none as yet have been high enough to meet their ideas of the value of it. 

Eastern Utah Advocate 
December 23, 1904

Saturday, November 2, 2013

Conditions at the Hecker near Woodside Utah

HECKER NEVER LOOKED BETTER
__________


Good Assays Obtained With 
Very Shallow Depth
__________

  Superintendent Harvey Hardy of the Hecker mine down near Woodside is particularly pleased with conditions there and says that within another year the camp will be one of the best in the state in the production of silver ores. 
  The Hecker property has closed down until after the holidays, when the company expects to resume work with an increased force.  The development work accomplished this season has opened up a large body of concentrating ore and the company has now under consideration plans for a plant to handle the product.
  Mr. Hardy says it will average 15 per cent lead, twenty-five ounces silver and $1 gold per ton.  Of this ore there is an immense body, almost at the surface.  In the drift from the bottom of the 100 foot shaft a strong vein is opening up which carries no less than 176 ounces of silver and 25 per cent lead. 
  At the Kaiser, a property of five claims in the same locality, which in early days shipped ore bringing returns of $1500 per car, a force of miners will be put on early in the year.  And a number of other properties in the district are being steadily worked.



Eastern Utah Advocate
December 18, 1902 

Thursday, October 31, 2013

Samples from Hecker Mine near Woodside Utah.

 The following is another article from old newspapers about the Hardy workings as my dad called them or the Copper Boy as it was known in the Salt Lake Mining Review.  This mine is in the Summerville Mining District in Emery County Utah.  I will have more articles posted to this blog in the future. 

THE HECKER MINE
__________

  Another lot of samples from the Hecker, near Woodside, have been tested at an assayer's in Salt Lake City,  The returns show from 93.5 to 119 ounces silver and from 43.2 to 48.5 per cent lead, with an average of 95 ounces silver and 45 per cent lead per ton.  This was derived from five assays.  Returns from samples of chloride were no less satisfactory, the average reaching 53.8 ounces silver and 37.89 per cent lead.  Of the latter Harvey Hardy reports a breast of seven feet in the cut by which the vein has been opened up, and to get it to moving to market 200 sacks have been forwarded to camp.  The shareholders are all rejoicing over the result of the assays, while the outlook cannot but stimulate interest in the camp.  


Eastern Utah Advocate
February 13, 1902