Mr. Stratton's Business: His Life & Mines

W.S. Stratton
W.S. Stratton

Tour this online exhibit excerpt and take a glimpse into the life of W.S. Stratton and the variety of information in the W.S. Stratton Mining Papers Collection! This collection was generously donated to the museum by the Myron Stratton Home and consists of over 1500 maps, blueprints, and drawings, nearly 300 ledgers, and over 96 cubic feet of papers. This temporary exhibit begins with a look at Mr. Stratton's life from his 1848 birth and early life in Jeffersonville, Indiana to his death in Colorado Springs in 1902. Along the way the three phases of his life are examined. Mr. Stratton's Business - His Life and Mines will remain available for the public until mid-June, 2003.


The Collections and Education departments at WMMI are pleased to present this online excerpt of Mr. Stratton's Business - His Life and Mines for the virtual visitor unable to travel to WMMI. Take a few moments to learn about this important figure in Western mining, view some of the artifacts in the exhibit and read some of the papers in this significant collection.

Terry Girouard, Previous Curator of Collections

The Early Years

In 1848, Stratton was born in Jeffersonville, Indiana, and was trained as a carpenter and draftsman before moving to Colorado Springs in 1872.

During his first two years in Colorado Springs, Stratton established himself as a very successful house builder. He also became very successful at buying and selling lots.

Carpenter/Prospector Years
1874 - 1891

A carpenter by trade, Mr. Stratton worked in the Colorado Springs area saving enough money for prospecting trips into the Colorado mountains during the summers. Prospecting throughout Colorado, Mr. Stratton's tenacity eventually paid off in Victor, Colorado.


Mr. Stratton was a carpenter by trade.

In May 1874, Mr. Stratton bought his first interest in a mine, the Yretaba Silver Lode, in Cunningham Gulch, near Silverton. This was the beginning of a pattern that lasted until his discovery in Cripple Creek Mining District.

 

"Stratton's life through these seventeen years of manhood could be most simply told by two pictures: The first to show him in winter, astraddle the roof beam of a new building, pounding away as an unnoticed carpenter … The second to show him in summer - the barest glimpse of a strange, gaunt man passing into the shadow of a dark mountain canon, with a burro patient, plodding, and silent as he."

-Midas of the Rockies, Marshall Sprague, page 105


Burro Pack Saddle: A Tool of the Prospecting Trade

Mine Owner
1891-1900

W.S. Stratton sold his interest in the Independence on April 27th, 1899 to the Venture Corporation, receiving 10 million for the mine. The sales contract can be seen on display at WMMI.

On July 4, 1891, Stratton entered a new phase in his life turning from his carpenter-prospector role to a one of mine owner.

The Independence was Stratton's dream mine. Not only did its location come to him in a dream according to legend, but it's riches made him the first millionaire to come out of the Cripple Creek Mining District.

From this time until his death over a century ago, on September 14, 1902, he devoted himself to his mining interests in the Cripple Creek District.

 

Types of Documents in the Collection

Mr. Stratton's vast mine holdings generated an enormous amount of paperwork. His mining papers consist of 96 boxes of papers, 351 ledgers, and over 1500 maps, blueprints, plats, and drawings.

Among the documents can be found correspondence such as these letters:

Mr. Stratton

My Dear Sir:

I should like to lease the dumps of your Geneva Mine. I can make a good living out of them. If you think favorably please send me lease to sign.

Yours truly,

Mrs. H.A.W. Tabor

Wednesday

Denver


 

Altman Colo

June - 2 - 1895

 

C.H. Morse, Secy Union Gold M. & M. Co.

Colo Springs, Colo.

Dear Sir

At the noon hour, just as the men were coming out of the shaft, when as accident caused by timbers not properly placed and wedged by lessees gave way and an accident that might have ended more serious had we worked in any other than the way we have.

M. B. H. was the one injured and he can give more details when he calls on you. I called in immediately Dr. Leavenworth and had the wound dressed and as he desired we put him in our buggy and sent him to the train.

In regard to the engine we have the agent of the Fairbanks Morse & Co called his attention to the main shaft being sprung and thereby throwing both disk wheels out of their regular course at least 1/8 of an inch…

Think that we ought to have an indicator as the marks on cable do not last long and are more or less confusing by being erased from running over rollers and also the number of them on the cable. It will not be very expensive and will more than repay its cost in convenience and safety. The melting snows and rains are already beginning to bother our work, loosening up ground and falling.

Yours Very Respectfully,

L. E. R.


Stratton
W.S. Stratton

By 1900, Stratton had:

  • sold the Independence Mine for $10 million
  • formed the Stratton Cripple Creek Mining and Development Company
  • purchased roughly 1/5 of mining properties in the District

Until his death, Stratton focused his time, money, and energy in finding the original source of the Cripple Creek gold.


Mr. Stratton's Echo

Work was suspended from the time of Mr. Stratton's death until after the funeral, but it has resumed and the properties are working as usual. The SCCM&D Company owns all the Stratton properties in the district, including a large amount of ground on Globe and Bull hills.

-EMJ September 27, 1902, page 423

 

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