Thomas Walsh (miner)
Thomas Francis Walsh was an Irish-American miner who, in 1896 in Colorado, discovered one of the largest gold mines in the United States of America.
Early life
Walsh was born April 2, 1850, to Michael Walsh, a farmer, and Bridget Scully. He was most likely born on his father's farm, Baptistgrange, in Lisronagh, Tipperary, Ireland. He had two siblings, who both also emigrated to the United States and settled in the West. His sister Maria married Arthur Lafferty, a two-gun police sergeant in Leadville, Colorado. Their brother Michael died in 1904 in Denver, Colorado, of dropsy of the liver.According to his daughter Evalyn Walsh Mclean's book, Father Struck It Rich, Walsh became an apprentice to a millwright at the age of twelve and grew into a fine carpenter.
In 1869, he and his sister Maria emigrated to the United States after the death of their father. For a time, Thomas settled in Worcester, Massachusetts, with his aunts, Catherine and Bridget Walsh Power, who helped "shake the greenhorn off him."
Career
In the early 1870s Walsh heeded the call to "Go West, young man" and settled in Colorado, where he was paid well for his carpentry skills. Walsh was said to be attracted to the opportunities that came with the gold rush, including trading goods and services at inflated prices, as opposed to gold mining itself.Gradually, he became more and more immersed in the gold industry. He was soon trading mining equipment to prospectors in exchange for their mining claims as payment. He also studied mining technology at night.
In 1877 he moved to Leadville, Colorado with a small fortune of between $75,000 and $100,000. Along with his wife, he ran the Grand Central Hotel in Leadville.
Eventually Walsh was overcome by gold fever. Unlike other prospectors, however, he took a methodical and careful approach to prospecting, which paid off. In 1896, he came home and uttered the words which his daughter later used as the title of her memoir: "Daughter, I've struck it rich!"
His Camp Bird Gold Mine near Ouray, Colorado was soon turning out $5,000 a day in ore. The Walsh family became very wealthy. In a short period of time, Walsh had made a fortune totaling $3,000,000.
Walsh donated a library which occupied the second floor in the Ouray City Hall and Walsh Library in Ouray.
Washington, DC
With this wealth, Walsh and his family enjoyed a lavish lifestyle that included trips to Europe, fine clothes, and expensive motor cars. Soon after his mine was established, around 1898 the family moved to Washington, D.C. Walsh was moving in prominent circles, and President William McKinley appointed him as a US commissioner to the Paris Exposition of 1899.,Personal life
On July 11, 1879 in Leadville, Colorado, he married Carrie Bell Reed. The couple had two children:- Evalyn Walsh, August 1, 1886 – April 24, 1947
- Vinson Walsh, April 9, 1888 – August 19, 1905, who died in a car accident
In 1908, Walsh's daughter Evalyn married Edward Beale McLean, the son of John Roll McLean, who later became the publisher and owner of The Washington Post from 1916-1933.
Walsh died on April 8, 1910, at his home in Washington, D.C.