------------ EH.NET BOOK REVIEW --------------
Published by EH.NET (December 2007)
John C. Stewart, _Thomas F. Walsh: Progressive Businessman and
Colorado Mining Tycoon_. Boulder, CO: University Press of Colorado,
2007. xv + 230 pp. $35 (cloth), ISBN: 978-0-87081-870-7.
Reviewed for EH.NET by Joshua C. Hall, Department of Economics and
Management, Beloit College.
This book is a biography of one of Colorado's most famous citizens,
Thomas F. Walsh, by Denver attorney and historian John Stewart.
Called "one of the foremost mining men in the country" by the _New
York Times_ at the time of his death in 1910, Walsh is famous for his
discovery of the Camp Bird Mine in Colorado, one of the most
productive gold mines in U.S. history. In addition, his considerable
wealth led him to become a significant figure in state and national
politics for the last decade of his life.
_Thomas F. Walsh_ begins by recounting what little is known about the
Walsh family in Ireland circa Tom Walsh's birth in 1850. Walsh came
from a fairly typical Irish farming family of the time and began his
lifetime interest in geology while in grade school. At this time,
however, all mineral rights in Ireland belonged to the British Crown.
As a result, in 1869 Walsh left Ireland for the United States.
From this point on, the book can be thought of as split into two
distinct parts. The first part, comprised of Chapters 2 through 7,
follows Tom Walsh as he seeks to make his fortune prospecting for
minerals throughout Colorado. This is also the part of the book that
is most likely to be of interest to economists and business
historians. In these chapters, Stewart paints a picture of Walsh as a
shrewd businessman who loved mining but would only engage when it
made financial sense.
Walsh did not immediately rush to Colorado and begin prospecting.
Instead, he was happy to find steady work as a carpenter building
railroad trestles for the Colorado Central Railroad. When the
financial panic of 1873 raised the returns to prospecting relative to
carpentry work, Walsh joined the gold rush. Even after moving to the
mining town of Del Norte in southwestern Colorado, Walsh split his
time between carpentry and prospecting, a strategy he would employ
for much of his mining career.
Based on data supplied by Stewart about Walsh's earnings during his
first five years in the mining territory, this strategy was a very
lucrative one. According to Stewart, when Walsh left the Black Hills
in 1878, he left with $10,000 in carpentry savings and $15,000 from
sales of his stake in a local mine.
This raises one of my major criticisms of the book. While Stewart
notes that Tom Walsh left the Black Hills as a fairly wealth man, by
using only nominal dollars throughout the text he does not provide
today's readers with enough context for how proficient Walsh seemed
to be at accumulating wealth. Using the Consumer Price Index, for
example, Walsh's $25,000 in 1878 was equivalent to nearly $500,000 in
2006 dollars. That is a considerable sum to accumulate in just five
short years, especially with two-fifths of it coming from carpentry.
Given the availability of online calculators (such as the one on
EH.NET), it would have been easy for Stewart to have provided readers
with this context.
For the next eight years, the Walsh fortunes ebbed and flowed along
with his various business ventures, including a lucrative stint as a
hotel owner and a not so lucrative period as a silver ore refiner
during the silver crash of 1893. Then in 1896, Walsh discovered the
Camp Bird gold vein, one of the most lucrative deposits of gold ever
discovered in the United States. During its first four years of
operation, the mine produced $2.5 million dollars of gold, silver,
lead and copper with costs of only $885,000. Thus, in just four years
Walsh had earned about $1.65 million in profits from the Camp Bird
Mine (around $37 million in 2006 dollars).
What did Walsh do with his newfound wealth? That is the subject of
the second half of the book that begins with Chapters 8. Two years
after discovering the Camp Bird vein Walsh moved his family to
Washington D.C. where the Walsh family quickly became a prominent
member of Washington high society. After selling the Camp Bird Mine
for $6 million in 1902 ($145 million in 2006 dollars), Walsh spent
$2.1 million on building and furnishing a mansion on Massachusetts
Avenue in order to better signal his permanence as a member of
Washington's elite.
Until his death from lung cancer in 1910, Walsh spent the remainder
of his life "as a prominent member of national society." He spent his
days engaged in philanthropic works and advocated for public policies
that he felt would benefit the Western states, such as irrigation
initiatives and highway construction. His frequent political
donations and newfound social ranking brought Walsh attention from
politicians and other world leaders. Among his political
acquaintances were Presidents William McKinley, Theodore Roosevelt,
and William H. Taft.
I found Stewart's _Thomas F. Walsh_ to be a quick and insightful
read. The primary value of the book to economists lies in providing
classroom teaching material. In the style of McCloskey's (1985) price
theory text, I use problems -- mostly historical in nature -- to
teach price theory. Several examples from this book will find their
way into my problem sets. A good example of the firm's shut-down
decision occurs on page 173, when Stewart describes how the Camp Bird
Mine would shut down and restart depending on fluctuations in the
price of gold or silver. More generally, however, this book is too
narrowly focused on the life of Walsh and the mining industry in
Colorado to be of general interest to economic and business
historians.
Reference:
D. McCloskey, _The Applied Theory of Price_, New York: Macmillan (1985).
Joshua C. Hall is an assistant professor of economics at Beloit
College in Beloit, Wisconsin. His most recent publication is (with
Peter T. Leeson) "Good for the Goose, Bad for the Gander:
International Labor Standards and Comparative Development" in the
September 2007 issue of _Journal of Labor Research_.
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Published by EH.Net (December 2007). All EH.Net reviews are archived
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