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Earliest Known Comstock Lode Mining Document: 1859 Ophir Diggings, Utah Territory Deed [164338]

Currency:USD Category:Collectibles / Mining Start Price:2,500.00 USD Estimated At:5,000.00 - 10,000.00 USD
Earliest Known Comstock Lode Mining Document: 1859 Ophir Diggings, Utah Territory Deed [164338]
SOLD
13,500.00USDto i***y+ buyer's premium (3,375.00)
This item SOLD at 2023 Apr 02 @ 11:41UTC-7 : PDT/MST
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Fantastic & historic! This document dates to the very beginning of the Comstock Lode silver rush. It mentions one of the most important mining claims--the Ophir--and the key early figures (Comstock, McLaughlin, Osborn, Penrod, Walsh), the Comstock's "Founding Fathers."

Handwritten deed on blue paper. 6 x 8" Folds, creases. Dateline Ophir Diggings, Utah Territory, U.S. Sept. 17th, 1859. Only 11 days later, the San Francisco Daily Alta California would announce a change of name from Ophir Diggings to Virginia City!

"Know all men by these present that I James Walsh do hereby sell and convey to Jane E. Ober One fourth of one undivided One Sixth portion of Fourteen hundred feet of mining ground or mining claims situated at Ophir Diggings in Utah Territory and known as the claim opened by Comstock, McLaughlin, Osborn, Penrod, Riley + their associates in the ownership of said Fourteen hundred feet, my one sixth interest in said ground or claims having been conveyed to me by H.T.P. Comstock during the month of August last - the consideration paid to me by the said Jane E. Ober for the interest above named is the sum of five thousand ($5000) Dollars cash." Signed James Walsh
"Witness my hand and seal.
Signed sealed and delivered in presence of F.J. Thibault, James L. King."

On the reverse is a written confirmation of the recording by the Commissioner of the Territory of Utah acknowledging the deed from James Walsh to Jane E. Ober, along with the Red Seal of Commissioner, F. J. Thibault for the Territory of Utah Office located in San Francisco on April 23, 1860. The seal has the well-known "Beehive" in the center. Nineteenth-century leaders of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints consciously created symbols to buttress their community. The most persistent of these pioneer symbols was the beehive. Its origin may relate to the statement in the Book of Mormon that the Jaredites carried "with them Deseret, which, by interpretation, is a honey bee".

In the Spring of 1859, two miners, Peter O'Riley and Patrick McLaughlin, finding all the paying placer ground already claimed, went to the head of the of what was known as Gold Canyon and began prospecting with a rocker on the slope of the mountain near a small stream fed from a neighboring spring. They sank a small deep pit in which to collect water for use in their rockers. In the bottom of this hole the rock differed in appearance. After feeding it through the rocker, they knew they had made their "strike" as the bottom was covered with a layer of gold. However, that was only the beginning.

In that hole, silver mining in America as we know it was born. In the rocker along with the gold was a large quantity of heavy blue-black material which clogged the rocker and interfered with the washing out of the fine gold. When assayed however, it was determined to be an almost pure sulphuret of silver.

Later in June of 1859 O'Riley and McLaughlin made their find, Henry T. P. Comstock learned of the two men working on land that Comstock allegedly had already claimed for "grazing purposes". Unhappy with his current claim on Gold Hill, Comstock made threats and managed to work himself and his partner, Emanuel "Manny" Penrod, into a deal that granted them interest on the claim. Osborn was J. A. Osborn who along with Joseph D. Winters bought another earlier partner's share in the 1400 foot claim. Each had one sixth of the claim and all but the Winters brothers sold out at very low prices for a total of $70,601. The Winters brothers, Joseph D., John D., and Theodore developed the claim with Judge James Walsh and other purchasers from the original claimants to become the fabulous Ophir Mining Co.

"Very soon after he had acquired this claim, (Henry) Comstock disposed of the greater portion of it to Judge Walsh, an enterprising and experienced quartz miner of Grass Valley, who, having heard of this discovery and seen some of the rich ore brought to his place, hastened over the mountains for the purpose of examining the deposit and making a purchase thereof, if the thing looked favorable. How little appreciation Comstock himself had of the real value of this property is evinced by the fact that he parted with his interest in nearly the whole of it for $6,000, congratulating himself that he had been able to dispose of it for even that much, and joining with his associates in making merry over the manner in which he had taken in what they facetiously termed, 'the California rock sharp.' " Ref. Henry DeGroot Comstock Papers from The Mining & Scientific Press, 1876; Part II (of 10).

Judge James Walsh was a well-known experienced hard rock miner and citizen of Grass Valley. Jane E. Ober was the wife of the noted San Francisco physician Benjamin Ober. Frederick J. Thibault is listed as a notary public and commissioner of deeds located at the NW corner of Montgomery and Clay in San Francisco (Langley 1859, Ibid. p. 266). James L. King is listed as a broker at the same location as Thibault (Ibid. p. 168).

This mining deed is the most historically significant Comstock document we've ever offered! It is a key piece suited for the most advanced private or museum collection.


Date: 1859
Country (if not USA):
State: Nevada
City: Virginia City
Provenance: