Just in time for the 4th of July, comes an amazing woman who, in spite of hardships, contributed to this country wherever she went.
Described
by her biographer as "Pretty as a Victorian cameo and, when necessary,
tougher than two-penny nails," this extraordinary woman wandered frontier
mining camps of the 1800s seeking gold, silver and a way to help others.
Throughout the West, she was variously known as the Frontier Angel, the Saint
of the Sourdoughs, the Miner's Angel, the Angel of the Cassiar and the Angel of
Tombstone.
NELLIE CASHMAN was
born in Queenstown, County
Cork, Ireland,
about 1850. She emigrated to the United
States in the 1860s, settling in Boston.
While working as bellhop in a prominent Boston hotel,
she is said to have met and chatted with General Ulysses S. Grant, who urged
her to go west.
Nellie took Grant's advice and used her
accumulated savings to travel with her sister Fannie to San Francisco in
1869.
Fannie married and began raising a family
within a year, while Nellie hired out as a cook in various Nevada mining camps,
including Virginia City and
Pioche. With her savings from these jobs, she opened the Miner's Boarding House
at Panaca
Flat, Nevada in
1872.
Before long, Nellie joined a group of 200 Nevada miners headed to
the Cassiar gold strike at Dease Lake in northern British Columbia.
Here, too, she operated a boarding house for miners and gained notoriety for
organizing a rescue caravan to a mining camp where a scurvy epidemic had broken
out.
Together with six men and pack animals loaded with 1,500 pounds of
supplies. She paid no heed to the Canadian Army officers who begged her to
turn back. She completed the 77-day journey through as much as 10 feet of snow,
arriving in time to nurse almost 100 sick miners back to health.
When the Cassiar strike
played out, Nellie headed for the silver fields of Arizona.
She arrived in Tucson in
1879, where she opened the Delmonico Restaurant, the first business in town
owned by a woman. The Delmonico was successful despite (or perhaps because of)
her habit of feeding and caring for hapless miners.
In 1880, Nellie sold the Delmonico and,
following the silver rush in the San Pedro Valley, moved to the new silver
boomtown of Tombstone,
just after the arrival of the Earp brothers.
Once in Tombstone,
she opened another restaurant, the Russ House. Named after the original in San Francisco,
Nellie served 50-cent meals, advertising that "there are no cockroaches in
my kitchen and the flour is clean."
During her years in Tombstone,
Nellie gained a reputation as an angel of mercy, and became a prominent and
influential citizen. A lifelong, devout Catholic, Nellie convinced the owners
of the Crystal Palace Saloon (one of whom was Wyatt Earp) to allow Sunday
church services there until she had helped raise enough funds for construction
of the Sacred Heart Church.
She
was also active raising money for the Salvation Army, the Red Cross, the
Miner's Hospital and amateur theatricals staged in Tombstone. She was
famous for taking up collections to help those who had been injured or fallen
on hard times, especially miners. Nellie found the members of
Tombstone's red light district sympathetic and charitable to her causes, and
relied on their generosity to help others in need.
Nellie's community services in Tombstone continued
to expand. She served as an officer of her church to hear the impromptu
confessions of two of the five men who were to be hanged for the Bisbee
Massacre of December 1883. The following year, when a group of miners attempted
to lynch mine owner E.B. Gage during a labor dispute, Nellie drove her buggy into
the mob and rescued Gage, spiriting him away to Benson, Arizona.
After returning from an
unsuccessful gold expedition to Baja, California, her widowed sister
Fannie died of tuberculosis, leaving Nellie to raise her five children. Nellie
sold the Russ House restaurant and spent the next years, children in tow,
wandering the mining camps of of Wyoming, Montana, and the New Mexico and Arizona territories.
It is said that all five children became successful, productive citizens under
her care.
Later she went to Canada's Yukon Territory. She arrived in Dawson, the center of Klondike diggings, where she opened a restaurant, a
mercantile outlet and a refuge for miners where she provided them with free
cigars
During the seven years Nellie lived in Dawson, she became famous as one
of the great figures of the Klondike gold rush. She
was revered by miners and mine owners alike, and celebrated by the likes of
Jack London, Joaquin Miller, Jack Crawford and Robert W. Service.
In 1898, Nellie headed even farther north and established
mining operations in the Koyukuk wilderness, 60 miles from the Arctic Circle. It is said
that in her 60s, she ran a dog sled team 750 miles across the frozen Arctic.
In 1923, Nellie Cashman
finally settled down in Victoria, British Columbia. When asked
by a reporter for the Arizona Star why she never married, Nellie replied,
"Why child, I haven't had time for marriage. Men are a nuisance anyhow,
now aren't they? They're just boys grown up."
Nellie Cashman, the
"Saint of the Sourdoughs," died in Victoria two
years later, on January 25, 1925. She lies in a plot with
the Sisters of St Ann, overlooking Ross Bay.
US Stamp plate issued 1994 honoring 'Legends of the West.' Nellie Cashman in lower left.
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