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Lost Dutchman Gold Mine
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Lost Dutchman Mine - Page 1

Few stories of the old west are as famous and as enduring as the legend of the Lost Dutchman's Mine. Like many legends, this one is based on some factual evidence enhanced with a lot of exaggeration and bit of downright fiction. After 100 years, the story is still believed by many, and still entices quite a few adventurers into the Superstition Mountains in search of the Dutchman's gold.

His name was Jacob Waltz

The legend is centered on Jacob Waltz, a Prussian born immigrant who arrived in the USA around 1840 and settled near Saint Louis, Missouri or Natchez, Mississippi. After gold was discovered in California in 1848, he apparently joined the wave of "forty-niners" heading west and braved the perilous journey across the untamed lands to the gold fields. Little is known about Waltz's life for the next 21 years except that he apparently did not find his fortune. He settled in California and became a naturalized citizen of the USA at Los Angeles in 1861.

In 1862, the fifty-two-year-old Waltz arrived in the wild and sparsely populated territory of Arizona. At that time, civilization in Arizona consisted of a few widely scattered towns and army forts plus several Spanish missions and pacified Native American villages. The fierce and unvanquished Apache Indians roamed the deserts and mountains killing any intruders they happened to encounter. Phoenix was a wild west frontier town along the Salt River with a small garrison of army soldiers to protect its inhabitants from the roving bands of marauding Apache. Gold and Silver had been discovered in parts of this wilderness.

Jerry Gargalione - Goldfield, Arizona

Jerry Gargalione - Goldfield, Arizona
©USATourist.com

He prospected for gold in Arizona

Jacob Waltz "prospected" or searched for gold and silver in the rugged mountains and scorching hot deserts of the Arizona territory. He was probably financed by local investors who often provided a "grubstake" or sufficient food, supplies and mining equipment to support an extended quest in return for a share of any wealth discovered. Many prospectors traveled with a "sidekick" or mining partner/companion for safety. At times, Jacob Waltz traveled with a sidekick named Jacob Weiser.

According to the legend, Jacob Waltz appeared in Phoenix sometime during the 1870s with many bags of rich gold ore. He drank heavily, spent money lavishly and bragged about his great gold find. He had found the richest gold mine ever. It was worth millions of dollars. He steadfastly refused to reveal its exact location but implied that it was in the Superstition Mountains.

Few men returned alive from the Superstition Mountains

The rugged and forbidding Superstition Mountains begin about 30 miles east of Phoenix. In those days, few men ventured into the Superstition Mountains. Those who did were rarely seen again. A few mutilated, headless remains were all that was usually recovered. The Superstitions were the sacred lands and the fortress home of the fierce Apache.

This next part of the legend is difficult to understand. For at least a decade after his great windfall of gold, Jacob Waltz lived a very modest life around the Phoenix area with little display of riches. He died on October 25, 1891 at the age of 81 in apparent poverty. His final days were spent under the care of Julia Thomas, an Afro-American woman who owned an ice cream parlor in Phoenix.

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Written by: Mike Leco

Top Photo: Lost Dutchman Gold Mine © USATourist.com

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