Strange Maps

January 17, 2007

63 - A Map to the Lost Dutchman Gold Mine

The Superstition Mountains to the east of Phoenix, AZ reportedly hold a legendary motherlode of gold known as the Lost Dutchman Gold Mine. Truth and fiction about this mine have been unrevokably mixed up through the years, producing 62 varieties of the legend. But before we get into those, here are some genuine facts about the Lost Dutchman Gold Mine:

  • There really was a Lost Dutchman, although he wasn’t Dutch. Jakob Waltz was nicknamed Dutch (i.e. from the Netherlands) because he was Deutsch (i.e. from Germany; a common error, see also ‘Pennsylvania Dutch’). A man of that name was born in Württemberg in 1810 and emigrated to the US. From the 1860s onward, he homesteaded in Arizona, pursuing mining and prospecting as a hobby - a quite unsuccessful one.  Waltz fell ill and died in 1891, but not before revealing the location of an alleged gold mine to Julia Thomas, the neighbour who cared for him. As early as Sept 1, 1892, a local newspaper relates how Thomas and others were trying to locate the mine. When they failed, it is reported they sold copies of a map for $7 each. After about a decade, the story sank into obscurity, regaining notoriety when it had acquired more spectacular aspects, in a fashion not dissimular to a game of Chinese whispers.

  • The Lost Dutchman Mine is the most famous in American history. Quite literally so, according to Byrd Granger. In 1977, Granger noted that the Lost Dutchman story was printed at least 6 times more often than the story of Captain Kidd’s lost treasure and the story of the Lost Pegleg Mine in California.

  • The Lost Dutchman Mine is the most sought after in American history. At least since 1892, attempts have been made to locate it. Annually, some 8.000 people try to find it. And not just crackpots: former attorney general of Arizona Bob Corbin was one of the many mine-seekers.

  • The Lost Dutchman Gold Mine has been situated in four different locales. It has been looked for in Colorado, California and in two places in Arizona - the other one being near Wickenburg, 180 km north-west of the Superstition Mountains.

Granger distinguished three main elements to the story, with the most complete version of the story incorporating all three legends. He argued that each of these three legends contains some truth, but have become badly distorted through time. The legend continues to evolve: recent additions are versions in which the gold is really a secret treasure trove of the Knights of the Golden Circle, a Confederate secret society active during the American Civil War (1861-1864).

  • Tales of the lost Apache’s gold, or Dr Thorne’s mine. The Apache (some even mention their famous chief Geronimo in this respect) are the only ones who know of a very rich gold mine in the Superstition Mountains. Until Miguel Peralta’s family stumbles upon the site, and start mining the gold. They are massacred by the Apache in 1850. Years later, an army doctor by the name of Thorne treats an ailing Apache (possibly a chief) who as a reward takes him to the mine - blindfolded, of course - where he can take as much gold as he can carry. Thorne is later unable or unwilling to reveal the location of the mine. Some writers have indicated that there actually was a Miguel Peralta whose family operated a gold mine - but this was in the 1860s, near Valenciana in California. After the mine became unprofitable, Miguel Peralta turned to fraude. He sold the mining rights to 12.000 km² in southern Arizona and New Mexico to Dr George M. Willing, Jr., based on a deed originally granted by the Spanish Empire. The deed was bogus, and Willing never recovered his money. This might be the way the Peralta story became incorporated into the Lost Dutchman legend. Additionally, there never was an army doctor named Thorne in the 1860s in Arizona. There was a Dr Thorne who had a private practice in New Mexico. He claimed to have been abducted by Navajo in 1854, discovering during his captivity a rich gold vein. Thorne told his story to three solders in 1858, upon which the soldiers unsuccessfully set out to find the vein.
  • Tales of the Lost Dutchman. This story involves Jakob Waltz (some sources say Weitz, Weitzer, Walls, Welz,…) and another German named Jakob Weiser - although this second German probably is a ’spin-off’ of the first Jakob, which occurred in the re-telling of the story. There are ‘hawk’ and ‘dove’ versions, depending on whether the men behaved violently or not. The story goes something like this: Waltz and/or Weiser locate a rich gold mine in the Superstition Mountains (in some versions they are told the location by a grateful member of the Peralta family, whose life they saved). Weiser is attacked (either by Apache or by Waltz) but survives long enough to tell a Dr Walker about the mine. Waltz also makes a deathbed confession to a Julia Thomas, and even draws a crude map of the mine.
  • Stories of the soldiers’ lost gold vein. Around 1870, two US Army soldiers discover a vein of almost pure gold in or near the Superstition Mountains, are able to present some of it to a third party but afterwards are killed or vanish. The root of this story is the effort of three US soldiers to locate gold in New Mexico based on what Dr Thorne allegedly told them.

 lostgoldmine.GIF

True or not, the legend of the Lost Dutchman’s Gold Mine continues to fascinate the public. This post card is a humourous version of the many serious treasure maps that undoubtedly circulated in Arizona and environs at the height of gold mine fever, at the end of the 19th century.

8 Comments »

  1. Don Rosa wrote a comic centering around this story. It was funny.

    Comment by Pii — January 19, 2007 @

  2. I love the tagline -

    ‘memorize and then burn’

    Comment by Gary Smailes — January 20, 2007 @

  3. “McKenna’s Gold,” a 1960s Gregory Peck film, was based on the Lost Dutchman. J. Frank Dobie, the University of Texas folklorist, wrote Coronado’s Children, which discussed the Dutchman and many other prospecting tales. He seemed so knowledgeable that for years he was often followed when he travelled.

    Comment by Bob williams — January 26, 2007 @

  4. If you want a REAL mystery, seek Lasseter’s Reef - somewhere in the middle of Australia.
    Fascinating story: either Lasseter did find a fabulous gold source OR he literally went mad and believed that he did.
    Fortunes have been spent trying to find his ‘reef’.
    There are plenty of sites to google (”Lasseter”).

    Comment by Robert — March 15, 2007 @

  5. Actually, “McKenna’s Gold” is based on the story of the Lost Adams Diggin’s - not the Lost Dutchman Mine. It is a very entertaining tale.

    J. Frank Dobie’s “Coronado’s Children” doesn’t mention the Lost Dutchman Mine. His “Apache Gold & Yaqui Silver” has quite a bit about the Lost Adams, however. Both are fine books!

    Comment by fred hollister — March 20, 2007 @

  6. “The Lost Dutchman Mine is the most sought after in American history. At least since 1892, attempts have been made to locate it. Annually, some 8.000 people try to find it. And not just crackpots: former attorney general of Arizona Bob Corbin was one of the many mine-seekers.”

    To be fair, such activities are often purely recreational–take the kids on an adventure that’ll give them a story and be a load of fun, for instance. I’d say that accounts for 7,998 “attempts” to find the mine per annum.

    Comment by The Dutchman! — January 20, 2008 @

  7. ‏I think you will want to add this book to your collection.
    Hot off the presses, “Spirits in the Mountains” tells the story of two brother’s 10 death-defying journeys into the Superstition Mountains in Arizona where they found the location of the Lost Dutchman Gold Mine. Michael and William Johnson were lead into the mountains by many clues and maps and a vision of mineral stains on the mountain. Many efforts
    have been made to disclose the location in order to have it protected by appropriate authorities that have total control of this area. Only one treasure trove permit has been given out since 1983 when the
    Wilderness Act was passed by the Federal Government. They were
    surrounded by gunmen while searching for the tunnel and the mine.
    Full-color photos and a new map traced from an actual photo of the
    location is in the book with many of their finds that match the
    etchings on the Peralta Stone Tablets that were found after the
    massacre of the Peralta mining group. Only one person survived to
    tell his story. Many believe the etched stone maps are a hoax. The
    book proves that they are not a hoax, but lead to a very real place this is one of the World’s
    greatest and richest gold mines. Please
    visit:www.spiritsinthemountain.com, It’s a thrilling book that takes you step-by-step to the mine and tunnel entrance.

    Comment by Linda Derr — February 8, 2008 @

  8. Spirits In The Mountains is a total joke! Crappy photos of blurry rocks, ceramic pots with “mysterious” symbols, Roman soldiers, Knights Templar in the Arizona desert. Surrounded by armed rocks is more like it. I think those Bros where high on pain meds! Don’t waste your $! Really!

    Comment by Richard Hall — March 20, 2008 @

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