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Bronco
Canyon Lost Pick Gold Mine
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to Arizona Treasure Stories
In the early 1870s, a Yavapai Indian would
periodically ride into the old Phoenix town to trade and buy food and
supplies with gold nuggets at the local pub that also served as a
store. He never seemed to be lacking gold, and one late Fall day two
miners who frequented the tavern named Brown and Davies decided to follow
him to try to locate the source of his gold.
They kept a distance behind the Indian,
traversing north by northwest out of town, noting red-brown mountains on
their right. They climbed steadily out of the valley and into higher
country where they camped on the grassy heights the first
night.
On the second day of their trek they
entered rougher country with larger, darker, more forbidding mountains,
dark black in spots with malpais from an ancient lava flow. The
saguaro and sandy slopes soon gave way to broken rock and low-growing
mesquite on the gulch floors, and they crossed Skunk Creek, New River, and
finally Agua Fria as they entered the vastness of Black Canyon.
There were high mountains to their west
and the towering and steep cliff-like Black Mesa on their right. The
Indian headed into one of several deep arroyos that cut east through the
Black Mesa into Bronco Canyon and disappeared. Brown and Davies
followed.
They entered Bronco Canyon east of the
ghost town Bumble Bee, Arizona (originally Snider's Station), which canyon
carried a tributary to the Agua Fria, and searched the canyon thoroughly
and the draws that fed it, locating a very rich 18" quartz vein of
gold in one of the rough-cut washes on the west side of the
canyon. (See
Map of Black Mesa and Bronco Canyon East of Bumble Bee)
They constructed a crude rocker and
arrastre for crushing gold out of ore at a nearby spring, and worked from sun up til after dark for
days. During the first few days, in preparation for winter storms
coming, they were able to haul about 200 pounds of the gold in sacks out
of the canyon, which they stashed safely 8 miles away at the confluence of
the old Squaw Creek and Slate Creek on the southwest side of what is now
Black Canyon City (formerly known as Goddard and Canon) likely not far
from where the Kay Mine was. (See
Map of Black Canyon City Area)
After working for almost a week, and having
filled about 25 sacks altogether with high-grade ore, they were ambushed
by a band of Apaches on horses who also were known to roam the region with
the Yavapai. Davies was killed instantly in the first burst of
gunfire, but Brown dropped to the ground feigning his death and rolling
under a thicket.
The unpredictable Apache warriors rode
away, and Brown buried the remaining gold sacks in a shallow hole under a
pile of rocks between a large boulder and a stratum of white volcanic ash
that outcropped along the foot of the mountains on the east side of the
arroyo, left his unfortunate partner's pick in the face of the quartz vein
to mark the location, and escaped out of the canyon after nightfall only
taking as much gold with him as he could carry, heading for California,
and intending to return after the Indians vacated the
region.
Many years later at age 80 about the time
the Great Depression fell upon the country, Brown returned to Phoenix and
made preparations for a jaunt into Bronco Canyon to recover his treasure,
but fell ill and revealed the above story of the hidden gold on his death
bed. He said that the balls of amalgam contained about $80,000 worth
of gold at the time.
A few years after Brown's death, a Mexican
sheepherder in Phoenix said he had passed a campsite in Bronco Canyon,
noting a nearby rusty pick stuck in a quartz outcropping, but he didn't
know of the mine or treasure at the time, and didn't stop to investigate.
Other visitors to the area have also
reported seeing an arrastre in the same region, but the lost gold mine, the cache of buried gold in Bronco Canyon,
and the gold hidden where the Squaw and Slate creeks met have never been
found.
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