Joshua Ward Lost Silver Mine

Gypsy Heart

Gold Member
Nov 29, 2005
12,686
339
Ozarks
The Joshua Ward Cabin where the bodies of Joshua Ward, his wife Abigail and their two little girls were found in 1908, locked inside the cabin 30 years after they were murdered by Indians. The ore wagon full of rich silver ore outside was a tantalizing clue to a lost treasure mine. Photo courtesy of Jerry Bowen.


The day was warm as the unrelenting sun beat down on Joshua Ward. It had been a productive trip to his silver mine. After a few days rest he would sell the rich silver ore and could finally buy that team of horses he needed. Hard work and persistence had paid off and he was feeling the contentment of a job well done. After filling the buckets with water at the spring, he headed back to his cabin and family.

Suddenly, he felt a searing pain in his back. Staggering through the cabin door, he realized the cause of his pain; four arrows were buried deep into his back. Once inside, he quickly barred the door with the last of his remaining strength then slowly sank to the floor, breaking the wooden arrow shafts as he fell mortally wounded. Across the room lie the lifeless bodies of his wife Abigail and two daughters, Sarah and Phoebe.

With the death of this family another lost mine story was born.

The mine was not just a figment of a lonely prospectors imagination. It was and is to this day, a silver vein that assayed at an estimated thousand dollars a ton at 1908 silver prices. The story is supported by verifiable facts and confirmed by Frank A. Crampton (a self taught mining engineer with impeccable credentials).

Frank Crampton was born in 1888, to a prominent New York City family. He grew up with all the social amenities befitting his family's wealth, but Frank had a restless nature and at the age of sixteen, he left home. He learned to "Ride the rods" from his new found friends, John Harrington and John T. Sullivan (Sully). Harrington and Sully educated the young Crampton in the hobo lifestyle and introduced him to hard rock mining. Over the years, Frank Crampton became well versed in the art of mining and built a reputation for honesty and hard work, believing nothing was worth while that wasn't earned the hard way.

During a business trip to Boston in 1908, Frank was approached by Massachusetts politician Herman Hormel and Dr. J. E. Meyers. Hormel's relatives had not been heard from for thirty years and he wanted Crampton to find them. The last known contact with the Joshua Ward was a letter. It was mailed from Cherry Creek, Nevada, on August 12, 1878. Early inquiries of law enforcement agencies and post offices in the area revealed nothing of the family's whereabouts.

Hormel produced several letters written by Abigail Ward, which provided several clues. She described an L-shaped cabin with an adjacent ox barn they had built in the wilderness near Cherry Creek. She further described the location as being in a small, narrow, basin-like valley with cottonwood trees and a spring at one end. Joshua had built a road to the cabin, which came over a ridge past the spring at the upper end of the valley.

Included in the letters was a crude map. The map showed the cabin with an arrow pointing south to Hamilton; an arrow pointing east to Cherry Creek; an arrow pointing north to Humboldt; and an arrow pointing west to Eureka. No distances were noted with the exception of "Eureka, six days".

One letter told of Joshua leaving for two weeks to mine one wagonload of silver ore and his of return home. This led Crampton to believe the mine was somewhere within a ten mile radius of the cabin. It was his theory that if the mine had been closer, Joshua would have returned home each night.

After studying the letters, Crampton decided the cabin was located about eighty miles north of Eureka. He surmised the cabin was closer to Cherry Creek than Eureka, for it was at Cherry Creek that Joshua bought his supplies.

Frank sent a telegram to his brother (Ted) in Date Creek, Arizona, instructing him to buy a reliable vehicle and enough supplies to last for one month. Arriving in Ely, Nevada, eight days later, Frank and Ted immediately set out north for Cherry Creek.

Cherry Creek is a small town about forty-five miles north of Ely. When Ted and Frank arrived in 1908, it was at the tail end of its third mining boom. After talking to the locals and obtaining as much information as they could, they left in search of the cabin.

Nearing mid-afternoon, they came across the very dim outline of an old road following it until they came to a deep wash that cut across the road. As they continued on foot, the road became more visible on the opposite side of the wash. Some twenty miles later they spotted a cabin about a mile off in the distance, but nightfall had descended upon them. They decided to make camp and put off investigating the cabin until morning.

Early the next morning they broke camp and headed toward the cabin, apprehensive of what they might find. Passing a spring they came upon a wagon, its wheels sunk into the soil to the hubs. It was obvious it had been there a very long time. Its cargo of rich silver ore lay on the ground below broken sideboards. Nearby in a small shed they found the bleached bones of two oxen, their skulls crushed by the blow of a heavy object.

As they continued on toward the cabin, they could see broken arrows imbedded in the door of the cabin. Frank tried to force the door open but it would not budge. They broke through the top section and it became apparent why the door would not openÂľthere were three bars holding it fast. Reaching inside he removed the bars, opened the door and entered the cabin. Once inside, his worst fears were confirmed. Underneath thirty years of hardened dust were the mummified bodies of the Ward family. Joshua was on the floor near the door with the broken arrow shafts still in his back. Abigail's body was across the room on the bed, her skull crushed by a single blow. The daughters, Phoebe and Sarah, were near the bed on the floor having suffered the same fate as their mother. The family had lain unmolested for thirty years. Why the Indians had not forced their way back into the cabin remains a mystery.

Snow had begun to fall; Frank and Ted had to complete their business quickly and return to town. They searched the cabin for papers and personal items they could send to Hormel. During the search they loosened a stone in the fireplace and behind it they found $5000 in gold coins. Joshua's mine had been paying well. They repaired the door and carefully closed up the cabin before they headed back to Cherry Creek. Winter was quickly closing in and they would not be able to return until spring.

After a difficult trip back to Cherry Creek, Frank sent a message to Hormel advising him of their find. Frank and Ted settled in for the winter and on Hormel's arrival in the spring, they headed back for the cabin. The bodies and personal effects were removed and the bodies were sent back east for burial. Frank searched for the mine over the next few years but to no avail. I suspect others made many searches over the years, but I have not found any evidence to indicate Joshua Ward's rich silver mine was ever located.

http://www.webpanda.com/white_pine_county/historical_society/Jerry_Bowen/joshua_ward.htm
 

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Desertphile

Full Member
Feb 17, 2013
146
42
Primary Interest:
Prospecting
From the book "Deep Enough." The cabin is on private property and the owners very much dislike visitors.

Note that over the years people have claimed to have found the lost silver mine. The latest claim to finding the lost silver mine was made in year 2003.
 

lgadbois

Sr. Member
Mar 20, 2003
299
253
Yes Desertphile, I liked your video on YouTube. If your month on the trail was a bit trying, just imagine what the Ward family life must have been in settling and trying to survive in this very solitary and hostile land.

For those that are interested in searching for the Lost Joshua Ward Silver Mine, the partial story that came from this thread is from the book, "Deep Enough: A Working Stiff In The Western Mine Camps" by Frank A. Crampton. The book is a great read. The Ward story is just one part of the narration of Crampton's life adventures.
 

Apr 24, 2020
1
2
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
Hi Desertphile, I very much enjoyed your YouTube video on the Lost Joshua Ward mine which I've been researching for years. My personal opinion is that your geocoordinates are a bit off from where I think the cabin may be, but having not found it myself, that's just an opinion and not backed by fact. I'm curious to understand why you think the cabin is on private property or that owners very much dislike visitors (the second part is easy to believe if the land is private). I never read anything about that in Frank Crampton's book, is this knowledge you gained from another source or perhaps from your exploration expedition back in '88? Keep exploring and thanks for any insight you may be able to provide!
 

Wilderland

Newbie
Mar 24, 2012
2
16
Great Basin
Detector(s) used
Minelab Equinox 900, Teknetics Omega 8k, Killer Bees, White's TRX.
Primary Interest:
Prospecting
This may be the mother of all thread resurrections since Gypsy first posted this 16 years ago, and the last post was in 2020. I live in this area and the story has fascinated me since I first read about it some 15 years ago. I’m grateful Gypsy posted it because the site she took it from is long gone.

I was in Cherry Creek a week ago, and in Egan Canyon, the Ward’s likely path to their homestead, as well. There was an old Pony Express station and then a stage stop in this canyon.

Some parts of the story don’t match the geography of the area. Since I haven’t yet read Crampton’s narrative, I will presume he is the one describing where the cabin was, or simply repeating what Mrs Ward wrote to her father. Most specifically, Hamilton, the County seat in the 1860’s, is about 100 miles directly east of Cherry Creek, not south. Humboldt is a county, not a town, and is some 270 miles to the NE of Cherry Creek, across the state.

Anyway, I’m grateful to Desertphile for his video and coordinates. I went to that site . It has a spring and the remains of a very small log building—much too small for a family or oxen. There is no rock bluff like is seen in Crampton’s picture. It has been a cow or sheep camp relatively recently. Others who have been there agree that if the picture is authentic, this isn’t the site.

Trying to determine where their cabin may have been is difficult. There is a LOT of area to cover. My presumption is they took the old Pony Express trail, which by the 1870’s would have been a stage line. I presume it would have been very difficult to blaze a trail alone, in this country, in one covered wagon with a wife and two daughters. So I don’t think Joshua would have gone too far off the existing stage trail, and kept them close enough to return to Cherry Creek for supplies. But that is my 2023 supposition, and not an 1870’s pioneer mentality.

If Crampton really did leave Cherry Creek and find the cabin by late that afternoon, which included 20 miles of hiking, I believe it puts the cabin fairly close to Cherry Creek. But, this leaves probably two valleys and a whole lot of canyons with mountain ranges on either side of both valleys. I’m hoping Google Earth will help me find the rock outcropping. Although I’m about as close as one could be to the area, it’s still a lot of country to cover.
 

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