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Going Underground in Bisbee Arizona




Bisbee – Circa 1916

Bisbee was founded as a copper, gold, and silver mining town in 1880, and
named in honor of Judge DeWitt Bisbee, one of the financial backers of the
adjacent Copper Queen Mine. In 1929, the county seat was moved from
Tombstone to Bisbee, where it remains.
Greed was major motivator in town. As a result the Bisbee Deportation
took place. The workers lived and worked in deplorable conditions and
also small wages. Therefore the workers went on strike and as a result the deportation took place to prevent profit losses.
The deportation was the the illegal kidnapping and deportation of about 1,300 striking mine workers, their supporters, and citizen bystanders by 2,000 members of a deputized posse, who arrested these people beginning on
July 12, 1917. The action was orchestrated by Phelps Dodge, the major mining company in the area, which provided lists of workers and others who were
to be arrested in Bisbee, Arizona, to the Cochise County sheriff,
Harry C. Wheeler.
These workers were arrested and held at a local baseball park before
being loaded onto cattle cars and deported 200 miles (320 km) to Tres Hermanas in New Mexico. The 16-hour journey was through desert without
food and with little water. Once unloaded, the deportees, most without
money or transportation, were warned sternly against returning to Bisbee.



Workers awaiting their cattle car deportation Source -Wikipedia
Workers being held at the local ball park. Note the armed guards. Source – Wikipedia
Copper Queen Mine

Martha and I visited Bisbee and took a tour of the Copper Queen Mine, a
hard rock mine in Bisbee that is played out and is now a tourist attraction.
Outfitted in hard hat, miner’s headlamp, thousands of Bisbee visitors ride into the Queen Mine Tour each year—heading underground and back in time. Tour guides, retired Phelps Dodge employees, lead the groups 1,500 feet into
the mine and recount mining days, techniques, dangers and drama. Adding a personal touch, the miner-turned-tour guides help visitors experience what
it was like to work underground. Tours depart each day, seven days a week,
from the Queen Mine Tour Building, located immediately south of Old Bisbee’s business district, off the U.S. 80 interchange.
The town is an interesting place though we didn’t see as much of it as we
wanted. Instead we did the mine tour and then went to a local micro-brewery.





After donning our safety equipment we were ushered onto the mine train.
This is the original train that ferried workers underground and back to the
surface. It’s very narrow and you sit facing forward while straddling a seat
somewhat like sitting on a horse saddle.



About to descend into the depths of the mine







One of our more “unique” selfies


Tour Guide and previous Phelps Dodge mine worker making sure everyone is ok with going underground. 
At this point we are about 1000″ into the mine tunnel.
Getting ready to dis-embarked the train for a visit to a former work area
The group making its way to a stop in the mine for a little orientation to the mining lifestyle
On our way up to a large room Quartz deposits in the mine wall
Typical work area within the mine. The bracing and scaffold in the background is typical of the type of 
reinforcement used inside the mine to shore up the weight above after blasting and clearing the tailing’s 
from the tunnel or openings



I think the guide told us that level three is about 300′ below the surface


Mine supervisors peddle cart. Supervisors used these to get around within the mine. This saved time.
 Miners would hide these to frustrate the supervisors.
Examples of hard rock drills used in the mine to drill blasting holes. The holes were then loaded 
with dynamite.



Of the two drills on display, one was equipped with water spray to keep the dust down. Prior to this innovation miners would display symptoms that mirrored “black lung,” The disease became less prevalent after the introduction of water while drilling.


After the holes were drilled they were loaded with dynamite with a blasting cap inserted and then a fuse which ran outside the drill hole. The fuses were cut to length depending on which holes had to be blown first. The center most holes were blown first to clear space for the rock debris to fall into and then the blasting continued (all in rapid succession from center to the outermost drilled holes). This allowed the debris to be cleared by mine workers without rock getting jammed up inside the diameter of the blast.
Mine shaft elevator. This was formed using the same shoring/scaffolding shown above, The elevators were 
used to ferry men and equipment to and from the surface. They also provided room for fresh air to come 
into the mine.




Life was hard in the mine. But some comforts were brought along for the miners use.




Mining in Bisbee wasn’t limited to hard rock mining. It also included
strip mining and where possible hydraulic mining.


This gigantic hole is the “Lavender Pit” The pit is an open pit mine that was mined by blasting through 
the rock and then using machinery to remove the tailing’s and bring them to the top for processing.

After the mining tours we made our way to the “Old Bisbee Brewery”
This spot is a local’s favorite and turned out to have great beer.


Downtown Bisbee











I can recommend the mine tour and the Brewery. It was very interesting to
learn the techniques used to extract the ores. The Copper Queen produced
some the most pure copper ore ever found it averaged 25% in purity.