Richard Gird: The Man Who Made Tombstone Possible


A Man Who Had Already Mapped Arizona

Richard Gird was born March 29, 1836, near Cedar Lake in Herkimer County, New York, the son of a prosperous dairy farmer who had trained as a teacher. At sixteen, Richard and two farmhands headed west by way of the Isthmus of Panama to join his eldest brother Henry, who was prospecting in El Dorado County, California. The crossing cost him considerably: he contracted malaria on the isthmus and spent months recovering in the Russian River Valley, where he and Henry started a stock farm and he dabbled in real estate.

In 1858 he sailed to Valparaiso, Chile, tried prospecting along the Andes without success, and found work supervising construction of the first railroad in South America. Back in California, he joined the Colorado River gold placer rush in 1861, arriving near Yuma. After a brief partnership running a ferry at Ehrenberg, he organized a prospecting party into Apache country and opened the first trail to the site of present-day Prescott. He claimed, with some justification, that he brought the first assaying and civil engineering equipment into central Arizona.

His most consequential early achievement was a commission from the Arizona territorial legislature. In 1865, Gird prepared the first official topographical map of Arizona Territory, published by Britton and Company in San Francisco, with colored geological sections prepared in collaboration with Professor Josiah D. Whitney, State Geologist of California. That map would prove useful in ways he could not yet anticipate. Over the following decade he ran a real estate firm in Prescott, returned to California to design hydraulic pumps with his brother-in-law, came back to Arizona to work Mohave County mines, surveyed the Signal townsite, and opened an assay office at the McCrackin Mine.

By January 1878, Gird was forty-one years old, experienced in every aspect of western mining, and working as mining engineer and assayer for the Signal Mining and Milling Company in western Arizona. His career had taken him to four continents and across a dozen mining districts. What happened next would overshadow all of it.


The Piece Nearly the Size of a Hen's Egg

Al Schieffelin was working as a miner at Signal when his brother Ed arrived from a long prospecting season near Camp Huachuca in southern Arizona, carrying ore samples from the hills soldiers had told him would yield nothing but his tombstone. Al showed one of the samples to Gird. Gird later recalled the moment in specific terms: "The piece was nearly the size of a hen's egg." He recognized it on sight as coming from a particular geological formation he knew from his territorial map work.

Gird proposed a partnership on the spot. Ed had almost no money. Gird agreed to fit out the traveling rig himself and cover the expedition's costs in exchange for an equal share. There was no written agreement. The three men, Ed and Al Schieffelin and Richard Gird, left Signal on February 14, 1878, in an old blue spring wagon pulled by Ed's mule Beck and Gird's mule Mollie, with Al's bay mare tied behind.


The Journey South

Their route ran down the Big Sandy to Bill Williams' Fork, then to Wickenburg, across to Hayden's Ferry on the Salt River, through Tucson (where they spread their blankets in a corral), then southeast to Pantano and down the old Butterfield stage route toward the San Pedro River. The journey was not without incident. Somewhere along the way, a loaded rifle discharged accidentally inside the wagon. The ball passed through Gird's coat and shirt without touching skin.

They made camp at the old Brunckow Mine adobe, an abandoned structure that Gird described as having served as a smugglers' cover. Within twenty-four hours of arrival, he had set up an assay furnace in the fireplace. He had sold his button balance (a small precision scale used to weigh the bead of pure metal, called a button, that remains in the crucible after smelting ore) to the McCrackin company before leaving, so he improvised a new one from a polished steel rod with two divergent scratched lines, calibrated against small reference beads of known weight that he carried with him. It was precisely the kind of practical problem-solving that made Gird indispensable to the venture.


An Immense Button

Gird's account of the actual discovery differs subtly from Ed Schieffelin's, as might be expected when two men remember the same event decades later. In Gird's version, he was working at his assay furnace one afternoon when Ed came in with a collection of float samples, including one water-worn piece that Gird recognized immediately as horn silver. He put it through the furnace while it was already hot, "getting an immense button." He valued it later on an apothecary's scale in Tucson at $2,200 per ton.

The next morning Gird went out with Ed, and together they followed the float up the gulch to find the ledge that would become the Lucky Cuss mine. In his 1907 account, Gird was precise about what this moment meant: it was, he wrote, "the real discovery of the mines now known the world over as the Tombstone mines." The ore was there. He had now confirmed it.


How the Mines Got Their Names

The naming of two of Tombstone's most famous mines came directly from Gird's experience in those first weeks of discovery.

When another prospector named Oliver Boyer, whom Gird described plainly as "a desperado who later killed a man," jumped one of their claims, Ed Schieffelin suggested simply letting him have it. Gird refused. He strapped on his revolver, walked to the claim, and methodically kicked down Boyer's corner monuments while Boyer sat on a nearby boulder whittling a stick and watching him. Gird resurveyed the claim and rebuilt each monument. "That was the beginning and end of all the contention that we ever had in the Tombstone District," he later wrote. The mine took its name from the episode: the Contention.

The Tough Nut got its name from a different kind of difficulty. An ore vein does not run straight and level underground; it angles, dips, and shifts direction, and a prospector reading the surface rock has to figure out which way the vein is trending so he knows where to sink a shaft. With this particular ledge, working out that direction from what was visible at the surface was, in Gird's words, "extremely difficult." It was, he said, "too tough a nut to crack."

When Gird asked Ed how much he thought they might receive for their discoveries, Ed "ridiculed the idea" of $50,000.


Building the District

Once the claims were staked, Gird became the operational center of the entire enterprise. He surveyed and connected all of the original claims and established the regulations for the Tombstone Mining District. He served as the district's first postmaster from December 2, 1878, to May 3, 1880, which placed him at the center of all official communication in the camp during its most explosive growth years.

His largest undertaking was the quartz mill at Millville on the San Pedro River, about nine miles west of Tombstone. He traveled to San Francisco to supervise the mill's fabrication at the Fulton Iron Works personally, turning down an offer of the General Superintendency of the Signal Company to do so. The Millville mill was operational by approximately June 1, 1879. Gird also built a sawmill in the Huachuca Mountains to supply timber for construction. He brought his wife to Millville in early January 1880 and made their home there, working from the mill rather than the town on the hill.

His Superintendent's role at the Tombstone Mill and Mining Company meant that the day-to-day running of the mines fell to him. When Ed Schieffelin could not supply sufficient ore for ten stamps and left to go prospecting again, Gird placed Gus Barron in Ed's job. Barron was soon supplying ore for thirty stamps.


What He Thought of the Schieffelins

Gird's 1907 account of the discovery, published in Out West magazine, contains the most candid character sketches of all three partners. He was not unkind, but he was honest.

Al Schieffelin he described as "a fine character, naturally brave, generous to a fault, and one who never failed a friend." Ed was more complicated: "somewhat self-conscious, given to personal display, ever worrying what others might be thinking of his goings and comings," but "at bottom, in all affairs of life, was honorable and true."

On the question of technical competence he was blunt. Neither brother had any knowledge of mining or milling, but "I did," he wrote simply. "Ed for a while attempted to superintend the mine, but in a short time he gave it up."


The Sale and an Unusual Act of Generosity

The Schieffelin brothers sold their interests in the mines relatively early, and in Gird's assessment "greatly against my advice." He held on. In March 1881, he sold the majority of his interests for $600,000. By that point the brothers had already sold, and they had received far less for their shares than Gird received for his.

The sale brought legal trouble. The heirs of T. J. Bidwell, who had died in July 1880, filed a $300,000 lawsuit claiming that Bidwell and Gird had been equal partners in acquiring Arizona mineral properties at the time of Bidwell's death. The case was settled in Gird's favor in the first instance; on appeal he chose to end the matter by paying the Bidwell heirs $100,000.

What he did next was remarkable. With no written agreement ever having existed among the three original partners, and no legal obligation of any kind, Gird calculated the difference between what he had received and what the Schieffelins had received. He then divided that excess equally among all three of them, so that in the end each partner received the same total amount. "We somehow tacitly understood that we had an equal share or interest," he wrote, as if explaining something obvious. He offered no further comment on it.


After Tombstone

Gird used the proceeds to purchase the Santa Ana del Chino Ranch in San Bernardino County, California, a property of some 37,000 acres. He became a partner with H. T. Oxnard in the Chino Beet Sugar factory and devoted himself to stockbreeding and experimental agriculture. Contemporary accounts described him in these later years as quiet, modest, a man who neither drank nor smoked. One account called him "a silent but powerful force, steadily working out his ends in the face of obstacles."

He died in Los Angeles on May 30, 1910, at age seventy-four. The silver district he had helped bring into existence had by then been operating for more than thirty years, producing ore from mines he had surveyed, processed in mills he had designed and built.


The Partner Nobody Mentions

The standard telling of the Tombstone founding story centers on Ed Schieffelin: the lone prospector who defied the soldiers' warnings, found silver in the hills, and named his claim after the tombstone they said he would get. That story is true as far as it goes. But it omits the engineer who confirmed the find, funded the journey, improvised the assay equipment, kicked down a claim-jumper's monuments, built the mills that turned ore into bullion, and kept the whole operation running while the discoverer went wandering again.

Gird left one other detail out of his published account. He made no mention of John Vosburg, the Tucsonan who had grubstaked all three partners for $300 in supplies and equipment on their first trip south, and who received a one-quarter interest in ten claims in exchange. Vosburg's contribution is documented only in his own statement in the Arizona Historical Society's biographical files. Gird's silence on the point, like his tacit equal-share arrangement with the Schieffelins, tells you something about how he operated: he remembered obligations when it suited him, and apparently forgot them when it did not.

What is beyond dispute is that Tombstone as a mining district required both men. Ed Schieffelin provided the persistence and the discovery. Richard Gird provided everything else.


Sources

  • Underhill, Lonnie E., ed. "The Tombstone Discovery: The Recollections of Ed Schieffelin and Richard Gird." Arizona and the West, Vol. 21, No. 1 (Spring 1979), pp. 37–76. [Presents Schieffelin's Bancroft Library memoir (c. 1886–87) and Gird's 1907 Out West article, "True Story of the Discovery of Tombstone," with editorial notes. Primary source for all direct quotations and biographical detail in this article.]
  • Love, Alice Emily. "History of Tombstone to 1887." M.A. thesis, University of Arizona, 1933. [Comprehensive narrative history of the founding era; context for the mining district's early development.]
  • Keith, Stanton B. Index of Mining Properties in Cochise County, Arizona. Arizona Bureau of Geology and Mineral Technology, 1973. [Production statistics and ownership history for individual Tombstone District mines, including the Lucky Cuss, Contention, and Tough Nut.]