Hecla Consolidated Mining Company records
Scope and Contents
The most important materials in the collection are interoffice correspondence (1877-1881, 1885, 1893) between mining department superintendent Samuel A. Barbour and general manager Henry Knippenberg and other company officials. In addition there are outgoing letterpress volumes (1871-1886) of Noah Armstrong, J.W. Earl, Henry Knippenberg, George Conway, and others. There are employment records (1876-1922) including payrolls, time books, and payments charged to employees' accounts for store and boarding house; financial records (1875-1899) including bills, freight bills, journals, ledgers, supply records, and trial balances; minor legal documents; a minute book (1898-1906); and production records (1877-1895) include assay reports, mine timber books, ore receipts, and ore shipments. In addition there is an unsigned account (possibly by Benjamin F. White) or a prospecting trip in 1880 to Lion City.
Dates
- Creation: 1871-1922
Language of Materials
English
Conditions Governing Access
Collection is open for research.
Conditions Governing Use
Researchers must use collection in accordance with the policies of the Montana Historical Society. The Society does not necessarily hold copyright to all materials in the collection. In some cases permission for use may require additional authorization from the copyright owners. For more information contact an archivist.
Administrative History
The Hecla Consolidated Mining Company was organized in January, 1877, at Indianapolis, Indiana. The company then bought mining property at Glendale, Montana, in Beaverhead County, and involved itself in the smelting and reduction of gold, silver, lead, and copper.
The first mine manager was Noah Armstrong, a local Glendale speculator, who was responsible for the company's formation. His tenure lasted two years until he was replaced in 1879 by E. C. Atkins, founder of an Indianapolis saw works. Atkins served only two years in the post. During his management the company's smelter burned and a new structure had to be erected at a cost of $20,000. This calamity, coupled with poor management, led the concern into a debt of $77,000. A change in management was promptly called for by the stockholders.
Henry Knippenberg, at that time managing director of the Atkins Saw Works, was offered the position as Hecla's general manager. His decision to accept the job came in March, 1881, but only after an on-the-spot tour of company property the month before. Following the inspection Knippenberg's report to the Board of Directors was not an optimistic one. Despite this report and his initial reservations, Knippenberg believed he could make the Hecla properties turn a profit--thus he accepted the position. He based his decision on fifteen years experience in the manufacturing business and his five years as a Pennsylvania coal mine manager. Knippenberg immediately obtained financing to correct the company's unstable condition. After getting $95,000 from New York backers he wasted no time in getting to Glendale in April, 1881. Within three months the firm's debt had been repaid and a ten percent monthly dividend was returned to the stockholders.
By 1886 the Hecla Mercantile and Banking Company, a separate subsidiary of the mining company, was organized with capital stock of $100,000. The company was a consolidation of Gaffney and Purdam of Melrose; Armstrong-and Losee, and Noah Armstrong and Company of Glendale, and Wilson, Rote and Company of Hecla. These represented three mercantile firms and one bank. Henry Knippenberg also served as the concern's president during its twelve years of business. He also involved himself in local politics, serving for a time as a Beaverhead County Comissioner, a state representative, and a member of Montana's 1889 Constitutional Convention.
Through the 1880s and early 1890s the Hecla Consolidated continued to prosper, and the Sherman Silver Purchase Act of 1890 encouraged the production of silver. The repeal of the act, though, in 1893, ended the federal government's required monthly purchases of this precious metal. The company's yearly reports reflected the loss. Along with an accompanying decline in available ore of all kinds, the Hecla's small profit soon turned into a deficit. The mining firm ceased operations in 1904. Henry Knippenberg purchased the Hecla properties in 1906, for $28,000 and soon after disposed of them himself. A syndicate of Philadelphia investors bought the mining interests and organized a new Hecla Consolidated Mining Company.
Extent
8.5 linear feet
Abstract
The Hecla Consolidated Mining Company was a Glendale, Montana, gold and silver mining company. Records (1871-1900; 1921-1922) include incoming correspondence to mining department superintendent Samuel A. Barbour, interoffice correspondence (1877-1881) and letterpress books (1871-1886) of outgoing correspondence of general manager Henry Knippenberg. There are also employment records (1876-1922); financial records; a minute book (1898-1906); minor legal documents; production records; and miscellany.
Arrangement
This collection is arranged by series. One folder in Employment Records series housed in mapcase.
Physical Location
1:1-1
Immediate Source of Acquisition
Acquisition information available upon request.
- Title
- Guide to the Hecla Consolidated Mining Company records
- Author
- Finding aid prepared by MHS staff
- Date
- 2008
- Description rules
- Finding Aid Based On Dacs (Describing Aechives: A Content Standard)2nd Edition
- Language of description
- Undetermined
- Script of description
- Code for undetermined script
- Language of description note
- Finding aid written in English.
- Sponsor
- Funding for encoding this finding aid was provided through a grant awarded by the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Repository Details
Part of the Montana Historical Society, Research Center Archives Repository
225 North Roberts
PO Box 201201
Helena MT 59620-1201 United States
406-444-2681
406-444-2696 (Fax)
mhslibrary@mt.gov