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Presentation
JACK OF ALL TRADES: J.W. SWILLING IN THE
JACK OF ALL TRADES:
J.W. SWILLING IN THE
April 1, 1992 - January 31, 1993
Display produced by Ileen Snoddy, Project Historian,
Community Relations Division; and the Art Division
Catalog edited by Ileen Snoddy. and designed by
SRP
Together, we can make a difference.
©1992 Salt River Project
Reproduced, edited and photographs
enhanced by: Neal Du Shane 10/31/2006
Reproduction Approved by: Ileen Snoddy,
Project Historian and SRP
The
We gratefully acknowledge the assistance of the following institution and their staffs:
Alabama Department of Archives and History; Arizona Historical Society (Phoenix); Arizona Historical Society (Tucson); Arizona Historical Society (Yuma); Arizona Historical Society - Fort Lowell Museum; Arizona Department of Library, Archives, and Public Records; Arizona Mining and Mineral Museum; Arizona State Museum; Arizona State University, Arizona Historical Foundation; Atlanta Historical Society, Inc.; Buckeye Historical Society; Cave Creek Museum; Chandler Historical Society; Desert Caballeros Western Museum; Fort Bowie National Historic Site; Mesa Southwest Museum; National Archives (Washington, DC); National Archives, Pacific Southwest Region (Laguna Niguel, California); Pendleton District Historical and Recreational Commission (South Carolina); Phoenix Museum of History; Phoenix Public Library; Pioneer, Arizona; Pueblo Grande Museum; Sharlot Hall Museum; Western Archaeological Reserve (Tucson).
SALT RIVER PROJECT
JACK OF ALL TRADES:
J.W. SWILLING IN THE
April 1, 1992 -January 31, 1993
Jack Swilling is often remembered as a colorful character whose notorious desperado
reputation overshadows his accomplishments.
During
the years 1856 through 1878, Swilling traveled throughout the
1992
marks the one-hundred-and-twenty-fifth anniversary of the founding of the
Swilling Ditch Company, the first canal company formed by stockholders in the
John
W. (Jack) Swilling was born April 1, 1830, the eighth of ten children, in
Several
of his nine brothers and sisters would later move west, settling in
Throughout his life, Swilling maintained periodic contact with his family back in the States, particularly his youngest sister Emily and their father, George. A letter to Swilling's brother James, written by their father in 1874, notes that George had received word from Jack for the first time in over two years. A few years after this letter was written, George died, and his death was ironically reported in the Arizona Miner.
1
2
Jack
Swilling first left home at seventeen with his brother Barry. Calling himself
Jackson W. Swilling, he enlisted as a musician at
General
Scott was occupying the city of
3
Muster
Rolls.
4
Discharge Certificate.
5
Mary Jane Gray Swilling Skinner Loaned by Isabell Leaver and Family
Jack
Swilling and his brother Barry were discharged at
Until
recently, researchers were unable to account for Swilling’s life during much of
the 1850’s. References to a wife and child left behind in
6
7
Letters Written by J.W. Swilling
To his Wife, Mary Jane.
Donated by Isabell Leaver and Family
8
9
10
Tintype
of Born in Loaned by Isabell
Leaver and Family
11
Map of
From the collections of the Arizona
Historical Society, Tucson
13
“Go west young man and grow with the
country . . . “ Those words were made famous by Horace Greeley, a newspaper man
in the 1850’s, who wrote of the opportunities he saw while visiting the West.
14
Diary shared
by
Mary Jane
and Jack Swilling
Loaned by Isabell Leaver and Family
15
Having grown up near the area of the
When Colonel Jacob Snively found gold along
Gila River east of
16
Civil War
Chronicle.
Loaned
by the
17
Early in 1860, Jack Swilling appeared in
the census records of the Pinos Altos, Gold Mining Camp near
In October, Swilling received a copy of the resolution formulated over Thomas Mastin's death and took his place in the Arizona Guard, assuming command soon after upon Helm's departure. The unit was soon called to the Santa Rita Copper Mines, to suppress trouble with the miners.
On February 14, 1862, Jefferson Davis
proclaimed
The Confederates attacked the Federal
outpost near Gila Bend in April of 1862 although there is no official record of
this encounter. Historians have reported that Swilling was part of the
Requisitioning of livestock from the
locales around Mesilla by the Confederate commander William Steele was a cause
for distress throughout the occupation. Authorities in EI Paso demanded payment
for cattle requisitioned. In June of 1862, Swilling refused to requisition
livestock near Pinos Altos, presumably from people he was familiar with from
mining in the area. The Confederate command found that Lieutenant Swilling had
interfered with an order to procure animals and ordered him to report to
headquarters to explain his conduct. A few weeks later Swilling was reported
deserted from
In early September, General Carleton,
Commander of the Union Forces in the territory, made Swilling an expressman to
carry the Army's mail. By January, the
18
Military Forts in the
From the Collections of
the
19
During
the Civil War, both the Confederacy and the
During
his involvement with the
20
22
23
25
Joseph R.
Walker
Rich Hill
28
Loaned by the
29
Although the romanticized image of a lone prospector panning for gold is a familiar one, the great bulk of gold and silver mined in the West came from hard rock mines owned not by men but by corporations.
Gold is found integrated physically though not chemically with quartz, a hard glasslike mineral. Silver occurs most-commonly as a compound, sulfide. In each case an elaborate system of machinery is required to tear the metal-bearing rock from the earth to crush and extract. The equipment is expensive, requiring an investment far beyond the means of the average prospector.
As a consequence, the usual course of events in the West was for a prospector to "strike it rich", take out what he could with pick, shovel, and pan, and then sell his claim. The new owner would bring in professional miners, dig shafts and tunnels and build a mill in which the ore could be processed.
30
Jack
Swilling, Pauline Weaver and A. H. Peeples are credited with the discovery of
the Rich Hill Mine, one of the richest placers ever found. Swilling sent
samples of gold from Rich Hill to General James H. Carleton. These samples are
said to have led Carleton to throw his support behind establishing the capital
of the newly created
According to one' early pioneer, A. F. Banta, Rich Hill was discovered by Jack Swilling and his party who were guided to the foot of the hill by a Pima Indian. Swilling had previously learned, through Indian sources, that placer gold could be found in large quantities. The guide was paid five ponies and fifty silver dollars, but because of his superstition regarding gold, he would not take the party directly to the source. The guide, fearful of retribution, slipped away at night. Berado Frayes discovered gold on top of Rich Hill and brought the gold to Swilling.
The surface of the rock was divided into squares; one square for each one of the party. The squares were numbered and drawn out of a hat, the ground staked off and numbered. Banta reports that "as there was practically no dirt to wash out, the gold being found in large nuggets, and either lay upon the surface of rock or in crevices, it was gotten out with spoons and butcher knives. It was decided by a majority of the group that after a man had filled his pint cup with gold he should knock off for the day." This rule was adhered to and many days they filled their cups by 11 o'clock, while in some cases it took till 3 o'clock in the afternoon. Swilling later sought out and paid the Pima guide.
31
Assayer’s
Scales.
Loaned
by the Mining and
Assayer’s Scales, used to weigh gold dust and nuggets were not the exclusive property of professional assayers. Gold became the medium of exchange in the territory for much of the 1800’s and nearly every miner, mine or mill owner, banker and storekeeper owned an assayer’s scale.
33
Loose ore particles, called placer gold, mix with sand
in the beds of streams and can be easily separated by swirling a mixture of
earth and water in a flat pan until the lighter materials spill over the edge
of the container leaving the heavier gold flakes or nuggets.
At first, whatever pans were available were used
including everything from washbasins to frying pans. Soon specially designed
miners' pans became available and the form of these pans has changed little
over the years.
Miners' pans average about eighteen inches in diameter
with a gently sloping wall seldom more than 3 inches high. Made of zinc, or
occasionally copper, these pans were mass produced throughout the nineteenth
century, and are still being made.
34
Shovels
and Picks. Loaned by the Mining and Pickaxes
and prybars were used as placer gold became harder to find. Prospectors
located “dry diggings” extracting ore from cracks in rock walls along the
streambeds. At first, miners employed nothing more than hunting or bowie
knives or an iron spoon for this task, but pickaxes and prybars were used
as the surface veins gave way to the harder rock underneath.
A
shovel was required to remove the gold-bearing
sand from the streambeds. Most mining shovels cannot be distinguished from
other types of shovels; the same hold true for pickaxes and crow and pry bars.
These tools were brought west not only for the miner, but the builder, mason
and railroadman as well.
35
Dry-washers, like the one seen here,
were used to extract the course gold from the sand without water.
Dry-Washer.
Loaned by the
36
Early Canal Construction.
38
39
Jack Swilling and other stockholders in the Swilling
Ditch Company brought their mining experience to canal building, as can be seen
in the use of miner's inches to
measure the amount of water in canals.
Miners lacking running water had to bring water to their
claims and workings from live streams. The water ran through a small wooden
waterway called a sluice. Sluices were often built by several miners with each
participant entitled to a share of the water. To measure the quality of water
to which each was entitled small holes were cut in the side of the sluice. The
flow of water through the opening was given the name "miner's inch".
In
40
The Salt
River has provided the major source of water to the inhabitants of the
The first
modern canal in the
During the
years 1865 through 1867, Jack Swilling worked as an express rider for the mail
traveling between
41
In November of 1867, Swilling and the other
stockholders filed for water rights. The area claimed was, "Opposite the
buttes on Salt River, at a big rock about two miles above the point known as
the hay camp and about twenty-five miles above the junction of the Gila and
On November 11 1867, the eight men in the Planters
Irrigating Company published their claim to, "all the waters of the
At the November 16th meeting in
The next day, the company voted a levy of sixteen
dollars per share. This assessment was imposed to raise money for the purchase
of tools and provisions for construction. Shareholders without money were paid
sixty seven dollars a month in addition to receiving tools and provisions to
work out their shares within three months and two weeks.
42
43
The stockholders arrived in the valley in December of
1867. The party, led by Jack Swilling,
included.
Peter Burns Frank Chapman
James Deslinger Darrell Duppa
Tomas Hoague John Larson
James Lee Thomas
McWilliams
Thomas McGoldrick Michael McGrath
Frank Metzler Antonio
Moreas
James Smith Ludivic
Vandermark
P.T. (Jack)
Walters Joseph
Woods
44
Like
the Hohokam before them, the American Settlers used handheld canal digging
tools for a majority of the work. Mule-drawn
The
Swilling party first began digging on the north bank of the Salt River, across
from the buttes where
45
“That
this whole valley had at some time been densely populated cannot be
doubted...': wrote John T. Alsap in 1872,
"... although neither history tradition or legend gives any account of who
the inhabitants were from whence they came or whither they have gone. The whole
valley is dotted with the ruins of ancient towns and buildings. The great canal
commonly called the "Montezuma Acequia" intersects the river near the
upper end of the valley and runs thence in a northwesterly direction for
several miles. It would take a little work to put it in condition to be used as
of old although there are trees of a foot in diameter, standing in it. Smaller
ditches leading out from it at convenient distances show that it was used for
purposes of irrigation and that the whole valley has been under cultivation. .
. "
Swilling's party had noticed the Montezuma Acequia. The second canal attempt followed the outline of this old Hohokam canal dug approximately 500 years before.
In March of 1868, the first portion of the Swilling ditch was complete. The Arizona Miner reported that over 600 acres were planted, mostly barley, wheat and corn.
“The
principal crops of this season were com and beans. Jack Swilling, John Larson,
Jacob Denslinger and Tom McGoldrick were the chief farmers. There was much rain
during the season and the com crop was especially good. One who saw it says
that Swilling had about 15 acres of as fine of corn as might be seen in any of
the Western states that are celebrated for the production of this grain. In no
season since that year have our farmers been able to raise so good a crop of
corn. . . “
46
47
48
On July 4, 1870, Jack Swilling, Thomas Barnum, and John
T. Alsap published intent to begin the Phoenix Ditch Company above the head of
the ditch owned by the Swilling Irrigation Canal Company.
49
On December 6 1870, Swilling, B. W. Hardy and four others established the Hardy Irrigating Canal Company which the next year became the Tempe Irrigating Canal Company. Eleven days later, Swilling was on the other side of the river with a party of men, laying out the Hayden Ditch. Swilling also had an interest in the Miller Ditch, which he sold in 1872.
In 1873, Swilling, Ludivic Vandermark, James McKinnie and others constructed a ditch
upstream
a dozen miles east of
The Pima and Maricopa Indians began a ditch in the valley soon after the arrival of the
Americans.
The Americans and Mexicans farming upstream on the
50
51
“A
Settlement called “
Field
notes of Wilfred Ingalls, U.S. Deputy Surveyor, March 1868
52
Land Bond.
Loaned by the
53
By the fall of 1868, one hundred people had settled in
the vicinity of Swilling's Ditch and the Phoenix Settlement near what is now
When the Territorial Legislature created
According to early settlers and the newspapers of the
time period, Jack Swilling, anxious to have his homestead become the site of
the future city's offices, bribed the ballot taker to report the first election
vote in favor of
54
Pen and
Ink Sketch. Loaned by
Had
to be used as the first county courthouse. The
dwelling “Swilling’s
Castle”, had been built with this in mind.
Donated by E. Darton Harris
55
Early Agriculture in the
56
"At this time [1872], 5,000 acres are under cultivation and
the settlement's population is 700. The settlement was named
The principal crops are barley, wheat, corn, sorghum,
Irish potatoes, sweet potatoes and peanuts. Cotton and tobacco have also been
tried successfully but not to any great extent while almost every known garden
vegetable can be raised in abundance. The average yield per acre of wheat,
barley and corn is about 2,000 lb. per acre. The average price of grain last
year was 4 1/2 cents per pound and all that was raised found ready sale. At
present grain is worth 5 1/2 cts. per pound. No tame hay has yet been cut here
to my knowledge, but alfalfa does well and I think clover would be a good crop.
Sorghum and corn fodder is the principle rough feed for stock and sells for
about $10.00 per ton. . .
But few experiments in the way of fruit raising have
been tried in this valley but in every instance when tried have proven
successful. This season a large number of fruit trees of almost every kind have
been put out and I have no doubt will prove profitable."
J. T. Alsap, 1872.
57
58
From the fall of 1866 to the late spring of 1867,
Swilling served as an express rider from
In the summer of 1869, Jack Swilling was appointed the
As early as June of 1869, Swilling also served as the
community’s Justice of the Peace.
60
Marriage Certificate.
Loaned by the
61
Oath of Office.
Donated by
E. Darton Harris
62
Jack Swilling stage this photograph of himself and his adopted
son Gavilan in 1877. Their portrayal of a desperado and his Indian body guard
was a response to the rumors regarding Swilling which had begun to circulate
throughout the territory.
64
Doctors' care in the territory was provided by only a handful
of physicians, mostly Army surgeons stationed in the area. Settlers were forced
to rely on their own knowledge of plants, herbs, and folk remedies. Medicines
which were available often contained drugs such as alcohol, morphine, and
opium.
Before coming to the territory, Swilling was struck on
the head with a revolver, fracturing his skull. Shot in his left side, he
carried the bullet for the remainder of his life. These wounds caused him great
pain, for which he was prescribed morphine. Swilling became addicted to Perry
Davis Vegetable Painkiller which contained both alcohol and opium as major
ingredients.
Jack Swilling may have been trepanned. This operation,
used by Army surgeons during the Civil War, consisted of drilling into the
skull to release pressure. A metal plate was then attached to the patient's
head shielding the area.
This combination of pain killers and alcohol caused
changes in Swilling's personality. As the years passed his dependence on
narcotics increased. Informed of his actions while under these influences,
Swilling had an affidavit sworn out, stating he should be arrested and sent to
an asylum if his behavior reverted. During his 1878 trial, Jack testified:
"Well, whiskey alone never does it, but taking the narcotic and whiskey
together makes me do things - I suppose I do. My wife tells me I do - which is
very bad, that I know I wouldn't do if sensible".
65
Jack Swilling's reputation as a desperado was carefully
cultivated by himself and others both during his lifetime and in the years
after his death. Swilling reported the number of men he killed as between two
and fourteen on different occasions. Notwithstanding his service in two wars
and in several armed units, there are two reported instances of Swilling
killing another person in civilian life.
The first report, from the memoirs of a fellow miner in
the Pinos Altos gold camp, recounts Swilling's accidental shooting of his best
friend during a riot in the town's dance hall.
Accounts of Swilling killing a man identified only as
"a Chileno" in Wickenburg in the fall of 1867, appear in both the Arizona Miner for that week and in the
reminiscences of several early pioneers. It is reported that the man had told
others he would kill Jack Swilling on sight. When they met in the street, both
drew their pistols at the same time but Swilling fired first. The incident was
reported as self-defense.
66
Perry
Davis Painkiller Bottle. Loaned by Perry
Davis Painkiller Trade
Cards. Loaned by
67
In the spring of 1878, Jack Swilling, George Munroe and
Andrew Kirby traveled to White Picacho to bring back remains of Colonel Jacob
Snively who had been killed while prospecting in 1871.
A few weeks after Snively's remains had been re-interred
in the Swilling family graveyard, Jack Swilling was in Gillett. While drinking,
he allegedly identified himself, Kirby and Munroe as the robbers in a Wells
Fargo stage robbery which had occurred near Wickenburg in late April. Jack
Swilling and Andrew Kirby were arrested on both Federal (mail tampering) and
Territorial (robbery) charges and taken to
Soon after their arrest it was discovered that the
crime had actually taken place in
On (Saturday)
August 12, 1878, (6:30PM) Jack
Swilling died while incarcerated at
68
Arrest Record.
69
70
Soon after Swilling’s death,
Joseph Evans recanted his
allegations toward
Swilling and the others and
arrested a second
set of men in connection
with the robbery. On
October 5, 1878, Andrew
Kirby was released
from jail.
71
73
Trinidad Swilling's parents, Ignatius Escalantes and
Petra Mejia, were
reportedly emigres from
After Swilling's death, Trinidad moved to
74
Jack and Trinidad Swilling had seven
children: Georgia (1865), Matilda (1867-1875), Lelia (1871), Elizabeth (?),
Barry (1874), Matilda Adeline (1876-1879), and John William, Jr. (1878 Sometime after the Swilling’s arrival
in Many Arizona Pioneers claimed that Hank
Swilling, a member of the Clanton gang, was Jack Swilling’s son. The First
Territorial Census indicates he was born in
75
Editors note - Photo on left: Lillian Swilling is the woman in the white skirt and light blouse. Woman seated is Dr. Whitesides. Woman standing in center is believed to be Georgia Swilling Butler who died shortly after this picture was taken.
Editors note – Photo on right: Is believed to be Lillian
Butler, Georgia Swilling Butlers daughter who would have been 20 years old in
1910. Lillian Swilling’s death certificate states she died in 1907 at
76
During its
first few months, the
Late in
life,
"No woman was here before her
except me; I don't claim that, because I don't claim to be white...I was the
first one here but they don't call Mexicans white, I come from
The dispute
of the first "white" woman to settle the
. . . The Herald sticks to it that Mrs.
L. C. Gray is the lady while the Gazette stoutly denied the allegation. Cease
your turmoil gentlemen, you appear to know nothing whatever about the case. We
were in Salt River Valley long before either of you ever saw the Territory and
the only woman we then saw was the good, ladylike wife of the late Jack
Swilling, who, although of Mexican birth, is white of face and heart.
Trinidad
stated in oral histories, that during the digging of the canal she spent much
of her time in
The 1860
census lists only 44 Anglo-American women age 16 or older living in the area of
present-day
79
Soon
after their marriage in
81
87
89
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