"Lift the mask from some of our courts
and begin to get to your work of salvation"
By Rob Carrigan, robcarrigan1@gmail.com
In my earlier life as a newspaper publisher, it seems to me like I followed around in Ernest Chapin Gard’s footsteps – just about 100 years after he first made his appearance in Colorado. I published the Cripple Creek Gold Rush, which was a direct descendent of Gard’s Cripple Creek Crusher. I managed the Tri-Lakes Tribune in Monument and the Palmer Lake area, a century after Gard’s Palmer Lake Herald and Monument Register. I had worked at papers that covered Mono County in California that had ties, and had a friend that edited the paper in Gardnerville, Nevada with links to Gard. All were temporary haunts of the bombastic journalist, newspaper publisher, and mining promoter. For a while there, I thought there was some sort of weird Ju-Ju between me and the guy, 100-years-displaced.
Then I figured out that this
fellow started or promoted a paper in most every promising mining camp in the
West.
“E. Chapin Guard was at
Palmer Lake much of the time between 1888 and 1895,” wrote my friend Daniel W.
Edwards in a paper for the Palmer Lake Historical Society in July of 2010.
Edwards recently retired from the U.S. Department of Comerce in Washington,
D.C. and authored the book Dr. William
Finely Thompson: Dental Surgeon and Founder of Palmer Lake.
“He published Palmer Lakes
first newspaper, served on the first town council, was town attorney, a justice
of the peace, filed claims to local mining properties, and wrote a booklet boosting
Palmer Lake. Yet, being a restless and ambitious man, Gard could not stay put
for long. He established, published, or edited 11 Colorado newspapers in during
his career, and his articles appeared in at least six others. As a roving
journalist and newspaper editor in Colorado, Gard often resorted to poetry,
humor, and sarcasm in his writings and fully exercised his right to freedom of
the press. He did contribute to the dialog of democracy by criticizing public
officials, but his unrestrained enthusiasm and often bombastic, intemperate
rhetoric also provoked strong opposition. Many newspapers of that era practiced
a similar style of journalism.”
The Mountain Democrat of
Placerville, California, had this to say about E.C. Gard, near the end of his
colorful career in its June 4, 1926 edition.
“Thirty years ago, when new
mining camps were constantly springing up in the state of Colorado, each new
mining camp had a newspaper that boosted everything from the skies above to
what was expected to be found thousands of feet underground, and in most cases
the name of the editor was E. Chapin Gard. There were two things that Gard
could do more of and do better than anyone else in camp, one was write boost
articles and the other was to drink good whiskey. He did both constantly and
consistently, and helped many men become wealthy but never saved any money
himself …
E. Chapin Gard, still
boosting, with more pep than half the men we meet every day, who has probably
been compelled to forget his age in order not to become old, an example of what
it means to always look on the bright side, to look for sunshine instead of
clouds, to side-step gloom and cultivate happiness and contentment.”
Of course Gard made enemies,
often with his own rhetoric.
“Don’t send your pennies to
India,” Gard is quoted in the Pagosa Springs News on July 1, 1898. “The
Hottentot can get along for awhile without your contributions … We need
missionaries and money and tornados of prayers and rivers of tears to civilize
the heathens in darkest America. Turn your gospel machines loose on Denver’s
gates of Hell. Batter down the stone walls of Capitol Hill and see Satan and
his imps scamper. Go into the big department stores and offices, where physical
serfdom cringes and moral ruin crouches and weeps, and rescue the perishing.
Lift the mask from some of our courts and begin to get to your work of salvation as
rapidly and vigorously as possible. Pry up a few boards under the altar in
front of some of our pulpits and see if we don’t need several tons of saving
grace right here in Denver.”
E. Chapin Gard was just getting
warmed up.
###
Photo info: men and women
pose at the Golden Eagle Mine, possibly near Palmer Lake in Colorado. A stuffed
golden eagle is mounted on a piece of wood above the opening. The woman wears a
long dress with a velvet panel, a jacket, a flat-brimmed hat and fingerless
gloves. Horace Swartley Poley, photograpeher, estimated creation date between 1892
and 1901. Western History/Genealogy
Department, Denver Public Library. It is possible the bearded fellow on right
is E. Chapin Gard.
No comments:
Post a Comment