By Steven Wade Veatch
Miners in the Cripple Creek mining district once drilled, blasted, and mucked deep underground by the light of a candle. Not only did these candles illuminate their work areas, but they also provided shadows for Tommyknockers to hide in.
In Cripple Creek, as in other mining districts, mine owners supplied miners with candles; however, they required miners to buy the holders for the candles. Miners called these holders “candlesticks.” Most candlesticks were mass-produced and sold through mining supply stores and catalogs—even Sears and Roebuck sold miners’ candlesticks. These generally had similar designs, but there were a large number of patented variations.
To make it easier for miners to replace damaged or worn out candlesticks, a purveyor of these basic devices visited Cripple Creek and other mining towns and peddled them directly to the miners. In figure 1, a man is selling candlesticks to a group of miners. He used two burros to pack the miners’ candlesticks from town to town.
An entire industry developed producing mining candles made from stearic acid and paraffin wax. The stearic candles used in Cripple Creek had many benefits: They emitted little smoke and were suited for some of the poor ventilation found in underground mining. These candles gave a steady source of light and were not easily blown out in a draft. Candles were easy to handle and simpler to transport than oil lamps. Mine owners viewed candles as less of a fire risk than oil lamps. A miner could easily put out a candle that tumbled over before it set mine timbers on fire. If a miner knocked over an oil lamp its destructive flames spread rapidly.
Candle manufacturers set the standard diameter of candles at 0.75 inches. Candle lengths varied, but averaged about 9 inches (Bartos, 2010). Manufacturers wrapped candles in sets of six and packed them into boxes of 120 or 240 candles. The cost of a 240-unit box was between $3 and $5 (Bartos, 2010). Miners burned through three or four candles per day (Bartos, 2010).
Figure 3. Diagram of a typical miner’s candlestick. Source: Wilson and Bobrink, 1982. |
Figure 4. The March 1899 patent design for William Pleasants’ candlestick. Pleasants was a resident of Víctor. Source: Ramsdell and Wagner, 1982. |
Table
1.
Miner's Candlesticks Patents As
applied for by residents of the Cripple Creek Mining District, Colorado
Springs, and Colorado City, Colorado. |
|||
Applicant |
Residence |
Date |
Patent No. |
William
Lincicum and Charles F. Lewis |
Colorado City |
Nov. 1895 |
549,925 |
William
H. Pleasants* |
Victor |
Mar. 1899 |
D-30,406 |
William H. Pleasants |
Victor |
June,1899 |
D-30,991 |
Amede Bernier |
Victor |
Aug. 1899 |
631,270 |
Christopher Peacock* |
Altman |
Aug. 1900 |
656,209 |
Charles
Cornell and Felix John Troughton |
Victor |
Jan. 1901 |
665,067 |
John B. Lindahl* |
Colorado Springs |
Oct. 1905 |
801,465 |
Harry
D. Pelham and Charles P. Kaba* |
Colorado Springs |
Aug. 1913 |
1,069,170 |
*Known
to have been manufactured. Source: compiled by Ed Hunter from Ramsdell and
Wagner, 1982. |
References and Further
Reading:
Bartos, P., 2010, A light in the darkness:
U.S. mine lamps, the early years—candlesticks, oil lamps, and safety lamps: Mining
History Journal, vol. 17, p. 45-63.
Gosling, E. M.,1969, Miners’ Candlesticks:
Spinning Wheel, vol. 25, Jan-Feb, p. 21.
Pohs, H. A., 1989, Early Underground
Mine Lamps: Mine Lighting from Antiquity to Arizona: Museum Monograph No. 6,
Tucson, Arizona Historical Society, p. 7-16.
Pohs, H. A., 1995, The Miner’s Flame
Light Book: Denver, Flame Publishing Company, p. 121-214.
Ramsdell,
J. and N. S. Wagner, 1982, Patents, Miners’ Candlesticks: Carson City,
NV, privately published.
Weicksel, S., n.d., Mining Charity, Retrieved from https://americanhistory.si.edu/fr/node/47976 on 5/18/2021.
Wilson, W. E. and T. Bobrink, 1984, A Collector’s Guide to Antique Miners’ Candlesticks: Tucson, The Mineralogical Record.
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