C.B. Ruggles transcript
Hello! This is Susan Barnum with Borderland Heritage History
brought to you by the El Paso Public Library.
In today’s episode, we’re traveling back to the Wild West,
discovering a lost mine, some legendary borderland beasts and finding love in
Anchorage Alaska.
C. B. Ruggles was born on April 22, 1880 and was
named C.B. because he was born on the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy train on
the way west. C.B. was raised in Oregon where he learned to be a good cowboy
and was friendly with members of the Modoc Nation.
At some point, the family moved to Kansas. In 1900, he
married Jane McVey in Stafford Kansas. They had a few children, one of whom
died as an infant.
The family moved to New Mexico where C.B. worked for the
Cliff Cities Pack Outfitters. He also hunted coyotes, roped mountain lions and
broke horses. C.B. lived in New Mexico for 15 years, and must have heard the
legend of the lost Tayopa mine during that time. The mine was reputed to hold
vast wealth and any prospector who could find it would certainly be quite
wealthy.
In 1921, he traveled to El Paso, Texas and then further
south into Chihuahua, Mexico in order to do some prospecting. For six years, he
prospected and searched for the Lost Tayopa Mine. He had considerable medical
knowledge that he’d learned from his father and used it to treat miners and
Native Americans in the area who called him “El Doctor.”
He met folklorist and writer, J. Frank Dobie in 1928 and
told him about where he believed the lost Tayopa mine was located. Dobie would
eventually write about the mines in his book, Apache
Gold and Yaqui Silver originally published in
1939. Not only did C.B. believe that he had found the location of the Tayopa
Mines, which he claimed in the El Paso Times in 1928, but one year before, he
claimed to have trapped a legendary ounce. The ounce is a cryptozoological
creature that has never been positively identified, yet legends abound
regarding its existence.
Whether the ounce was real or just
a strange variant of a cougar, C.B. was determined to hunt new game. He moved
to Alaska in the summer of 1928 where he planned to hunt Kodiak Bears. C.B. met
his second wife, Etta, in Anchorage. Etta was also a hunter and trapper and
drove her own dog sled.
Henrietta or Etta was born in
Sweden in 1897 and emigrated to Salt Lake City with a group of Mormons at age
17. She married C.B. in 1929 and the couple lived together in Alaska, hunting
and trapping. Later, C.B. would write about surviving as a hunter in Alaska for
the Saturday Evening Post. Etta Ruggles also talked about their Alaska
experiences to women’s clubs.
C.B. and Etta moved to Arivaca,
Arizona in the 1930s where they lived on a mining claim north of the city. They were still living in the area in the
early 1950s where they were active in the community.
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