
Entrance to Lost Dutchman State
Park
The Lost Dutchman Gold Mine
(also known by many similar names) is reportedly a very rich
gold mine hidden in the Superstition
Mountains
, near Apache Junction
, east of Phoenix
, Arizona
in the
United
States
. The land is a designated
Wilderness Area, and
mining is now prohibited there.
The mine is named after German immigrant Jacob Waltz ("Dutchman"
was a common, though inaccurate, American slang term for "German,"
derived from the
German word for
"
German" – "Deutsch").
It is perhaps the most
famous lost mine in American history:
Arizona place-name expert Byrd Granger notes that, as of 1977, the
Lost Dutchman story was printed or cited at least six times more
often than two other fairly well-known tales, the story of Captain Kidd's lost treasure, and the story of
the Lost Pegleg mine in California
. Robert Blair notes that people have been
seeking the Lost Dutchman mine since at least 1892, while Granger
writes that according to one estimate, 8,000 people annually made
some effort to locate the Lost Dutchman's mine. Former
Arizona Attorney General Bob Corbin is among those who have looked for the
mine. Others have argued the mine has little or no basis in fact
and is a
legend though, as noted below,
Blair argues that all the main components of the story have at
least some basis in fact.
According to many versions of the tale, the mine is either
cursed, or protected by enigmatic guardians who wish
to keep the mine's location a secret.
Other Lost Dutchman mines
Blair writes that "[t]here have been at least four legendary Lost
Dutchman gold mines in the
American West, including the famed
Superstition mine of Jacob Waltz".
One Lost Dutchman mine is said to be in
Colorado
, another in
California; two are said to be located in Arizona. Tales of
these other Lost Dutchman mines can be traced to at least the
1870s.
The
earliest Lost Dutchman mine in Arizona was said to have been near
Wickenburg
, about north-west of the Superstition Mountains: a
"Dutchman" was allegedly discovered dead in the desert near
Wickenburg in the 1870s alongside saddlebags filled with gold. Blair suggests
that "fragments of this legend have perhaps become attached to the
mythical mine of Jacob Waltz". What would seem to be a crucial
detail is also in dispute, as some allege that the so-called "mine"
is actually a mine in the Superstition Mountains, or is instead a
hidden stockpile of gold
ore and/or
bullion and/or coins.
There are also vague similarities between the stories associated
with the Lost Dutchman mine and the
Lasseter's Reef story in
Australia .
Stories about the mine
Granger writes that "[f]act and fiction blend in the tales", but
that there are three main elements to the story:
- "They are, first, tales of the lost Apache gold or Dr. Thorne's mine; second, tales about
the Lost Dutchman; and, third, stories of the soldiers' lost gold
vein ... [t]he most complete version of the Lost Dutchman story
incorporates all three legends". As noted below, Blair argues that
there are kernels of truth at the heart of each of these three main
stories, though the popular story is often badly garbled from the
actual account.
In 1977, Granger identified 62 variants of the Lost Dutchman story
– some of the variations are minor, but others are substantial,
casting the story in a very different light from the other
versions. Keeping in mind that there are sometimes considerable
variance between the tales, below is a brief summary of each of the
three stories identified by Granger.
Lost Apache gold, or Dr. Thorne's story
In this story (actually two interconnected stories), members of the
Apache tribe are said to have a very rich gold mine located in the
Superstition Mountains. Famed Apache
Geronimo is sometimes mentioned in relation to this
story. In most variants of the story, the family of a man called
Miguel Peralta discovered the mine and began mining the gold there,
only to be attacked or massacred by Apaches in about 1850 in the
supposed
Peralta massacre. Years
later, a man called Dr. Thorne treats an ailing or wounded Apache
(often alleged to be a chieftain) and is rewarded with a trip to a
rich gold mine. He is blindfolded and taken there by a circuitous
route, and is allowed to take as much gold ore as he can carry
before again being escorted blindfolded from the site by the
Apaches. Thorne is said to be either unwilling or unable to
relocate the mine.
The truth about the Peralta Mine
Blair insists that the Peralta portion of the story is unreliable,
writing: "The operation of a gold mine in the Superstitions by a
Peralta family is a contrivance of 20th century writers". A man
named Miguel Peralta and his family did in fact operate a
successful mine in the 1860s – but near
Valanciana, California, not in
Arizona. The mine was quite profitable, earning about $35,000 in
less than one year; Blair describes this as "an unusually good
return" for such a small gold mine to earn in such a relatively
brief period. As of 1975, ruins of the Peralta mine were
standing.
However, the Peralta Mine eventually became unprofitable and after
the money was gone Miguel Peralta eventually turned to
fraud. Dr. George M.
Willing, Jr. paid Peralta $20,000 for the
mining rights for an enormous swath of land – about in southern
Arizona and New
Mexico
– based on a deed originally granted by the
Spanish Empire in the 1700s.
Trouble came after Willing learned that the deed was entirely
bogus. Despite his efforts, Willing was never able to recover the
money he gave to Peralta.
Blair argues that this Peralta story (well known to Arizona
residents) was eventually incorporated in the Lost Dutchman story,
in a severely distorted version, following the renewed interest in
the Lost Dutchman's mine in the 1930s.
The truth about Dr. Thorne
Another detail which casts doubt on the story is the fact that,
according to Blair, there was never any Dr. Thorne in the employ of
the Army or indeed of the
Federal Government
in the 1860s. According to Blair, the origin of this story can be
traced to a doctor named Thorne who was in private practice in New
Mexico in the 1860s. Thorne claimed that he was taken captive by
Navajos in 1854, and that during his
captivity he had discovered a rich gold vein. Thorne related his
claims to three U.S. soldiers in about 1858. The three soldiers set
out to find the gold, but without success. Over the decades, this
true tale was gradually absorbed into the Lost Dutchman's
story.
The Lost Dutchman's story
This tale involves two German men, Jacob Waltz (or Weitz, Weitzer,
Walls, Welz, Walz, et cetera) and Jacob Weiser. However, Blair
argues that there is a strong likelihood that there never was a
second man named Weiser, but rather that a single person named
Waltz (or a variant thereof) was, over the years, turned into two
men as the legend of the Dutchman mine evolved. Blair contends that
this story can be divided into "hawk" and "dove" versions,
depending on if the German(s) are said to behave violently or
peacefully. In most versions of the tale, Waltz and/or Weiser
located a rich gold mine in the Superstition Mountains (in many
versions of the story, they save or aid a member of the Peralta
family, and are rewarded by being told the location of the mine).
Weiser is attacked and wounded (whether by marauding Apaches or by
a greedy Waltz), but survives at least long enough to tell a man
called Dr. Walker about the mine. Waltz is also said to make a
deathbed confession to Julia Thomas, and draws or describes a crude
map to the gold mine.
See "Historical Jacob Waltz" below for more information about the
miner whose deathbed confession was the beginning of the legend of
the Lost Dutchman mine.
Stories of the soldiers' lost gold vein
In yet another version of the tale, two (or more)
U.S. Army soldiers are said to have discovered
a vein of almost pure gold in or near the Superstition Mountains.
The soldiers are alleged to have presented some of the gold, but to
have been killed or to have vanished soon after.
This account is usually dated to about 1870. According to Blair,
the story may have its roots in the efforts of three U.S. soldiers
to locate gold in an area of New Mexico, based on an allegedly true
story related to them by Dr. Thorne of New Mexico; see above.
The historical Jacob Waltz

A view of Superstition Mountains in
Lost Dutchman State Park
Blair cites ample evidence of the historical Jacob Waltz and
suggests that there is additional evidence that supports the core
elements of the story as related above – that Waltz did in fact
claim to have discovered (or at least heard the story of) a rich
gold vein or cache. But Blair suggests that this core story was
distorted in subsequent retellings, comparing the many variants of
the Lost Dutchman's story to the game of
Chinese whispers, where the original
account is distorted in multiple retellings of the tale.
There was
indeed a Jacob Waltz who immigrated to the U.S. from Germany
. The
earliest documentation of him in the U.S. is an 1848 affidavit in
which Waltz declared himself to be "about 38 years old".
A man
called Jacob Waltz was born in September 1810 in Württemberg
. Blair suggests that this Waltz could be the
same Waltz who later came to be regarded as the legendary Dutchman,
and that he changed the spelling of his surname to better match its
pronunciation.
Waltz relocated to Arizona in the 1860s, and stayed in the state
for most of the rest of his life. He pursued mining and
prospecting, but seems to have had little luck with either. In
1870, Waltz had a homestead of about near Phoenix where he operated
a
farm.
There was a catastrophic flooding in Phoenix in 1891, and Waltz's
farm was one of many that were devastated. Afterwards, Waltz fell
ill (he was rumored to have contracted
pneumonia during the flooding). He died on October
25, 1891, after having been nursed by an acquaintance named Julia
Thomas (she was usually described as a
quadroon).
Blair suggests that there is little doubt that Waltz did in fact
relate to Thomas the location of an alleged gold mine. As early as
September 1, 1892, The
Arizona Enterprise was reporting on
the efforts of Thomas and several others to locate the lost mine
whose location was told to her by Waltz. After this was
unsuccessful, Thomas and her partners were reported to be selling
maps to the mine for $7 each.
The death of Adolph Ruth
Were it not for the death of amateur explorer and
treasure hunter Adolph Ruth, the story of
the Lost Dutchman's mine would have likely been little more than a
footnote in Arizona history as one of hundreds of "lost mines"
rumored to be in the American West. Ruth disappeared while
searching for the mine in the summer of 1931. His skull – with two
bullet holes in it – was recovered about half a year after he
vanished and the story made national news, thus sparking widespread
interest in the Lost Dutchman's mine.
In a story that echoes some of the earlier tales, Ruth's son Erwin
C. Ruth was said to have learned of the Peralta mine from a man
called Pedro Gonzales (or Gonzalez). According to the story, in
about 1912, Erwin C. Ruth gave some legal aid to Gonzales, saving
him from almost certain imprisonment; in gratitude, Gonzales told
Erwin about the Peralta mine in the Superstition Mountains, even
reportedly passing on some antique maps of the site (Gonzales
claimed to be descended from the Peralta family on his mother's
side). Erwin passed the information to his father Adolph, who had a
long-standing interest in lost mines and amateur exploration. In
fact, the elder Ruth had fallen and badly broken several bones
while seeking the lost Pegleg mine in California; he had metal pins
in his leg, and used a cane to help him walk.
In June 1931, Ruth decided to finally try and locate the lost
Peralta mine. After traveling to the region, Ruth stayed several
days at the ranch of Tex Barkely and prepared for his expedition.
Barkely repeatedly urged Ruth to abandon his search for the mine:
the treacherous terrain of the Superstition Mountains could be
difficult for experienced outdoorsmen, let alone for the semi-lame,
66-year-old Ruth.
However, Ruth ignored Barkely's advice, and set out for a two week
stint in the mountains. Ruth did not return as scheduled, and no
trace of him could be found after a brief search. In December,
1931,
The Arizona
Republic reported on the recent discovery of a human skull
in the Superstition Mountains. To determine if the skull was
Ruth's, it was examined by Dr.
Aleš Hrdlička, a well-respected
anthropologist who was also given
several photos of Ruth, along with Ruth's
dental records. As
Curt Gentry writes, "Dr. Hrdlicka positively
identified the skull as that of Adolph Ruth. He further stated,
after examining the two holes [in the skull], that it appeared that
a
shotgun or high-powered
rifle had been fired through the head at almost
point-blank range, making the small hole when the bullet entered
and the large hole when it exited".
In January 1932, human remains were discovered about three-quarters
of a mile (1.21 km) from where the skull had been found. Though the
remains had been scattered by scavengers, they were undoubtedly
Ruth's: many of Ruth's personal effects were found at the scene,
including a
pistol (not missing any shells)
and the metal pins used to mend his broken bones. But the map to
the Peralta mine was said to be missing.
Tantalizingly, Ruth's
checkbook was also
recovered, and proved to contain a note written by Ruth wherein he
claimed to have discovered the mine and gave detailed directions.
Ruth ended his note with the phrase "
Veni, vidi, vici."
Authorities in Arizona did not convene a criminal inquest regarding
Ruth's death. They argued that Ruth had likely succumbed to thirst
or heart disease (though, as Gentry writes, "[o]ne official went so
far as to suggest that [Adolph Ruth] might have committed suicide
... While this theory did not ignore the two holes in the skull, it
did fail to explain how Ruth had managed to remove and bury the
empty shell, then reload his gun, after shooting himself through
the head". Blair notes that the conclusion of Arizona authorities
was rejected by many, including Ruth's family, and also by "those
who held onto the more romantic murdered-for-the-map story".
Blair writes that "the national wire services picked up the story
[of Ruth's death] and ran it for more than it was worth", possibly
seeing the mysterious story as a welcome reprieve from the bleak
news that was otherwise typical of the
Great Depression.
Other deaths and disappearances
Since Ruth's death, there have been several other allegedly
mysterious deaths or encounters in the Superstition Mountains, but
it's unclear how many of these can be regarded as reliably
reported.
- In the mid-1940s, the headless remains of prospector James A.
Cravey were reportedly discovered in the Superstition Mountains.
He'd allegedly disappeared after setting out to find the Lost
Dutchman's mine.
- In his 1945 book about the Lost Dutchman's mine, Barry Storm
claimed to have narrowly escaped from a mysterious sniper he dubbed "Mr. X". Storm further speculated
that Adolph Ruth might have been a victim of the same sniper.
The mine in fiction
The Death's-Head Mine by Bill Piercy is a 2001 novel
inspired by the Peralta legend.
The
MacGuffin in the
Sherlock Holmes novel
Sherlock Holmes
and the Crosby Murder by
Barrie
Roberts is a map to the mine. According to this story it is
being kept secret by the Apaches.
In a
Scrooge McDuck story by
Don Rosa, McDuck was given a map of the Peralta
mine by Jacob Waltz in 1890. He tells the story to
Huey, Dewey, and Louie and one of
them confirms Waltz to be the Lost "Dutchman", goes to Arizona with
them and
Donald Duck to find the gold
and finds it, but learns it belongs to
Pima
Indians.
A 1993 board game called
The Search for The
Lost Dutchman's Gold Mine, loosely based on the myth of Jacob
Waltz, sets up a 20-day (2 minutes each) team-building program for
organizational development.
The
adventure game,
Al Emmo and the Lost
Dutchman's Mine is based on the myth of the Lost
Dutchman's gold. The protagonist, Al Emmo, sets out to locate the
mine and recover its riches. Another computer game,
Lost Dutchman Mine, was
released in 1989.
The 1949 movie
Lust for Gold,
starring
Glenn Ford and
Ida Lupino, is about the search for the mine by
Walz's grandson, played by
William Prince. Most of the movie is
a flashback in which Ford plays Jacob Walz. The Peralta Massacre is
also depicted in a flashback.
The 2006 thriller
Event also references the lost mine and
its discovery in the Superstition Mountains. Even though the
discovery of the mines comes near the finale of the novel, the
story is actually about the
Roswell
Incident of 1947 and a subsequent, second
flying saucer crash some 50 years later.
A custom map for
Trophy Hunter 2003 says the player can go
and seek out the Lost Dutchman Gold Mine and its
ghost town, while hunting.
The mine in music
"Dutchman's Gold" was a chart hit in 1960 for
Walter Brennan.
"Superstition Gold" (1983) was inspired by the legend of the Lost
Dutchman. Written by DoubleTake (the twin brothers Dave Hage and
Dennis Hage), It was the first known record album to use a treasure
hunt technique where clues to find $10,000 in gold were "buried"
inside the music. Additionally, the brothers wrote a companion book
that looked humorously at the Lost Dutchman legend, called the
"Official Goldbuster Guidebook".
References
- Blair, 21
- Blair, 22
- Blair, 87
- Blair, 98
- Blair, 108
- Blair, 110
- Blair, 132
- Blair, 133
- Blair, 11
- Blair, 75
- Blair, 25
- Blair, 29
- Blair, 59
- Blair, 73
- Blair, 74
- Gentry, 101
- Gentry, 102
- Gentry, 102–103
- Blair, 97
- Blair, 96
- The Death's-Head Mine
- Dutchman's Gold at MTV.com
- Superstition Gold
See also
Lost mines
External links