Solomonville Arizona Local Pioneer History Charcoal Mining
|
|
|
|
click picture to enlarge
|
click picture to enlarge
|
From Charcoal To Banking
The I. E. Solomons of Arizona
By Elizaeth L. Ramenofsky
Volume 47 Great West and Indian Series
Condition: Book and Dust Jacket are Near Fine.
The story of the Solomon family is a dramatic saga of pioneering, intimately interwoven with the transition of a sleepy adobe village to the largest and busiest trading center in Graham County - Solomonville.
I. E. SOLOMON. This prominent merchant and farmer of Solomonsville, Arizona, was born in Germany in 1844, and in that country received his education and was taught the mercantile business. When sixteen years old, in company with his eldest sister, Anna, young Solomon sailed for America, and landed at New York City. From there he went to Pennsylvania and located on the Susquehanna River in Bradford County. He engaged as a clerk with an uncle and remained in his employ for three years, when he embarked for himself in the livery and exchange stable business, following staging, etc., in Towanda, Pa., until 1876. From there he went to New Mexico intending to make his future home in that section, but becoming dissatisfied made his way to Arizona in the early summer of 1876, and settled on the place where he now resides, when there were about half a dozen white families in the settlement. He located forty acres of what is now the town site of Solomonsville, and opened a store, which was run in a rather crude way for a few years. He kept adding to his small stock until he now has a fine large store and is doing a flourishing business. About the year 1878 the town was named Solomonsville in honor of our subject, who had the credit of building up the town and forming the settlement. In 1880 the postoffice was established at Solomonsville and Mr. Solomon was the first postmaster, holding the position for sixteen years, through all the administrations except Cleveland's last term. He was appointed county treasurer of Graham County by Governor Fremont, held the position one term, and so well were the people satisfied with his services while an incumbent of that position that he was re-elected, serving in all four years. He has never sought office but has declined some very flattering propositions. Mr. Solomon has had some interesting experiences with the Indians, living near the Apache reservation, and was always in danger. He had a large flock of sheep and hired men, women and children to herd them. Twelve men, one woman and a child were murdered by the Indians while watching the sheep. One of the men was tied to a tree and stoned to death. The remainder were shot, and about 500 head of sheep were killed. About two years after this Mr. Solomon started for a trip to New Mexico, accompanied by his brother Adolph, who was ill. There were no doctors in Arizona at that time. They started with two teams and two men to Las Cruz, Mexico, but when about thirty miles from El Paso on Upper Gila, Adolph was taken worse and it was feared that he could not make the trip. He and Mr. Solomon concluded to take the stage from Silver City. Both teams went on. however, and were attacked at Cook's Canyon, near Fort Collins, New Mexico, by the Indians. One horse was killed, the balance taken and the men and wagons burned. The soldiers from Fort Bayard found two photographs of Mr. Solomon's daughters and knew that the teams must belong to him. About three years after this Mr. Solomon and wife and children started with three teams to Las Cruz, New Mexico. When about sixteen miles from home they camped for the night and one of the children was taken sick. Fearing that the child might get worse Mr. Solomon sent his wife and family back home, but he continued the trip two days later. When he arrived at Fort Cummins, New Mexico, he learned that the stage had been attacked the day before and five men murdered, one of whom was a young man, Major Maddens son, who had just returned from school. Thus by being delayed one day the lives of the whole party were saved. Mr. Solomon has had many other experiences with Indians and with road agents, being held up by the agents in the early days, but he has always been lucky. He has been industrious and progressive and is yet the owner of about 1,300 acres of fine land near Solomonsville. He still deals in sheep and cattle. At the present time he is interested in three canals, Montezuma, San Jose and Darby, and is president of all. He owns considerable valuable town property. In the year 1872 he returned to Germany and there married Miss Anna Frendenthal. They have six children: Charles, Eva, Rosa, Harry, Lillie and Blanch. Harry is a student in a military school at San Rafael Academy, Cal. In his political views Mr. Solomon is a Republican. About eight miles from his place they are experimenting for coal, with fair prospects.
Your book will be carefully gift-wrapped in brown paper and tightly encased with-in a heavy-duty cardboard frame. delivery confirmation is included with every order. Priority and insurance available. I will combine shipping for multiple purchases.
Spellbinding Commitment to Customer Satisfaction
Spellbinding Books is a husband and wife partnership. My wife and I are both bibliophiles and collectors, we understand how important trust and honor is this business. We STAND BY whatever we sell. If a mistake is made on our end WE WILL MAKE IT RIGHT GUARANTEED. Although we are not perfect booksellers, we constantly strive to always sell books in an ethical and professional way. Spellbinding Books is the result of the passion and creativity of my wife and I. Our BEST books are reserved for Ebay, we love writing comprehensive descriptions, taking great photos and giving information regarding the subject matter or author whenever possible. We find satisfaction in uniting great books with our customers. If you need anything let us know.
Return/Refund Policy
We are happy to offer a full refund if item is not as described and is returned within 7 days. Our Word is BINDING!
An Explanation Regarding Condition Ratings
Judgment regarding condition and ratings vary from bookseller to bookseller. We'd like you, the customer, to understand Spellbinding Books condition ratings system so that you feel secure regarding the condition of the books you buy from us. We go out of our way to photograph and describe our books in such a way as to give you the feeling of actually handling the book for yourself.
Fine:
1900-Present
Book is Like New, basically a new book that has been lightly handled, unread.
Dust Jacket appears untouched, perfect.
0 B.C. -1900
Book is in astoundingly superior condition for its 100+ years of age, this rating is RARELY given to books over 100 years old.
Near Fine:
1900-Present
Book has minor signs of wear: bumped corner, rubbing to head of spine and corners, lightly soiled, ect.
Dust Jacket lightly rubbed, very minor signs of wear.
0 B.C.-1900
Book may have some obvious wear, but overall in excellent shape, clean with a sound binding. No damp staining or looseness.
Very Good:
1900-Present
Book is nice looking, doesn't have any flaws that make your heart flutter. Book may have inscription/bookplate, moderate wear to extremities of binding, some soiling to pages, slightly sloped spine.
Dust Jacket: small tears, creases, fading, very small stains, some wear to extremities, possibly price-clipped.
0 B.C. - 1900
Book is sturdy and clean, may have some moderate damage to head and tail of spine, worn extremities, writing on endpapers, some age-toning and or foxing.
Good:
1900-Present
Book is well read and worn, a sturdy copy for the most part, may have a sprung or cracked hinge, splitting along spine, stains/soiling, small amount of writing/underlining.
Dust Jacket: Large tears, worn extremities, chipped, stained ect.
0 B.C. - 1900
Book is intact, no missing pages, binding is loose, may contain some writing/underlining.
Fair:
1900-Present
Book may have any of the following serious defect: broken hinges and spine, water damage, very worn, writing and underlining.
Dust Jacket, may be detached from flaps, stained, worn and torn, large pieces missing.
0 B.C. - 1900
Book may have, detached boards, missing pages, extensive water damage/staining, very loose binding.
Acceptable:
1900 - Present
Books is used for information, not a showcase copy. Books may be worn ex-library copies, weak and detached bindings, writing, missing endpapers.
DJ has serious damage/defects.
0 B.C. - 1900
Book is decrepit, i.e. wasted and weakened by the infirmities of old age.
Atrocious:
You know a book has a serious defect if it has one or more of the following qualities: literally falling apart, fully emerged in a liquid, missing numerous pages WITH text, ect. Fortunately for you and I, these types of books would only appear in my inventory if A.)It was signed or B.)It was ancient or exceptionally Rare.
Spellbinding Books, Always Fascinating
See my other listings for more great items!
We accept Paypal
Payment is expected within 7 days from close of auction.
Media $3.00, Priority $5.00, International $12.00
Items are usually shipped the business day after payment is received. If for some reason your shipment is delayed for several days your order will be upgraded to priority mail.
Insurance is offered for all items. If you choose to insure your item it will be for the winning bid amount. Minimum amount for insurance is $2.00.
Template designed by the_butler_did_it!_boutique ~ Copyright 2007
|