Wild West Lives On In Arizona’s Bisbee
By
David Ellis
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The Wild West lives on here amid the Mule Mountains |
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Bright lights – the historic Copper Queen Hotel in festive mood |
 | Visitors about to descend into the abandoned Copper Queen Mine |
There was a time when you could go into a pub and buy a beer for a dollar. In
the little Arizona town of Bisbee in 1970, artist Stephen Hutchinson
went one better than that: with his wife Marcia he walked into the
historic local pub, put down his dollar and came away with what he
wanted. Not a beer, but the pub itself. Bisbee, 130kms
south-east of Tucson and 15km north of the Mexico border, was once
one of America’s toughest Wild West mining towns, sporting a couple of
hundred saloons and brothels for the near-30,000 population of mostly
gold and copper miners interested mainly in drinkin’, feudin’, fightin’
and, yes, well… Yet its equally tough and strong-willed civic
leaders somehow tamed Bisbee. They built churches, a museum, an
enviable library, schools, a YMCA Centre, encouraged families into the
area and somewhat miraculously turned Bisbee – then the largest city on
the rail line between Saint Louis and San Francisco – into one of
America’s most-cultured cities for its time as well. From the
1880s to 1970s Bisbee’s mines in the ore-rich Mule Mountains were
amongst the wealthiest in the world, producing nearly 3-million ounces
of gold, over 3.6-million kilograms of copper, and millions more of
silver, lead and zinc. But when they closed in the 1970s the
population dwindled from 30,000 to a fifth that, and today Bisbee
provides a rare opportunity to visit a community that still cherishes
and proudly wears its links with the Wild West on its arm – but without
the kitsch of other one-time Wild West communities. And it is
home to a thriving artists’ community, provides a bolt-hole for hippies
and other colourful characters and drop-outs, is a haven for
activity-minded retirees, and is one of America’s most-accepting
communities for gays and lesbians. Victorian-era and
European-style homes nestle in its foothills alongside Wild West-era
cottages, one-time saloons are now art galleries, coffee shops,
boutiques and antique stores, and the Copper Queen Hotel that took four
years to build from 1898, is a welcoming hostelry once more, with
restored Wild West-style bars and restaurants. The hotel was
carved into a hillside by one of the mining companies, Phelps Dodge
Mining that also owned grocery, hardware, clothing and other businesses
– and cleverly paid its employees in cash, so that what went out from
one hand on pay-day, was collected back through the other by week’s end. The
Copper Queen’s stone and brick walls are two-thirds of a metre thick to
insulate it from the heat of summer and retain warmth in winter, and
for some reason never explained, it was designed along Italian lines
with Italian mosaic tile floors, and with a cathedral ceiling over the
lobby fitted with priceless Tiffany glass – that equally mysteriously
was dismantled one weekend and has never been seen again. And the
hotel’s Saloon still features a near-life-size portrait of British
stage actress Lily Langtree, the love interest of Edward Prince of
Wales, and said also to be the secret love-wish of Texas Judge, Roy
Bean – although he never met her. Stephen and Marcia Hutchinson
bought the shuttered-up old hotel after the Phelps Dodge Mining
couldn’t sell it – and offered it for $1 to any local interested
in buying and restoring it. Bisbee has a very active Chamber of
Commerce and Tourism Office and has almost weekly community events,
celebrations and festivities running the whole gamut of social,
recreational and cultural interests. They include a desert bird
observatory, daily tours of the abandoned Copper Queen Mine (after
which the hotel was named,) weekly Ghost Tours of reputedly-haunted
sections of the hotel, a ghost tour every January of the historic and
world-famous Bird Cage Theatre, weekly Saturday Farmers Markets, a Gay
and Lesbian Pride Weekend and Leather & Lace Ball in June,
Annual Brewery Gulch Daze in September and National Cowboy Day the same
month, even a Wine Festival in October and an Historic Homes Tour in
November. And in October, a bizarre Ice Man Stair Climb in which
contestants run up 135 stairs in under 30 seconds while lugging large
blocks of ice. Another of Bisbee’s unexplained little mysteries. For details of events, accommodation and getting to Bisbee, phone Canada & Alaska Specialist Holidays on 1300 79 49 59.
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