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Thursday, December 28, 2017

Augusta Tabor: Entrepreneur | Colorado Virtual Library
src: www.coloradovirtuallibrary.org

Augusta Pierce Tabor (1833-1895) was the wife of a merchant and miner, Horace Tabor, the first white woman to live in the Idaho Springs mining camp, and a Denver philanthropist. She was inducted into the Colorado Women's Hall of Fame in 1991 for her contributions to social service and philanthropy.


Video Augusta Tabor



Early life

Augusta Pierce was born in Augusta, Maine on March 29, 1833. Her father, William B. Pierce, owned a quarry and was a contractor. Tabor, one of ten children and the third of seven girls, suffered poor health during her childhood. She had a lovely figure, thick dark hair and was determined and charming. Tabor was a debutante, grew up in a pampered lifestyle, and believed in women's rights. She was the cousin of Franklin Pierce, president of the United States.


Maps Augusta Tabor



Adulthood

Augusta and Horace Tabor lived in the Idaho Springs mining camp before moving to Leadville. The Tabors established a store and Augusta made money as a washerwoman and as a landlady to boarders. Horace mined for gold in the mountains of Colorado and in 1878, after 20 years, he struck a silver vein that made US$10,000 (equivalent to $248,172 in 2016) per day.

The Tabors established a mansion in Denver after Horace was elected lieutenant governor later in 1878. The 20-room mansion, built at Eighteenth and Broadway for $40,000 (equivalent to $992,690 in 2016), was operated as a boarding house after Horace left her for Elizabeth "Baby Doe" McCourt. Augusta was landlady for up to 14 people at a time and was engaged in community activities, such as contributing to civic projects and charities and hosting fund-raising events. Tabor was particularly involved in the Pioneer Ladies Aid Society.


Augusta Tabor - Wikiwand
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See also

  • Leadville mining district
  • Pike's Peak Gold Rush

The Silver Baron's Wife by Donna Baier Stein
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References


Company | Creating paper and packaging designs
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Further reading

  • "Augusta Louise Pierce Tabor, Notable Unitarian and Universalist Women". Unitarian Universalist Women's Heritage Society. Archived from the original on 2015-01-24. 
  • Caroline Bancroft (1991) [1955]. Augusta Tabor, Her Side of the Scandal. Boulder, Colorado: Johnson Publishing Company. ISBN 0933472145. 
  • Diane C. Major (2013). Augusta Tabor: Enterprising Pioneer. Palmer Lake, Colorado: Filter Press. ISBN 0865411727. 
  • Betty Moynihan (1988). Augusta Tabor, A Pioneering Woman. Evergreen, Colorado: Cordillera Press. OCLC 17877111. 
  • Augusta Tabor, Hubert Howe Bancroft (1884). Cabin Life in Colorado. Palmer Lake, Colorado: Filter Press. OCLC 25912042. A statement recorded at Denver, Oct. 22, 1884, concerning arrival in Colorado, 1859; experiences in mining regions; work with her husband in the Post and Express Office; carrying gold to Denver. 
  • Linda Wommack. "Augusta Louise Pierce Tabor". From the Grave: A Roadside Guide to Colorado's Pioneer Cemeteries. Caxton Press. p. 97. ISBN 978-0-87004-565-3. 



External links

Media related to Augusta Tabor at Wikimedia Commons

Source of article : Wikipedia