Ed Schieffelin (German Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Ed Schieffelin" in German language version.

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IABotmemento.invalid

  • Dies ist eine der glaubwürdigsten Versionen. Bei Burns: „Tombstone, An Iliad…“ ist es ein Indianerpfeil der ihn tötete. The Brunckow Cabin (2) (Memento des Originals vom 3. Februar 2010 im Internet Archive)  Info: Der Archivlink wurde automatisch eingesetzt und noch nicht geprüft. Bitte prüfe Original- und Archivlink gemäß Anleitung und entferne dann diesen Hinweis.@1@2Vorlage:Webachiv/IABot/www.discoverseaz.com Ed Schieffelin was not the first to find silver in the Tombstone Hills. Frederick Brunckow, a Prussian-born mining engineer, began work on the San Pedro mine and erected a cabin near the San Pedro River. The remains of that adobe cabin can still be seen between Charleston and Tombstone. In 1860 Brunckow was working the mine with three other men and about a dozen Mexican helpers. He and two of his men were robbed and murdered at the cabin. The Mexican workers were blamed for the killings. Brunckow’s San Pedro mine influenced Ed Schieffelin in his prospecting during 1877 of the outcrops to the northeast. It is said that he used the fireplace in the Brunckow cabin to assay some of his samples after he made the discovery that made Tombstone famous.

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cardcow.com

  • Silver Skeletons by Oren Arnold "Whar you goin’, Ed?" Al Sieber asked his friend who was saddling a mule, one day in 1877. “Just out a ways, looking for stones,” Ed Schieffelin replied. “Don't you know this country’s full of Indians? Only stone you'll find will be your tombstone.” But Ed rode out, alone. Next day his mule suddenly shied at something white. Ed dismounted. There on the hillside lay the skeletons of two men! Moreover, their outstretched arms touched a pile of silver nuggets. Excitedly Ed looked around, found the source of the ore, then rushed home to file his claim. In a few months he was a millionaire and a city of 15,000 people had sprung up there, wildest, toughest boom town in Western history. Its name? Remembering his friend’s prophesy, Ed Schieffelin grinned to himself on that discovery day and said: “I'll name this place Tombstone.” Thus Tombstone, Arizona, and its newspaper „The Epitaph“, have become famous the world ’round.
    Ed Schiefflin (2) had been told by the famed civilian scout, Al Sieber, that the only valuable rock he would find in the hills southeast of the San Pedro River would be his tombstone. As a result that was what Schiefflin decided to name his silver strike.

carnageandculture.blogspot.com

  • Silver Skeletons by Oren Arnold "Whar you goin’, Ed?" Al Sieber asked his friend who was saddling a mule, one day in 1877. “Just out a ways, looking for stones,” Ed Schieffelin replied. “Don't you know this country’s full of Indians? Only stone you'll find will be your tombstone.” But Ed rode out, alone. Next day his mule suddenly shied at something white. Ed dismounted. There on the hillside lay the skeletons of two men! Moreover, their outstretched arms touched a pile of silver nuggets. Excitedly Ed looked around, found the source of the ore, then rushed home to file his claim. In a few months he was a millionaire and a city of 15,000 people had sprung up there, wildest, toughest boom town in Western history. Its name? Remembering his friend’s prophesy, Ed Schieffelin grinned to himself on that discovery day and said: “I'll name this place Tombstone.” Thus Tombstone, Arizona, and its newspaper „The Epitaph“, have become famous the world ’round.
    Ed Schiefflin (2) had been told by the famed civilian scout, Al Sieber, that the only valuable rock he would find in the hills southeast of the San Pedro River would be his tombstone. As a result that was what Schiefflin decided to name his silver strike.

discoverseaz.com

  • Dies ist eine der glaubwürdigsten Versionen. Bei Burns: „Tombstone, An Iliad…“ ist es ein Indianerpfeil der ihn tötete. The Brunckow Cabin (2) (Memento des Originals vom 3. Februar 2010 im Internet Archive)  Info: Der Archivlink wurde automatisch eingesetzt und noch nicht geprüft. Bitte prüfe Original- und Archivlink gemäß Anleitung und entferne dann diesen Hinweis.@1@2Vorlage:Webachiv/IABot/www.discoverseaz.com Ed Schieffelin was not the first to find silver in the Tombstone Hills. Frederick Brunckow, a Prussian-born mining engineer, began work on the San Pedro mine and erected a cabin near the San Pedro River. The remains of that adobe cabin can still be seen between Charleston and Tombstone. In 1860 Brunckow was working the mine with three other men and about a dozen Mexican helpers. He and two of his men were robbed and murdered at the cabin. The Mexican workers were blamed for the killings. Brunckow’s San Pedro mine influenced Ed Schieffelin in his prospecting during 1877 of the outcrops to the northeast. It is said that he used the fireplace in the Brunckow cabin to assay some of his samples after he made the discovery that made Tombstone famous.

findagrave.com

ghosttowns.com

google.de

books.google.de

johnmcneil.com

jstor.org

karl-may-gesellschaft.de

redirecter.toolforge.org

  • Dies ist eine der glaubwürdigsten Versionen. Bei Burns: „Tombstone, An Iliad…“ ist es ein Indianerpfeil der ihn tötete. The Brunckow Cabin (2) (Memento des Originals vom 3. Februar 2010 im Internet Archive)  Info: Der Archivlink wurde automatisch eingesetzt und noch nicht geprüft. Bitte prüfe Original- und Archivlink gemäß Anleitung und entferne dann diesen Hinweis.@1@2Vorlage:Webachiv/IABot/www.discoverseaz.com Ed Schieffelin was not the first to find silver in the Tombstone Hills. Frederick Brunckow, a Prussian-born mining engineer, began work on the San Pedro mine and erected a cabin near the San Pedro River. The remains of that adobe cabin can still be seen between Charleston and Tombstone. In 1860 Brunckow was working the mine with three other men and about a dozen Mexican helpers. He and two of his men were robbed and murdered at the cabin. The Mexican workers were blamed for the killings. Brunckow’s San Pedro mine influenced Ed Schieffelin in his prospecting during 1877 of the outcrops to the northeast. It is said that he used the fireplace in the Brunckow cabin to assay some of his samples after he made the discovery that made Tombstone famous.

roadsideamerica.com

web.archive.org

  • The prospector was Edward Lawrence Schieffelin (Memento vom 5. Dezember 2010 im Internet Archive) Meanwhile, another determined prospector arrived. The newcomer had trailed into the country with a company of Hualapai scouts late in the summer of 1877 and had then used Brunckow’s cabin as his base of operations. The prospector was Edward Lawrence Schieffelin, and he materialized from the desert a tall and wild figure. Although he appeared fifty years old, he had not reached thirty years yet.
  • Dies ist eine der glaubwürdigsten Versionen. Bei Burns: „Tombstone, An Iliad…“ ist es ein Indianerpfeil der ihn tötete. The Brunckow Cabin (2) (Memento des Originals vom 3. Februar 2010 im Internet Archive)  Info: Der Archivlink wurde automatisch eingesetzt und noch nicht geprüft. Bitte prüfe Original- und Archivlink gemäß Anleitung und entferne dann diesen Hinweis.@1@2Vorlage:Webachiv/IABot/www.discoverseaz.com Ed Schieffelin was not the first to find silver in the Tombstone Hills. Frederick Brunckow, a Prussian-born mining engineer, began work on the San Pedro mine and erected a cabin near the San Pedro River. The remains of that adobe cabin can still be seen between Charleston and Tombstone. In 1860 Brunckow was working the mine with three other men and about a dozen Mexican helpers. He and two of his men were robbed and murdered at the cabin. The Mexican workers were blamed for the killings. Brunckow’s San Pedro mine influenced Ed Schieffelin in his prospecting during 1877 of the outcrops to the northeast. It is said that he used the fireplace in the Brunckow cabin to assay some of his samples after he made the discovery that made Tombstone famous.
  • SV Cool History Text.PDF Brunckow Cabin (Memento vom 9. Januar 2014 im Internet Archive)

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