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Deep Enough: A Working Stiff in the Western Mine Camps Revised Edition
Contributor(s): Crampton, Frank A. (Author)
ISBN: 0806125292     ISBN-13: 9780806125299
Publisher: University of Oklahoma Press
OUR PRICE:   $22.46  
Product Type: Paperback - Other Formats
Published: January 2020
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Biography & Autobiography | Historical
Dewey: B
LCCN: 81043639
Physical Information: 0.65" H x 5.9" W x 9.03" (0.88 lbs) 306 pages
Themes:
- Chronological Period - 19th Century
- Cultural Region - Plains
- Cultural Region - Western U.S.
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:

Of all the memoirs of the wild West, Frank Crampton's autobiography of his youth in the mining camps ranks with the very best.

Scion of a wealthy New York family, Crampton ran away from home in 1904 at the age of sixteen. Two bindle stiffs picked him up in a Chicago railroad depot and led him west as they taught him to survive first as a hobo and then as a hard-rock miner. In the first two decades of this century Crampton lived and worked in almost all of the important mining camps in the Westin California, Arizona, Nevada, and Colorado as a miner, assayer, surveyor, and finally one of the West's best-known mining engineers.

In miners' lingo "deep enough" meant "I don't care" or "I've had it"; the term was applied to anything one did not like or wanted nothing more to do with. Many of the experiences that Crampton describes were of that order. He was trapped in a collapsed mine shaft for ten days. He was in San Francisco at the time of the great earthquake and in Ludlow, Colorado, during the Ludlow Massacre. He lived in Death Valley among the desert rats and witnessed the last days of the old French prospector John Lamoigne, who "never looked for anything where anyone else would expect to find it, but where others were afraid to try." He become so bored with barrooms and gambling dens at one time that he hired a girl of the line in Goldfield, Nevada, just for an hour's conversation.

So many adventures, so much camaraderie, novelty, and humor are crammed into this true-life story that fiction pales in comparison. Bindle stiffs, tinhorns, tenderhorns, bohunks, entrepreneurs, politicians, wives, and women of the evening crowd the pages. This reprinting of the 1956 edition of Deep Enough is enhanced by two new maps and additional photographs from the author's personal collection. In reading it, a new generation can share the extraordinary characters, hardships, and plain fun that Frank Crampton knew between the ages of sixteen and thirty.


Contributor Bio(s): Crampton, Frank A.: -

In later years Frank A. Crampton gave up mining and turned to other branches of engineering. He spent many years in Asia and Central American and became interested in national and international politics. In 1954 he retired after returning from Korea, where he was a consultant in the office of President Syngman Rhee and an adviser to the minister of commerce and industry and other government to officials.