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BEN BEAMER
Tucked into a small
cliff of Tapeats Sandstone on the south side of the Little Colorado
River at the Confluence, there is a small stone cabin. Part cliff
(back wall and part of the ceiling), part human construction, the
stone “cabin” that Ben Beamer occupied starting in 1890 was a hybrid
structure that took the Ancient Puebloan ruin that he found near the
confluence of the Little Colorado River and Colorado River and then
remodeled to suit his needs.
Beamer, like many early
Grand Canyon miners, sought gold and silver deposits but found copper
and asbestos more plentiful. Indeed, asbestos mined from the Grand
Canyon was an important resource for its day. Used as a fire
retardant, for example, it was used in theater curtains across the
United States and as far away as London.
Beamer prospected for
mineral deposits along the cliffs and side canyons of the river
corridor and, following in the footsteps of Ancient Puebloan
predecessors, pursued some small scale farming along the bench
adjacent to his cabin. Compared to other parts of the Grand Canyon,
only a handful of prospectors and miners set up claims in the
southeast section of the canyon, an area where pioneers were kept at
bay by meager mineral deposits, a lack of European-American
settlement, and a deeply entrenched, active Hopi-Navajo cultural
sphere. Mormon settlers shifted this human matrix in the southeast
canyon as they moved from Utah into the canyon and downstream from
Lees Ferry while non-Mormon miners and ranchers shifted northward into
the area by the 1870s.
Beamer may not have had
a large impact on mining claims in the Grand Canyon; however he did
help to create a lasting trail network in this vicinity. Beamer
hammered a trail out of the coarse grained Tapeats Sandstone that
follows closely along the southeast side of the Colorado River
connecting his cabin to Palisades Creek and then on to the Tanner
Trail. The trail became part of a larger network of trails known as
“Horsethief trail” since it was frequently used by more nefarious
canyon residents who stole their four-legged freight from south rim
outposts then drove them down the canyon along the Tanner and Beamer
trails, re-branding the animals while in transit. They repeated their
trade network in the opposite direction after emerging from the canyon
on the northern side near the Arizona Strip where they sold the
animals to Mormon pioneers then collected new horses from their
unsuspecting recent customers to drive into the canyon and sell on the
southern side. The trail is still in use today.
Beamer is one of the
few Grand Canyon settlers for whom there is no known picture.
Source material for
this story: Anderson, Michael. 1998. Living at the edge: Explorers,
exploiters and settlers of the Grand Canyon region. Grand Canyon:
Grand Canyon Association. Cline Library, NAU.
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