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Louis B. Bentley papers

 Collection — Multiple Containers
Identifier: Ms-0014

Scope and Contents

The Louis B. Bentley papers reflect the various activities of the Organ merchant and mine agent. One series contains the records of Bentley's assay office, and another series includes blueprints and maps. Most of the blueprints are tracings for the Organ Ore Co. and a large portion of the maps are geological drawings of the New Jersey Zinc Exploration Company. Correspondence dates from 1906-1955, but is fragmentary, excepting three letterpress books covering the periods 1906-1916. A principal correspondent of Bentley's was Gen. Henry Harrison Chase Dunwoody, President of the Aztec Mining Company. Bentley acted as a mine agent on Dunwoody’s behalf.

The General Store File series contains bills and receipts, checks, circulars, correspondence, daybooks, a records book entitled "Dead Beats," and store licenses. There are few legal documents in the collection, an item of interest is a copy of a court case in which Bentley sued the state of New Mexico for taking over land he had patented.

The series Organ Ore Co. and other mining reports, contains information on mining in the Organ Mountains. Most of the reports concern the potential profits that could be made from mining the area's natural resources. Besides such promotional literature, the reports also contain geological data and maps. Nearly all the items in the series are from the periods when the Organ Ore Co. was established to take advantage of low grade ore still unmined in the Organs.

Besides Bentley's personal involvement in Organ mining, he was interested in the general science of mines. The collection also contains mining catalogs, a copy of United States Mining Laws and other booklets that deal with mining. The Scrapbook series contains three large albums of articles collected by Bentley regarding mining.

Dates

  • 1834 - 1958

Conditions Governing Access

Open. All materials in this collection are available for research under supervised conditions in the Research Room.

Conditions Governing Use

All rights possessed in this collection have been assigned to the Rio Grande Historical Collections of New Mexico State University Library.

Biographical / Historical

Louis Boyer Bentley was born in St. Louis, Missouri on October 28, 1869. His father was secretary of St. Louis Lead and Oil Company. In 1874, the family moved to Hastings, Michigan, where the senior Bentley went into the lumber business with his brother. Bentley attended school until 1887, when his father died and his family moved to Grand Rapids, Michigan. Bentley secured a job with an electric construction company in Grand Rapids. In 1891, Bentley returned to Hastings and organized the Hastings Electric Light and Power Company. Bentley married two years later.

Disposing of his interest in the Electric Light Company in 1899, Bentley moved to Chicago where he worked for a year in a chemical laboratory. After quitting that, he returned briefly to Hustings and then headed to Colorado Springs and Cripple Creek, Colorado. Disliking the Colorado climate, Bentley and a friend headed for Prescott, Arizona. On the way to Prescott, the pair met C.B. Rogers, Superintendent of the Torpedo and Modoc Mines in New Mexico's Organ Mountains.

Rogers offered both men jobs and Bentley became an assayer, bookkeeper, foreman and general handy man for the mines. Bentley eventually took over the commissary and boarding house, and served as Postmaster. When work shut down at the Modoc, Bentley started a general store in Organ, New Mexico. In 1909, he began his Custom Assay Office. Bentley also served as a Deputy Sheriff for the small mountain community. During the 1920's he helped create the Organ Ore Company, to mill low grade ore still plentiful in the Organ Mountains.

Louis B. Bentley died in 1955.

Extent

9 Linear Feet

Language of Materials

English

Abstract

Assay records, blueprints, maps, correspondence, general store files, legal documents, mining reports of the Organ Ore Company and other mining companies, stock certificates, printed materials scrapbooks and photographs belonging to Louis Boyer Bentley, Organ, New Mexico assayer, merchant and mine agent. Blaming mismanagement for the failure of various mining operations in the Organs, Bentley and others started the Organ Ore Company, in the 1920s. The company sought to mill low grade ore in Organs, saving the cost of transportation for the raw ore. Bentley also acted as an agent for Eastern owners of mines in the Organ Mountains.

Related Materials

Herman B. Weisner papers. Ms 0249. Archives and Special Collections, New Mexico State University Library.
Title
Guide to the Louis B. Bentley papers
Status
Completed
Language of description
English
Script of description
Code for undetermined script

Repository Details

Part of the New Mexico State University Library Archives and Special Collections Repository

Contact:
Branson Hall
PO Box 30006
MSC 3475
Las Cruces New Mexico 88003 USA