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KS 66285
913-708-5119
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Rags, Riches & Scandal - The Tabor
Triangle
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But, alas the spirited girl, began to attend the parties of
Leadville
and started to drink heavily. After a heavy night of partying,
she became involved in a scandal with a local saloon keeper and
Baby Doe sent
her to Denver, where she thought she would be better off.
Silver Dollar obtained a job at a local newspaper and wrote a western
novel called The Star of Blood. But neither adventure was
successful. Then she tried her hand at publishing a small
periodical, but her life was spiraling downward and after a couple of
years, she decided to move to
Chicago,
Illinois. There, she planned to make one last stab at making a career of writing and
if that proved unsuccessful, she told her mother, she was going to join a
convent.
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Silver Dollar Tabor
This image available for
photographic prints and downloads
HERE!
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Rosemary Echo Silver Dollar Tabor
posing in Chicago in 1925.
This image available for
photographic prints and downloads
HERE!
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Baby Doe
never saw her again, but received sporadic letters, until an
article appeared in the Denver paper, which outlined the details
of
Silver Dollar's grizzly murder.
During her time in
Chicago,
Silver Dollar had continued on a path of destruction, getting
involved with drugs, continuing to drink, and joining a burlesque
show for a period of time.
She lived with one after another
ill-fit men, until one of them killed her by pouring scalding
water over her naked body.
Silver Dollar was 35.
Baby Doe
denied the entire story, stating that
Silver Dollar was safely in a convent. Though she
probably knew it was true,
Baby Doe
would never admit otherwise.
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Baby Doe,
who stayed at the cabin for her remaining 35 years, was a proud woman
who routinely refused charity of any kind. Periodically she would
trudge into town for supplies, which she paid for with chunks of
"valuable" ore she picked up around the property, unaware that the
sympathetic shopkeepers who accepted her samples as payment probably
dumped the worthless rocks as soon as she left.
Contrary to popular belief, she did not "hold on to the Matchless as
it will pay millions again," as some have incorrectly reported were
Horace Tabor's deathbed words. The Matchless Mine had long since been
lost to foreclosure and had failed to produce, even with several new
attempts on the part of the new owners.
Baby Doe
was living in the tiny cabin only due to the generosity of the current
owners of the worthless mine, where she scribbled page after page of
her increasingly paranoiac and, ultimately delirious thoughts.
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As years passed,
Baby, with no income and unable to buy anything,
would rap her feet in burlap sacks held with twine. When sick, she would
doctor herself with turpentine and lard. With the help of creditors and
through the kindness of her
Leadville
neighbors, she was supplied with the bare necessities of life. However, food and clothing sent to this very proud woman was sent back
unopened.
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Movie premier of "Silver Dollar" in 1932,
courtesy
Denver Public Library
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When a movie about
Baby Doe Tabor came out in 1932, the promoters offered to pay her and
her expenses if she would attend the premier in Denver. She refused,
and in fact, would never see the movie because it was about her old life. A year later a friend, who was a priest, and two lawyers tried to talk her
into suing the movie producers for libel, promising her that she would
receive $50,000. Again, she refused, this time stating that she didn't
need the money because the Matchless Mine was getting ready to provide her
with many more times that amount.
However, the movie did bring her publicity, which resulted in her
receiving several sympathetic letters, often including money. This
money, she accepted, as it did not fall under her definition of "charity."
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On February 20, 1935,
Baby Doe
literally struggled to get to town for a few supplies, and a grocery
delivery man, had given her a ride back from town, checking to make sure
that she had food, water and wood. She wrote in one of her endless
diaries: "Went down to
Leadville
from Matchless - the snow so terrible, I had to go down on my hands and
knees and creep from my cabin door to 7th Street. Mr. Zaitz driver drove
me to our get off place and he helped pull me to the cabin. I kept falling
deep down through the snow every minute. God bless him."
Continued Next
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Baby Doe
visiting Denver in 1930, courtesy Denver Public Library.
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From the Rocky Mountain General Store
Vintage
Magazines -
Legends of America and
the
Rocky Mountain General Store has collected a number of
Vintage Magazines, including True West, Frontier Times,
Treasure and more for our
Old West
and Treasure
Hunting enthusiasts. For most of these, we have only one
available. To see this varied collection, click
HERE!
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