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P.O. Box 19423
Lenexa,
KS 66285
913-708-5119
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KANSAS LEGENDS
A Murderous Tale of Scandal & Treasure
in Galena |
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Though
Galena,
Kansas is a sleepy little town of only
about 3,000 people today, it wasn’t always so. In the late 1800’s
this town was rockin’ and rollin’ with more than 30,000 miners working to
pull rich lead and zinc ores from more than 250 area mines.
With that many working men in a relatively new town, the settlement was a
haven for transients and outlaws. It’s innumerable
saloons,
gambling halls and bawdy houses added to the decadence of this early city.
During this time, many hardworking miners were lured inside to lose their
hard earned gold at the gaming tables and other questionable pastimes.
Some were never seen again.
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Galena,
Kansas, had a population of almost 30,000
in 1898.
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one enterprising woman by the name of Steffleback decided to profit
from the many miners, prospectors and businessmen when she opened a
two story bordello in the 1890s. In no time at all, the
Steffleback house was the most popular place in town, as it filled
with heavy-drinking miners, gamblers, and those in search of more
bawdy pastimes. Steffleback grew quite wealthy over the next few
years, but she was a greedy woman and the sight of the amount of money
carried by many of her customers was more than she could handle.

Mining near
Galena,
Kansas
vintage
postcard
Soon, the ambitious
woman found an even better way to fill her coffers. One evening
when a local prospector sat at a table drinking whiskey, Steffleback
noticed that he paid for his drinks by pulling gold coins from a heavy
leather sack tied to this belt. Estimating the sack held several
hundred dollars, a new idea struck her. When the customer was
drunk, she lured him into a back room, where she instructed one of her
sons to sneak up behind the man. In moments, the man’s head was
split open with an ax and Steffleback was several hundred dollars
richer. Later, when no one was around Steffleback’s son placed
the corpse into a canvas bag, loaded it on a horse and moved the body
to an abandoned mine shaft, where it was dumped
With the numbers of transient miners
passing through the area, Steffleback soon decided that eliminating
these prospectors and relieving them of their money was a faster way
to get rich. Over the next several years, she allegedly lured as
many as thirty victims into her back room, later depositing their
bodies in the many mine shafts of the area.
For years she got away with the murders,
minimizing suspicion on herself, as she lived quite frugally.
Further alleviating any suspicion, she never deposited the money into
a bank, instead squirreling it away somewhere in
Galena.
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one night she got into a heated argument with one of her “girls,” fired
her and kicked her out of the house. Seeking revenge, the angry
woman immediately went to the authorities, telling them of the madam’s
murderous activities. Steffleback was arrested the next day.
Once incarcerated, the lawmen searched Steffelback’s property for any sign
of the stolen cache, but found nothing. Branching out, they also
searched several abandoned mine shafts in the area which yielded more than
a dozen bodies, but none of the stolen money.
Tried in 1897, Steffleback never admitted her
guilt, nor revealed where she had hidden her fortune. Sentenced to
the State Women’s Prison in Lansing,
Kansas, she was watched and listened to carefully believing that she
would one day give up her secret. However, she died in 1909, without
ever revealing where she had hidden the
treasure.
Following her
death, the story was revived and treasure hunters flocked to
Galena
from as far away as
Colorado.
Floors of the old bordello were ripped up and walls pulled down, but
again, the money was never found. Today, the
treasure
is still said to be buried somewhere near the site of the now long gone
bordello or in one of the many old mine shafts surrounding
Galena.
December, 2004
Also See:
Galena - A Lead
Mining Maven |
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From the Rocky Mountain General Store
Saloon
Style Advertising Prints - What were on the walls of the
saloons in the
Old West? Likely, much of the same as those you find today -
advertisements for liquor, beer, and tobacco. Plus the "decadent" women of
the time. In our
Photo Print Shop, you'll find dozens of photographs for decorating your
"real" saloon or
den in a saloon
type atmosphere.
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