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Pearl’s
body was taken to Fairley Bros. and Lampman undertakers. When
Pearl’s
relatives were notified, her sister made the long train journey from
Indiana. Having believed for years that
Pearl
was a dressmaker, she was shocked and horrified to find
Pearl
with died red hair and learned of her true vocation. Furious at
the undertaker for letting her make the long journey, she left in a
huff and refused any responsibility for her sister’s remains.
After
Pearl
was abandoned by her sister, it was found that she was not the wealthy
madam that everyone thought. In fact, her
estate did not have enough money to even bury her properly.
Pearl’s
clientele proposed to auction off the beautiful French gown, but
before this could be done a communication was received from Denver
containing one thousand dollars and directing that she be buried
wearing the lovely pink gown.
Pearl was interred
with much pomp and circumstance, the funeral parade being led by the
Elks Band, playing the Death March, and escorted by four mounted
policemen. Carriages followed filled with business men, girls from
"The Row,” and many miners from the camp.
Pearl’s lavender casket,
covered with red and white roses was lowered into her grave at the
foot of Mt. Pisgah Cemetery and marked with a wooden marker.
Within just a few short years,
Pearl
and her grave were forgotten. It wasn’t until the 1930s when
Cripple Creek
began to promote tourism with
Cripple Creek
Days,
that people again became interested in the story of
Pearl de
Vere. Her grave had been lost in a weed filled corner of the cemetery,
with her name nearly eroded away from the simple wooden marker.
Soon, a campaign to replace the
wooden marker was begun and the Wilhelm
Monument Company donated a white marble heart-shaped stone which now rests
atop her grave. The original wooden slab
marker is now on display at the
Cripple
Creek District
Museum.
The Old Homestead
continued to operate until 1917. Later it would serve as a boarding house
and a private residence.
In 1957 the owners of the house discovered
many original items and wanted to share the house with the public. After extensive renovations, The Old Homestead was opened as a museum in
June, 1958. Filled with many pieces of original furniture and
displays that tell the story of the shady side of
Cripple
Creek, the house is the only original parlour to survive. Knowledgeable guides tell the story of the house,
Pearl de Vere and
Cripple
Creek in thirty minute tours from Memorial Day through October. |