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History
HISTORY OF THE MINES
OF SPAIN AREA
The earliest known inhabitants of the Mines of Spain State Recreation
Area during historical times were the Mesquakie. Their village was located
at the mouth of Catfish Creek, just south of where the Julien Dubuque
Monument now stands. From this site, the Mesquakie carried on a fur trade
with French voyagers. They also worked the lead mines for many decades
dating back to before the Revolutionary War. There is also evidence of
prehistoric Native American cultures, some dating back as much as 8,000
years. Mounds, village sites, rock shelters, trading post sites, and campsites
dot the landscape.
Julien Dubuque is credited
as being the first European to settle on what is now Iowa soil in 1788. In 1796,
Dubuque received a land grant from the Governor of Spain, who had resided in
New Orleans at the time. The grant gave permission to Julien Dubuque to work
the land which was owned by Spain and specified the 189-square mile area to
be named as "Mines of Spain." Dubuque eventually married Potosa, daughter
of the Mesquakie Indian Chief, Peosta. Dubuque died March 24,1810.
Lead mining was a major
part of this area's history, first by the Native Americans, and in later years
(late 1830s through the 1850s) by European miners and farmers. The Civil War
caused renewed lead mining activity which waned after the war, but continued
until 1914.
The Julien Dubuque
Monument, built in 1897, sits high above the Mississippi River and provides
the "Landmark" for the Mines of Spain Area. Julien Dubuque is
buried on this site, which provides a scenic vista of the 1380-acre Mines
of Spain, the city of Dubuque, the Mississippi River Valley, and Illinois.
When Dubuque died, the Mesquakie buried him with tribal honors beneath
a log mausoleum at the site where the current monument now stands.
Edwin B. Lyons, a
Dubuque business man and conservationist, left provisions in his will
to develop an interpretive center and nature preserve for the city of
Dubuque. Two years after his death, the Lyons Trust Fund purchased the
farmland originally known as the Otto Junkermann farm.
The Mines of Spain
State Recreation Area was dedicated in 1981. It was acquired with the
assistance of the Iowa Natural Heritage Foundation. The acquisition helped
assure the protection of an important piece of Iowa's historical and natural
heritage. In 1993, the area was designated as a National Historic Landmark.
Friends
of The Mines of Spain, Dubuque,
IA 52003-9214, 563-556-0620
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