Utah's Greatest Manhunt: The True Story of the Hunt for Lopez by an Eye Witness
Bertrand E Gallagher
From The Book Collector, Inc. ABAA, ILAB, Fort Worth, TX, U.S.A.
Seller rating 4 out of 5 stars
AbeBooks Seller since 20 October 1998
From The Book Collector, Inc. ABAA, ILAB, Fort Worth, TX, U.S.A.
Seller rating 4 out of 5 stars
AbeBooks Seller since 20 October 1998
About this Item
142 pages with illustrations. Duodecimo (6 1/2" x 5 1/4") bound in original publisher's pictorial wrappers. First edition. Rafael Lopez came to Utah to help break a strike up in Bingham Canyon in 1912. A year later, he was a fugitive and a folk hero. When Greek miners went out on strike in 1912, the Utah Copper Company turned to Mexican labor to keep production moving in its Bingham Canyon mine. Some of the strike-breakers stayed on after the dispute was settled. One of them a miner named Rafael Lopez became a folk hero among Mexican workers for his successful if violent defiance of authority. During the first decades of the twentieth century, the mining camps of Bingham Canyon were melting pots of Finns, Serbs, Greeks, and French. The Mexicans who looked for work there often had to take the least desirable jobs, but Lopez made forty dollars a day extracting ore from abandoned old slopes, and made a reputation as an industrious worker. But one evening in 1913, Lopez murdered a fellow miner Juan Valdez on their way home from work. Some claim that Lopez lost his temper and shot the man in cold blood. Others say he took revenge on the man who killed his brother. We may never know. But in the days that followed, Lopez led the police on a manhunt that made him a household name. When deputies tried to arrest him, Lopez retaliated, killing three more men. So police retaliated by jailing 54 Mexican miners on charges of vagrancy. As he continued to avoid capture, Lopez became a kind of hero among Utah s Mexican community. They cheered him as he eluded police and mourned him when a sheriff detonated dynamite to trap him in the mineshaft where he was supposedly hiding. But Lopez s body was never recovered. Some miners claimed to have seen him haunting the shafts, slopes, and drifts of Bingham Canyon. Others refused to work until he was found. And many believed that Lopez escaped to Mexico, never to be heard from again. Whatever his fate, the Mexican miners who coped with low pay and dangerous conditions turned Lopez into a folk hero, telling stories of his exploits for years to come. (John Christensen for Utah Humanities) Condition: Pages age toned else a very good copy. Seller Inventory # TEH033
Bibliographic Details
Title: Utah's Greatest Manhunt: The True Story of ...
Publisher: F.W. Gardiner, Salt Lake City
Publication Date: 1913
Binding: Soft cover
Condition: Very Good
Edition: 1st Edition
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