By Donna Wichelman
Over the last year, I’ve written about how the influx of immigrants to find their fortunes settled the western territories of the continental United States. The Territory of Colorado, in particular, saw the population explode due to immigrants who heard there were vast resources of gold and silver in the region. Many African Americans and whites, who’d helped fight for their emancipation, also came from the northern states and wanted to put the Civil War behind them.
In her book, The Rise of the Silver Queen, Historian Christine Bradley speaks about the many ethnic groups who arrived in Georgetown, Colorado, during the town’s silver mining heyday (1868 – 1878). They came “from every point of the globe…,” she says (The Rise of the Silver Queen, p. 88). These included Cornish, Chinese, Germans, French, Welsh, Jewish, and Italians, hoping to make it rich on a large silver lode.
| Ruins of the Terrible Mining Company near Georgetown, Colorado: Donna's Gallery, June 2019 |
Among the many groups who arrived, one could argue that no other impacted the Territory of Colorado more than the Irish, and nowhere is that more evident than in the Alvarez Cemetery in Georgetown and the Evergreen Cemetery in Leadville, Colorado. If one walks the grounds of these two cemeteries, it becomes immediately apparent that a massive amount of gravestones exist engraved with Irish surnames such as Bruce and McHugh, Dougherty and O’Donnell, McHugh and McGuiuggan, and Flannery and O’Sullivan.
| Alvarez Cemetery, Georgetown, Colorado, Donna’s Gallery, October 2018 |
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| Alvarez Cemetery, Georgetown, Colorado, Donna’s Gallery, October 2018 |
In 2023, the Evergreen Cemetery in Leadville, Colorado, completed an Irish Immigrant Miner's Memorial honoring the 1,300 Irish who settled in Leadville in the nineteenth century. The monument stands as a testament to those whose hopes and dreams brought them to America and who struggled to make a life in the new world.
In honor of my Irish protagonist, Anna Sullivan, in my Gilded Age historical romance, A Song of Deliverance, I wanted to visit the memorial. Though I’d seen a picture of it in my research, I didn’t know what to expect. So, when I walked into the area sectioned off for the Irish gravestones and memorial, I wasn't prepared for the heart-wrenching moment that impacted me.
| Donna Standing Next to the Irish Memorial, Evergreen Cemetery, Leadville, Colorado: Donna’s Gallery, June 2025 |
According to one plaque at the
memorial, approximately one-fifth of all residents of Leadville in 1880 were of
Irish heritage, making it the "most Irish community per capita of any
community between the West Coast and the Mississippi River."
Yet, despite their significant presence in Leadville, the Irish, as a whole, could not rise much above the poverty they had experienced in Ireland. Most couldn’t afford a proper burial for their kin. Scanning the names on the tall Plexiglas lists of people who lived and died in Leadville, I noticed the great number of children who died as infants or in early childhood. Most of them were buried in unmarked graves or with a simple wooden marker in the Catholic Pauper section of the cemetery, because their families couldn't pay the $15 that was required for a gravestone.
| Name of Those Who Died in Early Childhood: Donna's Gallery, June 2025 |
| Unmarked Irish Graves in the Catholic Pauper Section of the Cemetery: Donna's Gallery, June 2025 |


Thank you for posting. And thank you for sharing this site with us. I'm sure being there in person was very impactful. I admire Dr. Walsh for his work as well.
ReplyDeleteWhat an interesting post! Thanks for sharing. In the 80’s a friend of mine from high school headed to Leadville to seek his fortune and worked in the melebdinum (spelling?) mines. He lasted two years saying it was the hardest and most dangerous job he ever had.
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