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Augusta Pierce Tabor
1833-1895
Inducted 1991
Adopted by Suzanne Richardson
Augusta Pierce Tabor was the first white woman
to live in the mining camp in Idaho Springs. Later she and husband
Horace moved to Leadville, where they set up a store. After nearly
20 years of gold mining in the Colorado mountains, supplemented
by Augusta’s earnings from taking in boarders and doing laundry,
they literally struck it rich in 1978 with a silver vein that soon
produced $10,000 a day. Horace was elected lieutenant governor
later that year and surprised Augusta with a $40,000, 20-room house
at Eighteenth and Broadway in Denver. After Horace left her for “Baby
Doe” and her marriage dissolved, Tabor continued to live
in the Broadway mansion, keeping as many as 14 boarders at a
time. She hosted fund-raising events in her large home and gave
to community
charities and civic projects. She dedicated herself to the Pioneer
Ladies Aid Society, helping pioneer women in need. |