RAFAEL
LOPEZ SAGA
by
Eugene Halverson
Dinkeyville top center Copperfield business district low left |
Upper
Bingham, later Copperfield
was wonderful place to
grow up. Lots of kids to play with and
we had wonderful mountains to play in. I
lived in Telegraph, not Copperfield.
Most of the Mexicans lived in Dinkeyville and were proud of it.
There were no kids in Greek Camp but above and below the Copperfield stores we had lots of Greek kids. Jap Camp had kids to play with there too. We played with all nationalities and I loved them all.
There were no kids in Greek Camp but above and below the Copperfield stores we had lots of Greek kids. Jap Camp had kids to play with there too. We played with all nationalities and I loved them all.
I
was one of the second generation kids in Bingham. We cared nothing about skin color or
nationality.
HIGHLANDBOY |
Bingham
is remembered as a stone’s throw wide and seven miles long, known as a place
with a one-way street, an open sewer and founded on mining. It was the third largest and one of the oldest
city in Utah. Railroads brought company
towns, tunnels and an open pit mine.
Thousands of people came here to live and work. The work was dangerous and the pay was poor. Workers were forced to work ten hours a day
seven days a week and it was time to strike.
The
1912 STRIKE
STATE MILITIA |
John Leventis ran a coffee house in Copperfield. He said, “Let the owners get the ore themselves” so they left the mines, pooled their money and formed partnerships to open grocery stores, drug stores and hotels.
But, Prejudices still followed them.
Ellen
Vidalakis (Furgis) told about the Ku Klux Klan when they were burning crosses
in Dinkeyville. “You could see them
everywhere and people were just terrified.”
A Mormon Bishop’s was caught “burning crosses” above Magna. A doctor was burning crosses in
Copperfield. Salt Lake and Price had their
KKK burning crosses everywhere. There
were no arrests by police anywhere.
make believe LOPEZ |
1913
was Bad Time to come to Bingham but this was when LOPEZ came. He was an experienced miner and worked as a
“leaser”. He made lots of money and
spent it freely on his friends. He was
noticed and watched by the police. He
was not a “Scab” yet he was treated like some kind of animal. I remember stories of an educated, honest and
honorable person, from an aristocratic Spanish family from Mexico.
Well
Lopez got in a fight and went to jail. Deputy
Sheriff Sorensen called Lopez names and slapped him around. Later Lopez found two Greeks molesting two young
girls. Well sheriff Sorensen sent the Greeks
on their way and pistol-whipped Lopez and hauled him off to jail a second time where he taunted Lopez and beat him.
Lopez had been wrongly arrested and wanted revenge. He killed Valdez and headed over the mountain to the valley on foot. There was snow on the ground and the “Posse” followed him on horses. They found him just west of Lehi and he killed three of them but he missed Sorensen.
Lopez had been wrongly arrested and wanted revenge. He killed Valdez and headed over the mountain to the valley on foot. There was snow on the ground and the “Posse” followed him on horses. They found him just west of Lehi and he killed three of them but he missed Sorensen.
It
was easy to follow Lopez with the snow and the chase was on. Several Posses from as many cities and
counties began chasing like he was some kind of animal. LOPEZ began circling until no one knew who
was following who. There were reports of
gun battles at Mosida, a town south of Utah Lake. Posse thought they had him near Eureka. Others had him at Cedar fort. Fifty men plus
25 Indian Trackers had him at Skull Valley.
Others had him in Little Valley, south-west of Vernon. The town’s people and the police were sharply
divided on who was the good guy and who was the bad guy.
HIGH SCHOOL BAND |
It
seems like our killer had more friends than the sheriff. The Mexicans were quite proud of him for
teaching the sheriff a lesson even though hundreds of Mexicans in every Mormon
town were being arrested. “Newspapers”
called for all Mexicans to be deported. They were even rounding up Mexicans as
far away as California.
Eventually
one man quit following the sheriffs orders and began following some tracks
going back up into the mountain to Highland Boy, but no one believed him. Lopez was betrayed by a friend who said he
was hiding in the Apex Mine. Now he was
cornered like a rat in a trap. Of course
they went after him and two more men were killed.
The
mine was searched and searched again; poison gasses fumigated the mine and then
searched again and again, but no Lopez.
He was a “HERO” to many of the searchers and unknown to the Sheriffs
they were leaving food, water, clothing and blankets. Lopez even came down and talked to some of
the searchers.
TRACK GANG |
The Union- Company War ended only to be replaced by Lopez-Police War. People were sick and tired of guns and killings. The Police were just as unpopular as Lopez but by now many people turned a “blind eye” about helping the police.
The Apex siege eventually ended with no
Lopez. He escaped right under the sheriff’s
nose and most of the people laughed about it. He was helped and he vanished. He followed the mountains going south and
west past Vernon to the McIntire Summer Ranch where he found Morris Valdez living
there where he lived all that winter.
4th July Copperfield |
Sheriff
Smith, the Town Officials and the Company officials were embarrassed
again. They thought it tarnished
Bingham’s image. Money came from
everywhere to honor and bury the Deputies but not a dime to bury Valdez. Months went by and Valdez was still sitting
in the corner of Joe Berger’s Bar. Joe was
the town’s undertaker. Finally Joe put
up a sign and charged admission to come and see poor old Valdez. Money was collected and he was buried.
The
Salt Lake Tribune
By
Robert Kirby
Friday
marks the 100th anniversary of the worst law enforcement disaster in Utah
history. Over the course of a week, five police officers were murdered by a man
who was never apprehended for the crime.
In
1913, Bingham Canyon was still reeling from a violent strike against Utah
Copper the year before. The strike was broken in part by hundreds of guards and
"scabs" shipped in by the company.
Although
referred to as "deputies," the guards were actually little more than
armed thugs. Real Salt Lake County deputies arrested a number of them for
assault and drunkenness. Unfortunately, local miners didn’t distinguish between
the two.
The
disaster began with a commonplace murder in the Sap Gap district of Highland
Boy, an upper reach of Bingham Canyon. Shortly before midnight on Nov. 21,
Rafael Lopez shot and killed another man with whom he had a dispute.
Salt
Lake County sheriff’s deputy Julius Sorensen had arrested Lopez
HIGHLANDBOY |
The four-man posse, including Sorensen, caught up with Lopez at a ranch house near Saratoga Springs on Nov. 22. Seeing the officer’s approach, Lopez slipped out of the cabin and into the brush. When they rode up, he began firing with a lever-action rifle.
Ironically,
Lopez managed to murder everyone except the man he really wanted to kill:
Sorensen.
The deputy, 58, survived because his horse threw him. Within seconds, Salt Lake
County deputies Otto Witbeck and Nephi Jensen, and Bingham City police Chief
William Grant were dead or dying.
What
was already an epic flight to avoid apprehension became news overnight.
Hundreds of law enforcement officers swarmed to the scene on horseback and in
cars.
COPPERFIELD |
Still
on foot, Lopez fled. When he tried to cross over the Lake Mountain into Cedar
Valley, he had a gunfight with another posse. During the night, he managed to
slip away.
Upper
Bingham, later called Copperfield was wonderful place to grow up. Lots of kids to play with and we had
wonderful mountains to play in. I lived
in Telegraph. Most of the Mexicans lived
in Dinkeyville and were proud of it.
There were no kids in Greek Camp but above and below the Copperfield
stores we had lots of Greek kids. Jap
Camp had kids to play with there too. We played with all nationalities and I
loved them all.
I
was one of the second generation kids in Bingham. We cared nothing about skin color or
nationality.
The
Utah Copper before my time began building some modern homes from the business
district to the top of Copperfield.
These were built for the “whites”, (bosses, Mormons and
superintendents.) Greeks, Serbians,
Italians, and other nationalities just lived where they could. Janie Torres Montoya said she visited a
friend at the “Circle but said “only “Anglos” lived there.
MARKHAM |
They
worshiped him. He was the under-dog who survived against great odds and he beat
them all. He evaded the largest man-hunt
Utah has ever had. He must have laughed
all the way to Mexico.
LOPEZ
was a Hero” to the Mexicans, Greeks, Croatians, Slovenes, Swedes like me and
the Irish.
INDUSTRIAL
WARS—MONEY AND GREED
THE
ROCKEFELLER’S built an empire with questionable business practices, in other
words he was a thief. Under him Standard
Oil controlled the world’s oil. I first
found Rockefeller in Trinidad (where Bingham’s Joe Dispenza’s father was shot).
Ludlow
coal mines in Colorado where Rockefeller personally ordered the National Guard
to machinegun the tents of strikers after removing them from their Company
houses. An Engineer moved his train
between the strikers and the guns and allowing most of the people a chance to
escape. A disappointed Rockefeller
ordered the Tent Town burnt; soldiers on horse-back with torches burnt
everything. Four men, three women and
eleven children were burnt alive.
My
friend, Wayne Herlevi’s father was shot in Winter Quarters, Utah
In
1903 Rockefeller bought all the mines and claims the US Mine owned, Rockefeller
already owned the D&RG Railroad who built the B&G to Bingham,
Rockefeller money and influence helped start the Utah Copper. The D&RG also bought up most of the Coal
Mines in Carbon County, Utah.
UNIONS
PANOS TURNER kids |
Every
strike in Utah, Arizona, Idaho and Montana for the next forty-four years were
brutally crushed and lost. This is what they asked for.
1-
“DEAD WORK” –Work not Paid for like, Timbering (to stop cave- ins),
2-
Laying track,
3-
Cleaning and watering dust from the floors of the mine (in May 1st 1900 200 men
in Winter Quarters, Utah were killed. On
8 March 1924 176 men were killed). The
two worsted mining disasters in Utah mining history was caused by safety
violations by Utah Fuel a Rockefeller company.
4-
There were many jobs not paid for, Tools like picks and shovels, blasting
powder, but nothing was ever paid for a safety problem.
5-
Company hired Gunmen
6-
Cheating miner at the scales—the only pay a miner received was number and
weight of the coal at the tipple, a common complaint and practice.
7- The Company Store—miners were paid with
“Script” not money. Every man, women and
child caught with any food, clothing lost them when passing the “Guard Post”.
UNIONS
WERE OUTLAWED IN UTAH until 1944, I really don't think we won many strikes but
we tried. They deducted two years
Strike-time from my poor-man’s pension.
1935 Copperfield |
Telegraph
I was born here in 1928, after we were removed from here when my father almost
died from Silicosis (mine dust). Our new
home was the Panos Apartments in Frog Town.
Chris Apostle, another Greek, with a grocery store feed us. I have a great love and respect for
Greeks. It took many years to pay all
these bills but we did. When the US
Superintendent’s son ran over my brother and I, dad was offered an outside of
the mine job, running the US Air Compressor.
Carbon
County Mines
“Boot-legging was popular back then and the “Feds “were raiding the stills. By the time they traveled the seven miles up Bingham the stills were all hidden.
Sunnyside
still fondly remembers when the National Guard was searching every house in
town. Yankovich’s daughter came running
out of the house with a piece necessary evidence. The soldiers ran after her,
but she disappeared. She had climbed a
tree. Her father dyed her hair red and
she was never caught.
I
am also related to the Houghtons in Castle Gate. I have two brother-in-law’s who are still
working in the mines.
looking into CARRFORK |
Doctor Dowd threatened to shot any Company Guard who came to throw a lady who was pregnant and crying out in the snow.
Wild-cat Strikes in Bingham
A
strike at the end of a contract was hard on us.
Everything was shut-down while the company happily waited for a demand
for copper and they actually profited.
“BUT”
a Wildcat strike crippled production and cost them money.
I
remember a four day Wildcat when the Machinist Union shut all entrances to the
mine. Nothing entered for two days. The Company tried to break through with big
busses but they never made it. Can’t go
anywhere with flat tires.
The
County sent sixty maybe seventy Deputies and even the Highway Patrol was there. They handed out hundreds of “JOHN DOE
Warrants” signed by a Judge (one year in jail-$10,000.00 fine). Company foremen came to identify each one of
us.
My relations living in Carrfork |
Of
course the Deputies thought it was fun to harass us. When they got tired of one thing they tried
another. One was the “WEDGE” where about
sixty deputy joined together in a giant wedge and charged. Nothing could stop them. Anyone in front or under them got trampled
but that failed too.