Absalom Austin Townsend (December 7, 1810 – April 28, 1888)
Absalom Austin Townsend (December 7, 1810 – April 28, 1888) was an
American miner and prospector. He was a pioneer of the Wisconsin
lead-mining region and the California gold rush.
𝐄𝐚𝐫𝐥𝐲 𝐲𝐞𝐚𝐫𝐬
Townsend,
the third son of Samuel and Sarah (Longwell) Townsend, was born in
Sussex County, New Jersey in 1810. When he was two years old, his father
moved to Steuben County, New York, where he resided till 1826. His
father, now a widower, having purchased some military land in Western
Illinois, started on October 15, 1826, with his eldest son, Absalom, and
arrived at Fort Clark (now Peoria, Illinois), on January 1, 1827. In
mid-February 1827, they arrived at the lead mines in the vicinity of
Gratiot's Grove, near present-day Shullsburg, Wisconsin, and engaged in
the business of mining. They were soon interrupted by the Black Hawk War
in 1832. The elder brother volunteered in William S. Hamilton's
company, while Townsend and his father forted at Gratiot's Grove, with
Townsend serving under Gen. Zachary Taylor ("Old Rough & Ready"). He
served during the whole of the Black Hawk War (1832) as a volunteer,
under Col. Henry Dodge, and participated in the Battle of Bad Axe on
August 2, 1832. After the war was over, Townsend returned to mining.
𝐁𝐢𝐨𝐠𝐫𝐚𝐩𝐡𝐲
In
1836, he married and settled on a farm near Shullsburg, Wisconsin. With
news of the California Gold Rush, Townsend resolved to try his hand at
mining in that region. He fitted out a train of twelve wagons, drawn by
oxen, with a company of men, in the spring of 1849, and taking the land
route started on April 16, and arrived in California on September 9. The
"Rough and Ready Company" under Captain "Cappy" Townsend, composed of
nine men from Shullsburg, arrived by the Truckee route at a point on
Deer Creek, near the mouth of Slate Creek. The company styled itself the
"Rough and Ready Company" in honour of Townsend, who had served under
Taylor ("Old Rough & Ready"). From this company, the California town
of Rough and Ready derived its name. A 1958 episode of the Death Valley
Days TV series called, "Rough and Ready", reenacts their arrival and
founding of the town.
Consequent prospecting by
Townsend's company satisfied them that the newfound diggings were rich,
and removing their camp, they prepared winter quarters by building two
log cabins on the point of the hill east from and overlooking the
present town of Rough and Ready. At the end of February 1850, Townsend
took out over $40,000 (another source states $15,000), before the water
failed in the spring—no ditches then conveyed water from any large
stream to the smaller ones, or to dry ravines. Townsend then returned by
steamer route via San Francisco, Panama, and New Orleans to Galena, IL,
arriving on 26 April 1850.
Townsend fitted out
a company of 32 men on his second trip to the gold fields, well
supplied with horses and mules. They left Shullsburg on the land route
on May 23, 1850, and crossed the Missouri River at Omaha, Nebraska,
arriving on September 8 (or 10), 1850. Townsend was astonished to find a
town at Rough and Ready, containing some 400-500 inhabitants, instead
of just his two cabins. He had to "buy into a claim" to get a place to
work himself.[3][5] While in Nevada County, he pursued the business of
mining and stockkeeping. He returned to Shullsburg in the spring of
1851.
Townsend held various public offices in
Shullsburg and Lafayette County, Wisconsin. He acted as one of the
arbitrators in settling the claims of the miners, preparatory to the
sale of the Wisconsin mineral lands by the General Government. In 1842,
he was commissioned a Justice of the Peace by Governor James Duane Doty;
and in 1855, he represented his district in the Wisconsin State
Assembly.
In 1864, Absalom led a large wagon
train of individuals from Wisconsin, Illinois and Iowa to the gold areas
of Montana. Known as the "Townsend Wagon Train", it consisted of 150
wagons and over 400 people. They used the same Oregon Trail he had
traveled in his 1849 and 1850 trips to California but in Wyoming they
took an offshoot of the trail onto the Bozeman Trail which had been
mapped by John Bozeman in 1863. The Townsend Wagon Train was only the
3rd such train on the Bozeman Trail and was attacked by Native Americans
on July 7, 1864, near the Powder River in Wyoming. Several deaths
occurred on both sides of the battle. The Wagon Train eventually reached
its destination of Virginia City, Montana, on August 25, 1864,
according to the trail diary of Benjamin W. Ryan, a member of the wagon
train.
𝐏𝐞𝐫𝐬𝐨𝐧𝐚𝐥 𝐥𝐢𝐟𝐞
With
his first wife, Mary Ann Ross, there were four children, including
Addison and Virginia. She died in 1842 at the age of 29 and is buried in
Shullsburg. He married his second wife, Julia Almira Wells (1827–1877),
in 1844; they had two sons and one daughter, Edwin, Walter, and Ellen.
Julia Almira is buried next to Absalom in Evergreen Cemetery,
Shullsburg. Absalom married Charlotte Warne in Jo Daviess County, IL in
August 1880. Townsend was a member of the Presbyterian Church, and in
political views, he was a Republican. Townsend was active in the work of
the Masonic fraternity. He owned several tracts of land (over 800 acres
in total) west and south of Shullsburg which he farmed and owned the
mineral rights. His death occurred in 1888 and he is buried in Evergreen
Cemetery, Shullsburg, Wisconsin.

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