The 'diamond hoax of 1872' triggered a brief
diamond craze along the borders of
Wyoming and
Colorado,
USA.
In
1871, veteran
prospectors and cousins
Philip Arnold and
John Slack traveled to
San Francisco. They reported that they had found a
diamond mine and produced a bag full of diamonds as a proof. They deposited the diamonds on the vault of the
Bank of California.
Prominent financiers heard about the find and convinced the two to speak. Arnold and Slack were at first reluctant, but eventually offered to lead investigators to the field in Wyoming. Investors hired a mining engineer to accompany investors to examine the diamond field. Arnold and Slack led the inspection party from a railroad stop in western Wyoming to a huge diamond field with various gems on the open ground.
When the engineer made his report, more businessmen expressed interest. They included
William C. Ralston,
Horace Greeley,
George McClellan, Baron von
Rothschild, General
George S. Dodge and
Charles Tiffany of
Tiffany and Co. Tiffany's evaluated the stones as being worth $150,000. They convinced the cousins to sell their interest for $660,000 and formed their own mining company. Financiers sent mining engineer Henry Janin, who had also bought stock in the company, to reevaluate the find, and he sent wildly optimistic reports to the press.
US government geologist
Clarence King, along with two other geologists heard about the find and decided to inspect the unusual field. King uncovered a stone that was partially polished and definitely not natural. He also noticed that the field had diamonds,
rubies,
emeralds and
sapphires in the same area and many of the gems were clearly in places they could not have reached in any natural means. King contacted the investors, who had to face the fact they had been defrauded.
Further investigation showed that Arnold and Slack had bought cheap cast-off diamonds, refuse of
gem cutting, in
London and
Amsterdam for $35,000 and scattered them to "salt" the ground. Most of the gems were originally from
South Africa.
Arnold returned to his home in
Elizabethtown, Kentucky and became a successful businessman and banker. Diamond-company investors sued him, and he settled the cases for an undisclosed sum. Years later he died of
pneumonia after he was wounded in a shootout with a rival banker.
John Slack dropped from public view. He moved to St. Louis, where he owned a
casket-making company. He later became a casket maker and
undertaker in
White Oaks, New Mexico, where he lived quietly and died in 1896 at the age of 76.
External Links
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Photographs relating to the great diamond hoax
References
Dan Plazak, ''A Hole in the Ground with a Liar at the Top'' ISBN 978-0-87480-840-7 (contains a chapter on the great diamond hoax)