P6 THE SPOKESMAN • TUESDAY, APRIL 5, 2022 OFFBEAT OREGON HISTORY State biggest uranium mine was found by amateur rockhound BY FINN J.D. JOHN Offbeat Oregon D uring the go-go years of the uranium-mining rush of the early 1950s, the character of the uranium prospector became iconic. He was basically the gold-seeking “miner 49er” updated for the atomic age: in lieu of a mule, he rode an Army-surplus Jeep. In place of pick and gold pan, he carried a Geiger counter and ultraviolet flashlight. For the better part of a de- cade seekers of “A-metal” deposits (the “A” stood for “Atomic”) prowled all over the public lands of all the West- ern states, waving their Geiger counters at every promising rock formation. They spent a lot of time getting excited, and a lot of time being disappointed. Oregon has a lot of uranium, much of it in the form of au- tinite crystals; but it’s very thinly distributed — in most deposits, there is enough to set off a Gei- ger counter and get a prospec- tor all excited, but not enough to mine. So it’s ironic, but maybe not surprising, that Oregon’s biggest uranium strike was made by a guy who didn’t even own a Gei- ger counter. Lakeview business owner Don Tracy knew almost noth- ing about rocks and geology until he was in his late 30s. That’s when he stumbled across some stones, multi-colored and obviously semiprecious, that he couldn’t identify. None of his friends could either. Tracy hit the books, borrow- ing everything the Lakeview public library had on gem- stones and even digging into geology textbooks from Ore- gon State University. He also set up a rock shop in his garage with polishing and cutting equipment, and started going out with his family on regular excursions to hunt up new specimens. He never did find a name for his stones. They were some kind of jasper, but beyond that they apparently were unknown to science. Today they are known as Tracinite. Tracy was still in the full flush of his new geology hobby when the uranium craze broke out. The first thing he wanted to do was go out and use his newfound knowledge of min- erology to try to find some. Tracy didn’t own a Geiger counter, but he knew what ura- nium oxide crystals looked like — and maybe he remem- bered seeing something like them on one of his previous rockhounding expeditions. In any case, he closed in on the future site of the White King Mine like a bloodhound on a scent. There, near the edge of the Fremont National Forest, he found a deposit of rocks with promising-looking crystals set in them. He promptly staked a claim around them, naming it the Lucky Day. Back he went to Lakeview with a sample of the rocks. Be- cause he wasn’t kitted out for uranium mining, he had to borrow an ultraviolet light from a friend to shine at the rocks. Under it, they fluoresced the characteristic chartreuse color of uranium oxide crystals. To make sure, he sent a sam- ple to the Oregon Department of Geology. The department checked the samples and re- plied that there was uranium in them — in the form of autinite — but not enough to be worth processing. But they encour- aged him to keep looking. He did, moving afield from his first discovery, looking for rocks more densely packed with autinite crystals. And again, he very quickly found what he was looking for, near the banks of Augur Creek, stuck in the dirt wad of a tree that had blown down in a win- ter storm a month or two be- fore. He found two partners and the three of them staked 16 claims covering the “hot” ground in the state forest and on Walter Leehman’s land, and got busy exploiting it. They named the claim cluster “The White King Group.” While all of this was going on, another group of prospec- Oregon Historial Society Uranium prospectors Lee Gibson, Allen Berends, and Elden Berends stake a claim in Malheur County in 1954 in this photo made by Harano Studio of Ontario. tors was hunting across Lake County for the elusive A-metal using a very different tech- nique. Their names were Don Lind- sey, Robert Adams, Clair Smith and Choc Shelton, and the four of them had gotten interested in uranium mining a year ear- lier, in 1954. They had pooled their resources to purchase an extremely expensive Geiger counter, a Detectron Nucle- ometer, which was allegedly so sensitive that one could use it to sniff out uranium deposits from low-flying airplane. Ad- ams had a Piper Super Cub, so they used that to try the Nucle- ometer out. It didn’t work so great. Many hours of tedious, dangerous treetop hopping later, they had nothing to show for it. So they switched to prospecting the old-fashioned way, or rather the new-old-fashioned way, with a Jeep, using the Nucleometer like a regular Geiger counter. They were doing that when rumors reached their ears of Tracy’s big strike. Nobody admitted it. The prospectors said they were put onto the scent when a friend told them he’d seen pickup trucks leaving the Fremont Na- tional Forest with their beds full of rocks. But it seems most likely they used the Super Cub to figure out where the min- ing action was taking place. It wasn’t the kind of activity that one could do by stealth and by night. However they figured it out, figure it out they did, and pros- pecting out from the marked claims of the White King group with the help of their overpow- ered Nucleometer, they soon honed in on a spot that was so hot, the Nucleometer actually couldn’t measure it — there was no sensitivity setting low enough to keep the needle from simply pegging at the high end. As quickly as possible, they staked and filed a discovery claim and four claims around it, dubbing it the Lucky Lass Mine. And they weren’t a moment too soon. Other prospectors were already arriving. The word, it seemed, was out. “Talk about excitement!” Clair Smith wrote, in corre- spondence with author Ruby El Hult. “The next day the discov- ery … was in the newspapers, on the radio and TV all across the nation. People came from all over, some from 1,000 miles or more away.” “The first week after the dis- covery we estimated 2,000 cars drove by in front of the open cut,” he added. “Of the ore dug and piled by the side of the road, two or three tons must have been carried off piece by piece as souvenirs by sightse- ers. Our little town (Lakeview) looked like Gold Rush days, with street hawkers on corners selling Geiger counters and scintillators.” Over that crazy summer of 1955, nearly 10,000 claims were staked in the Fremont National Forest by hopeful prospectors, most of them based on mar- ginal readings from the cheap Geiger counters like the ones hawked on the streets of Lakev- iew. The area teemed with Army surplus Jeeps and bat- tered pickup trucks. And one or two of them may even have panned out. But, a decade later, only two of them remained in operation: The White King and the Lucky Lass. No uranium-mining story has a really happy ending. Few of the prospectors and miners who were involved in the in- dustry realized how dangerous uranium ore really was. But Oregon got off compar- atively unscathed, at least by comparison with other Western states. The White King and the Lucky Lass were open-pit mines, so Lakeview was spared the trauma of losing a genera- tion of underground uranium miners to a pandemic of lung cancer a dozen years later. (The White King did have one un- derground mine, but most of the work was done in the big pit.) After the uranium market declined to the point of the mines no longer being profit- able, both were closed, and the pits filled with water to form White King Pond and Lucky Lass Pond (13 acres and five acres, respectively). Left behind were mountainous heaps of ra- dioactive tailings. Both sites were added to the government’s Superfund cleanup program in 2001. To- day, the hottest of the tailings have been hauled away and more-or-less-safely buried in a “disposal cell” area nearby, protected by a heavy layer of compacted soil topped with rock. The remaining tailings are buried on site, and the whole area presents the appearance of a peaceful meadowland — al- though access is restricted due to the lingering radioactivity. █ Finn J.D. John teaches at Oregon State University and writes about odd tidbits of Oregon history. His book, Heroes and Rascals of Old Oregon, was recently published by Ouragan House Publishers. To contact him or suggest a topic: finn@ offbeatoregon.com or 541-357-2222. SOLUTION Sudoku on Page 2 SOLUTION Crossword on Page 2 Ways you can support Thelma’s Place: • Vehicle donations • Cash donations • Sponsorships • Volunteer CHILD CARE AN INTERGENERATIONAL PROGRAM Your support makes a difference! Redmond: 541-548-3049 Day Respite and Support Groups www.thelmasplace.org