2007-01-032022-02-032007-01-032022-02-03http://hdl.handle.net/11124/10101Baby Doe Tabor, the Silver Queen.Date scanned: 2000-10-26.Identifier: SC924.Unmounted; text on front.Held in the Russell L. and Lyn Wood Mining History Archive, Arthur Lakes Library, Colorado School of Mines.Postcard showing Baby Doe Tabor's face; image appears to be a newspaper photograph. In 1883 Horace Tabor, who was a wealthy silver mine owner and community leader in Leadville, divorced his wife and married the young divorcee Elizabeth McCourt Doe (Baby Doe). Their wedding was attended by Leadville's most prominent men, but their wives refused to attend the scandalous marriage and snubbed Baby Doe. Poor investments and the crash of the silver market in 1893 depleted the Tabors' wealth. Horace Tabor died penniless in 1899. After his death, Baby Doe tried unsuccessfully to get funding to repurchase the Matchless Mine, which had produced millions of dollars in silver for them. The owners of the Matchless Mine gave her permission to live in the supply cabin next to the mine shaft, and she lived there in poverty until the time of her death from a heart attack in 1935. Baby Doe's frozen body was discovered in the cabin by the neighbors a week later.Rights management statement available at: http://library.mines.edu/digital/rights.htmlBaby Doe, -1935PeopleBaby Doe TaborStillImage