Desloge Consolidated Lead Company was a lead mining company in the Southeast Missouri Lead District that was operated by the Desloge family in the 19th and early 20th century. The Desloge lead operations in the "Old Lead Belt", in the eastern Ozark Mountains, helped Missouri become the world's premier lead mining area.
His son, Firmin V. Desloge,[4][5] expanded mining operations and moved management to Bonne Terre, Missouri.[6] The Desloge mining property was established by the acquisition of the Pratte family land, north of the St. Joe property.[7] On June 5, 1874, a charter was granted to the Missouri Lead and Smelting Company, which was renamed the Desloge Lead Company on February 21, 1876. In 1876 and 1877, the company sank three shafts and built a new mill in Bonne Terre.
A fire in March 1886 destroyed the concentrating mill plant and damaged the rest of the surface plant. The following year, the company's remaining assets were sold to St. Joseph Lead Company, which made Firmin V. Desloge a trustee on its board, a post he would hold until his death. This merger helped the St. Joe company become the "greatest lead-mining and smelting company in the world.[8]
Desloge Consolidated Lead Company
After the fire, Desloge and his family took an option on a piece of land owned by the Bogy family which was called "Mine-a-Joe", one of the oldest mining properties in Missouri,[9] and started another mining operation under the name Desloge Consolidated Lead Company. The new company cleared the land and built company houses for its workers just west of present-day Desloge, Missouri.[10]
In 1893, the Desloges opened a new mine in St. Francois County, Missouri, just north of the St. Joe Lead Company property in Bonne Terre, on a tract of land originally granted to Jean Bte. Pratte and designated as U. S. Survey No. 3099.[3] The mill and smelting plant could produce 500 tons of lead per day.[11][12]
Firmin Desloge II expanded lead mining operations by buying the Bogy Lead Mine Company and the St. Francois Mining Company. Along with his partners, he organized a new company called Desloge Consolidated Lead Company. The company sank mine shafts and built mills, smelting furnaces, and power stations.[13] The Desloge Consolidated Lead Company's mine consisted of three shafts. Shaft No. 1 was the old Bogy shaft, and connected with shaft No. 2 by a tunnel. Two runs of ore had been drifted; the bottom of the lower run was at a depth of about 320 feet, and the face of the drift is in places as much as 60 feet high. The upper run is between the depths of 190 and 270 feet. Shaft No. 3 was sunk to a depth of nearly 300'feet.[14]
Firmin Desloge remained on the board of directors of St. Joe Lead Company from the time of St. Joe's acquisition of Desloge Lead Company in Bonne Terre in 1886 until his death in 1929.[15][16]
Ultimately, the company's lead operations required a massive real estate effort involving hundreds of land leases, purchases, options, rights of refusals, mineral rights, chattel mortgages, deed transfers, quit-claims, trust deeds, judgment sales, sheriff’s sales, bankruptcy sales, grants, bonds, notes, and various claims from area miners covering thousands of acres and hundreds of parcels of land.[17][18]
The Desloge Consolidated Lead Company built and operated a hospital to serve the miners and local community located in Desloge, Missouri on Fir Street.[19] The lengthy Desloge family association with this hospital is the catalyst to Firmin V. Desloge II donating to fund Firmin Desloge Hospital in St. Louis, Missouri.[20]
Desloge also helped develop the St. Louis, Iron Mountain and Southern Railway (aka the Iron Mountain Railroad), which opened in 1874 from St. Louis to Texarkana, Arkansas. When the St. Joseph Lead Company built a 13.5-mile narrow-gauge railroad from its mines to the Iron Mountain tracks at Summit in Washington County, the Desloge Company paid one-third of the costs.
Massive acreage of timber was acquired along with construction of substantial saw mills[22]
By 1901, mining operations at Desloge, Missouri included 3,640 acres[23]
Late-century lobbying
The Revenue Act of 1894, also known as the Wilson-Gorman Tariff, lowered protective tariffs on lead (although it raised rates on sugar and other materials). The prospect of cheaper imported lead threatened the Desloge company and other southeast Missouri lead businesses, so Firmin Desloge II immediately went to Washington, D.C., to lobby for repeal. In the meantime, he spent part of his own fortune to continue operations, retained his employees, and stockpiled instead of sold his pig lead.[24] The lead industry's lobbying efforts paid off in 1897, when the Dingley Act once again raised barriers to lead imports.[25]
1900s
Around 1916, the Desloge Consolidated Lead Company moved its corporate offices from Desloge to the 1892 Rialto Building in downtown St. Louis. Despite the city's history as a fur-trading center, "more money passed through St. Louis as a result of the lead business in Missouri,” Robert E. McHenry wrote in his 2006 book Chat Dumps of The Missouri Lead Belt.[26]
Sale
In 1929, the company sold its plant to the St. Joe Lead Company[27] for $18 million[28][29] ($319,395,349 today[30]) as 10,700,000 cash and $7,000,000 in bonds and other securities.[31] A trade newspaper wrote, “With the absorption of the Desloge concern by the St. Joseph Lead Company, one of the oldest mining companies of the district goes out of existence as a company.”[29]
The Desloge Consolidated Lead Company, and specifically Firmin Rene Desloge and Firmin Desloge II, were described in 1932 as "the most distinguished of American mining engineers".[32]
The modern Desloge Consolidated Lead Company
The name Desloge Consolidated Lead Company was used for a company formed in 2004 as an investment holding company by a Desloge family descendant, Christopher Desloge, and capitalized by remainderment of trusts from Firmin Desloge as assets of the sale of Desloge Consolidated Lead Company.[33][34] The name was changed in 2005 to Madaket Growth, LLC.
References
^Huger, Lucie Furstenberg. The Desloge Family in America. St. Louis: Nordman Printing Co., 1959 [1]
^HISTORY OF THE LEAD BELT OF ST. FRANCOIS COUNTY MISSOURI By A. J. Norwine (1924)
^Minute book 1906-1921 (v.22, 33, 34, 47, 48), Stockholder ledger (v.21, 32) St Joe Minerals Corp Collection, State Historical Society of Missouri, accessed 1-22-2023 [5]Archived 2022-01-23 at the Wayback Machine
^A large collection of original documents from early 1800s to 1920s evaluated by the Missouri Department of Natural Resources, Art Hebrank, Missouri Mines State Historic Site, Park Hills, MO. Documents remain in the possession of the Desloge Family, St. Louis, MO
^Desloge Lead Mining Company Papers, Collection A3035, Missouri Historical Society, [6]Archived 2022-01-22 at the Wayback Machine
^Preamble of the original, fully executed bequest documents in the possession of the Missouri Historical Society Archives, St. Louis, MO, Joseph Desloge Collection
^Sullivan, John J., History of St. Joe and Desloge Railway and Missouri River and Bonne Terre Railroad, handwritten, Railroads Collection, Desloge Railway, Missouri Historical Society archives
^Saw Mill Papers, Desloge Lead Mining Company Papers, Collection A3505, Missouri Historical Society [7]Archived 2022-01-22 at the Wayback Machine
^Missouri Mines Inspector, 1901, accessed by Desloge Lead Mining Company Papers, Missouri Historical Society, Collection A3505 [8]Archived 2022-01-22 at the Wayback Machine
^Mitchell, S. Duffield (December 1909). "Tariff on Zinc Ores". Report of the Proceedings of the Annual Session, Volumes 11-12. 11: 226. Archived from the original on 2022-04-17. Retrieved 2020-11-26.
^Chat Dumps of The Missouri Lead Belt, St. Francois County, With an Illustrated History of the Lead Companies that Built Them. McHenry, Robert E., 2006, Copy accessed at Missouri Department of Natural Resources, Missouri Mines State Historic Site, Park Hills, MO
^Secretary of State, State of Missouri, Corporations Division
^Firmin Desloge Trust FBO Christopher Desloge, last Will and Testament of William L Desloge, July 1998, St. Louis County, Missouri, 21st Judicial Circuit of Missouri; probated, accessed in Archives
Primary sources
The Desloge Family Collection at Missouri Historical Society, St. Louis, MO
Desloge Consolidated Lead Company records at Missouri Historical Society, St. Louis, MO
The Rozier Collection at Missouri Historical Society, St. Louis, MO
Southeast Missouri Mining and Milling. Doe Run Company. 2004.
"The Story of Lead Mining and Milling", a 1934 short film by the U.S. Bureau of Mines, made with the cooperation of St. Joseph Lead Company five years after it bought Desloge Consolidated Lead Company.