Mariscal Mine
Mariscal was a mercury mining community just west of Fresno Creek near the northern end of Mariscal Mountain in Big Bend National Park in southern Brewster County. The community, which was accessible only by pack train, was probably founded around 1900. In that year local rancher Mart?n Sol?s discovered cinnabar, a source of mercury, on Mariscal Mountain, and D. E. (Ed) Lindsey, a United States customs agent stationed at Boquillas, was the first to file mining claims there. The Lindsey Mine operated until 1906, when Lindsey sold his claims to Isaac Sanger , who with a group of Dallas businessmen formed the Texas Almaden Mining Company. The 1907 depression forced the company out of business, however, and W. K. Ellis, who owned a candelilla wax factory nearby, bought the claims. Between July 1917 and May 1919 the Mariscal Mine processed nearly 900 flasks of mercury, but in the latter year Ellis sold the mine to William D. Burcham, who organized the Mariscal Mining Company and reopened the mine in August 1919. A Mariscal post office was established in 1922, succeeding the McKinney Spring post office (actually located in Glenn Spring), which closed in 1921. After processing 400 flasks of mercury, the mine closed in the fall of 1923 due to heavy expenses, and most of the residents of Mariscal moved to Terlingua. The mine has been inactive since then, with the brief exception of 1942 and 1943, when, because of increased demand for mercury during World War II , it was reopened and processed ninety-seven flasks. In the mid-1930s Mariscal had one business and a population estimated at fifty; the population estimate remained at that figure until the early 1960s. By the early 1970s no traces remained of the community of Mariscal.