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9781647792503 Academic Inspection Copy

The Law of the Miner

The Arizona Experience
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The first adventurers into the New World faced a fundamental legal challenge: how to secure rights to any mineral claims they discovered. Early conquistadors worked under charters that required them to return a portion of their findings to the Spanish crown, but those without such charters had no formal protection-and the crown was slow to clarify individual rights. This uncertainty only grew as miners pushed into the lands that would become the Western United States. When gold was discovered in California, miners suddenly found themselves operating without any governing laws during the period between the end of the war with Mexico and the establishment of formal U.S. jurisdiction. In response, and without official sanction, they formed self-governing "mining districts," best understood as mutual protection societies. These districts marked the first organized attempt to define boundaries and create rules for establishing and maintaining mining claims. As the early rushes in California and Nevada subsided, miners carried these practices with them into Arizona and other western territories. In Arizona, no comprehensive collection of these early regulations has ever existed. The Law of the Miner addresses this gap by tracing the development of mineral law in early Arizona and presenting the full text of every mining district regulation that could be found. This work serves both the mining industry and historians seeking to identify the individuals involved in creating the districts and to understand these districts' historical boundaries.
John C. Lacy is a mining lawyer and mining law historian who, throughout his career, has been analyzing and writing about the contributions of mineral adventurers to the development of the law as it was applied to the acquisition of mineral rights. He graduated from the University of Arizona with a degree in journalism in 1964 and one in law in 1967. Lacy has represented mineral clients throughout the western United States and in South America and has taught mineral law and related subjects at the University of Arizona since 1976. His historical activities include work with the Arizona Historical Society, the Arizona History Convention, and the Society of Mining Law Antiquarians. The subject of The Law of the Miner came naturally to Lacy as he grew up in the Peruvian mining camp of La Oroya, and during college he worked as a fieldhand for several mining exploration companies. Presently, he is the director of the Global Mining Law Center at the James E. Rogers College of Law at the University of Arizona, where he teaches and supervises several online courses. He also continues to practice law at his firm, DeConcini McDonald Yetwin & Lacy, P.C.
"John Lacy strikes paydirt with this fascinating study of frontier capitalism and the evolution of mining law in the American Southwest. An exhaustive list of Arizona mining districts and their locations, along with full texts of regulations, makes this an indispensable resource for scholars, researchers, and general readers."-Bruce J. Dinges, coeditor with Bill Broyles of America's Most Alarming Writer: Essays on the Life and Works of Charles Bowden "Uncover the origins and evolution of American mining law with John Lacy's pioneering research. From Spanish roots to federal statutes, Lacy reveals the early miners' codes and district regulations that shaped an industry. An appendix of extant Arizona mining district regulations, post-1862, make this an indispensable reference for historians, legal scholars, and enthusiasts eager to explore mining's legal heritage."-Robert L. Spude, PhD, National Park Service regional historian, Santa Fe (retired) "John Lacy has written the definitive book on the historical development of mining law in what is now called Arizona. His careful descriptions, together with a comprehensive bibliography of secondary sources, make this a 'must-have' book for mining lawyers and scholars alike."-Stanley Dempsey, geologist, lawyer, investment banker, author of Mining the Summit: Colorado's Ten Mile District, 1860-1960
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