Sunday, July 19, 2015

Diamond Fever

CONTACT ME TO GET YOUR PERSONALIZED COPY OF FOREVER CRY. barbandpat66@suddenlink.net   $12 plus shipping, anywhere in the world. Or, in Arkadelphia, get your signed copy at Hardman Interiors. In Yell County, it can be found at the Yell County record office(And at Dardanelle) Also, in Plainview, at Gypsy Junction.
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Diamond Jim Archer spent 30 years at the Crater of Diamonds State park, digging for diamonds. He worked very hard, very fast, very long, every day, for thirty years. Though I have no doubt that his record can never be equaled, I did meet one other man who compared to James in many of these categories, except that he always kept a full time job otherwise, and he’s still raising a family, so he does not get to go every day.
     Henry Emison and his wife Lori were digging away when I met them. They were beginners at that time, but they quickly changed all that. Henry was recognized quickly by all other diamond hunters on the field as a digging machine, a true man among men. He could work all day at his job landscaping, then drive to the mine and do as much work as we fully human diggers could do in a day. Of course, he quickly found a lot of diamonds. At one time, they moved to my rental house in Gurdon, Arkansas, partially because they loved that 120 year old, six bedroom brick house. But mostly because it was close to the diamonds. What is it about rare, driven men like Jim and Henry that makes supermen out of them when they step onto that diamond field? I wish I knew. I would buy up a few gallons of it and enhance my own diamond collection a bit. Henry moved to the other side of Arkansas, because that was where his job was, a few years ago. But I know he’s still not out of range of that diamond mine, so we still don’t know how his lifetime collection will look.
     After I moved to Arkadelphia, Arkansas, only 45 minutes from the mine, I worked 30 days one winter, my longest, hardest, and least productive stretch of diamond fever. I was digging deep holes and washing out the mud, which is very hard work. My body ached all day every day, and some days I had to break through very thick ice  in the washing tank to wash my mud. I was carrying the mud in two five gallon buckets at least 100 yards. My total find was one diamond and a few small nuggets of gold. I told my friends, “I am the best trained, hardest working, and best equipped of all the non-producers at the mine.”
     I was talking to a fellow worker who, at that time, was well known at the park for finding a very large diamond right on the surface. I had just gotten started digging at a new site, when he walked up. I don’t remember his name, which is not an unusual thing for me. He stood there and watched me dig for a few moments, then said, “I was working that spot some time back. I got into a vein of fine black sand. After digging into that vein for a while, I washed out several nuggets of gold.”
     I continued digging there for some time. Then, I too started washing out black sand, and in it I started noticing small, paper thin strips of gold. After collecting several, the vein disappeared, and I never hit it again. I placed the small thin strips in water in a small bottle. When I came back to look at the strips a few days later, the strips had rolled up into small nuggets.
(The park superintendent refused to believe I found the gold there, declaring, “There is NO gold in THIS park.” But God and I both know I did.)
     Once Henry Emison was working along the creek. A group of Texas hunters had been working on the other side for two days. On Sunday, they got into a vein of very rich fine sand, and they found it very deep, an old sand bar from eons past. They started finding one diamond after another, but they were about worn out, and they had to leave that day. Knowing Henry was a total digging machine, they crossed the creek and made a deal with Henry. If he would dig with them, they would share the diamonds found. At the end of the day, Henry had five very nice diamonds. Henry called me that night, told me all about it, but he could not go back the next day, he had to go to work. He described exactly where the glory hole was, and, quite naturally, I was there, ready to dig, the next day. But as luck would have it, an old full timer had already taken over that spot. He dug there for days, and would never reveal how many he found. After he had finished, I was over there on a very rainy day. I told a group of college boys who were there about the twenty some-odd diamonds taken from that hole in one day. That hole was chest deep in water now, however. Later I came back by that hole, and the college boys were diving down, pulling out two handfuls of sand at a time. There is no limit to which one bitten by the diamond bug will go to find a diamond.
     As I worked one day, a northern tourist, new to the mine, walked about, just looking at the ground. He came over to where I was digging, and started telling me how easy it was to find a diamond. He Said, “Yesterday, I just walked around, and found ten diamonds, right on top of the ground.”
    “ Did you get them positively identified at the office?" I asked.
    “No, but I identified them myself on the internet.”
    I wanted to tell him, “If you will bring any one of those diamonds to the park office, and get a positive ID, I will kiss your butt at high noon in the middle of that field, and give you an hour to draw a crowd. I wanted to tell him that, but he was a big man. So I didn’t. There’s a lot of quartz and other stones on that field that can look like a diamond.
     A young man from Iowa started digging along about the time I started my hardest winter. We both went many days without finding a diamond. But when he did, he quickly went back to Iowa, sold all his stuff. He moved back to the mine, living just outside the fence in a tent. I’m not sure how many diamonds he found. Word was, he found some really nice stones along the way. Every day I went over there that winter, he was hard at work, digging deep holes, washing the sand out, and filling the holes back up the same day, as is now required. I fully expect that young man will someday leave that mine as an old man, his body totally broken down. Or, like Diamond Jim, he will die there.
     During that long winter, an old man moved in next to my claim. He was a very old man, and his equipment was very extensive, yet very old. I soon learned that many years ago, he had started finding so many diamonds one summer that he became famous. His collection was very extensive, and pictures were still up in the visitor’s center of that man.   This old man dug very hard beside me for many days. Yet, according to him, he never found any diamonds. He did tell me many stories about his famous summer, many years ago. He said he became so famous that summer that three different women approached him, begging him to go into the woods with them. Famous or not, that just seemed entirely too easy.

     On the last day that winter, Grandson Jordan came with me. At the end of the day, he declared, “Papaw, anything we do for fun can never be this hard.” Wise words from a young man. I ached all over, and my overworked body was breaking down. I hung up my shovel and screens, and have never been back. I don’t plan for constant pain to be my full-time partner in my old age, if I can help it. But I’m not dead yet, so my life collection of diamonds just might not be totally complete. And, I have the specialized equipment constructed and ready, just waiting to put it into action, when the right time comes. I’ll have a great time then. Once stricken, one is never totally cured of diamond fever
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