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Nellie Cashman
1844 - 1925
Inducted in 1984

Used by permission from the Arizona State Library, Archives and Public Records
A pioneer, prospector and businesswoman, Nellie Cashman lived and worked
in the mining camps of the West, from Arizona to Alaska. She spent
nearly two decades in Arizona, first running a restaurant in Tucson and
later operating a boarding house and restaurant in Tombstone. She
helped others wherever she lived, becoming known as “the miner’s
angel.”
Born in Queenstown, Ireland in 1845, Nellie immigrated to America with
her widowed mother and her sister in 1850. The family lived in Boston
and then San Francisco before traveling to the mining town of Pioche, Nevada
where they opened a boarding house in 1872. A few years later, Nellie
traveled north to Cassiar in the extreme northwest corner of British Columbia. There
she opened another boarding house and grubstaked many miners. During
the long, harsh winter, prospectors suffered from scurvy. Nellie
Cashman worked to bring vegetables to the area, helping many to recover,
but people continued to experience great hardship and found little gold.
In 1879, Nellie decided to try her luck living further south. She
went to Tucson, where she opened Delmonico’s Restaurant. In
1880, she moved to Tombstone and opened the Nevada Boot and Shoe Store
and later a boarding house and restaurant, the Russ House. Nellie
Cashman also operated another hotel and restaurant with her sister, Fannie
Cunningham. In 1884, Fannie died, leaving “Aunt Nell” to
raise her five children. Nellie never married but assumed the responsibility
of supporting and educating her nieces and nephews.
Nellie Cashman became very active in Tombstone, helping others who suffered
from accidents and illnesses during the 1880s, when the town lacked a hospital. She
also organized support for one of the town’s first schools and raised
funds for Tombstone’s first Catholic Church. In addition, she
invested in claims and partnered with miners to develop them.
Nellie moved frequently, living in Kingston, New Mexico from 1887 to 1888
before she heard about a new mineral find in western Arizona, in the Centennial-Harrisburg
vicinity of the Harqua Hala Mountains. She bought claims there and sold
supplies to miners, living there for a few years. During the early
1890s, she lived in other Arizona towns, including Jerome, Prescott, Globe,
and Yuma.
Nellie Cashman’s great interest in prospecting continued and she
left for Alaska in 1898 to strike it rich in Klondike. There she
ran a restaurant, purchased claims and grubstaked many miners. She also
worked to establish St. Mary’s Church and Hospital. During
the early twentieth century, she continued to operate businesses and travel,
often by dog team. In 1924, Nellie set a record as the champion woman musher,
traveling 750 miles in 17 days with her dog team, from Koyukuk to Seward,
Alaska.
In the summer of 1924 she became ill. After traveling to Fairbanks,
she was diagnosed with double pneumonia. Nellie Cashman died in
1925 in Victoria, British Columbia at the age of 81.
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