Cinnabar, a bright red mercury ore, was used by the
Ohlone people for paint, but the settlers soon saw its potential to produce
quicksilver. The first settler to find the mine was Secundino Robles, who discovered it in 1824, and later owned shares in the mine along with his brother. Andres Castillero, a captain in the Mexican Army, obtained a grant to the mine in 1846 but, occupied with his military duties during the Mexican War, soon sold it to Barron, Forbes Company, an English textile firm based in Tepic, Mexico. It was named "Nuevo Almadén" by Alexander Forbes. Castillero's mining claim was confirmed by the Board of Commissioners that evaluated private land claims in California on January 8, 1856, but there was continued litigation in the District court,
The United States vs. Andres Castillero. A claim of fraud was made on behalf of the Quicksilver Mining Company, which had acquired a competing land claim originating in an agricultural claim to the land the mine was on. On appeal to the Supreme Court of the United States the claim was found invalid in a decision rendered March 10, 1863. One of the competing land claims was
Rancho Los Capitancillos. The mine is named for a
mercury mine in (old)
Almadén,
Spain, which had operated since at least Roman times. (See
Heritage of Mercury. Almadén and Idrija.) The term Almadén, meaning "the mine", is derived from the
Arabic language. In 1863, acting on information that title to the mine had not been proven, Abraham Lincoln attempted to seize the mine, but the federal agent and deputy federal marshal were met at the mine gates by armed miners. Mindful of the possibility of losing the loyalty of California during the Civil War, the federal government backed off and Barron, Forbes Company was allowed to sell it to American investors for $1.75 million.
Arthur De Wint Foote worked at New Almaden in the late 1870s under
James Butterworth Randol. Representations of historical life at the New Almaden Mine were drawn in vivid detail by
Mary Hallock Foote, the wife of Arthur DeWint Foote, the resident engineer from 1876. Her illustrated correspondence about New Almaden, "A California Mining Camp", appeared in the February 1878 issue of ''
Scribner's Monthly''. New Almaden also features prominently in her memoir
A Victorian Gentlewoman in the Far West, which was later fictionalized by
Wallace Stegner in his novel
Angle of Repose. ==Environment==