Queen Mine
Underground Tours
9:00am, 10:30am, Noon, 2:00pm, 3:30pm
$13 for adults
$5.50 for age 4-12
(taxes are included)
Children under 4 are free.
Prices subject to change
For information, reservations, and group rates
call:
1-866-432-2071
(toll-free)
520-432-2071
(local)
Fax: 520-432-5191
Queen Mine Tour History
![]() Picture by John Harris |
BISBEE - a name to stir the interest of mining men everywhere - has been one of the greatest copper camps the world has ever known. In almost 100 years of continuous production before the Bisbee mines closed in 1975, the local mines produced metals valued at $6.1 billion (at 1975 price) one of the largest production valuations of all the mining districts in the world. This staggering amount of wealth came from the estimated production of 8,032,352,000 lbs of copper, 2,871,786 ounces of gold, 77,162,986 ounces of silver, 304,627,600 lbs of lead and 371,945,900 lbs of zinc!
Today’s Queen Mine Tour takes visitors deep into the old workings of the famous Queen Mine where great tonnages of extremely rich copper ore was mined in the early days, catching the attention of the mining industry around the world as one of the greatest treasure troves of copper ever discovered.
Taking the Queen Mine Tour is to step back through the pages of history. A melting pot of immigrant miners from the mining districts of Europe labored beneath the Mule Mountains to feed the insatiable demand for copper and electricity. The electrical age changed the World from a predominantly rural society to the industrial age, bringing with it the highest standard of living the world has ever known.
Early Bisbee Mining History
The story of Bisbee mining began in the late 1870’s when Lt. Dunn, in charge of a cavalry detail from the frontier Army post of Fort Huachuca, was on a scouting mission against the Apache Indians. Lt. Dunn and his men headed for a spring in the Mule Mountains to camp for the night. The party camped on a spot of fairly flat ground in the canyon below the spring—a site now occupied by Old Bisbee, only several hundred yards from the beginning of today’s Mine Tour.
On a walk after dinner, Lt. Dunn picked up an interesting rock. He found a few more pieces along the slope of the south wall of the canyon. Unable to do anything about it because of military duties, Dunn took a prospector by the name of George Warren into his confidence and struck up a deal by which Warren would locate claims and work the property with Dunn as a partner. But on his way to the site, prospector Warren stopped to visit some friends and enjoy his favorite pastime—whiskey drinking. He soon has new partners and they staked a new group of claims and left Dunn out of the deal. When Dunn came along later to check, he was on the outside looking in.
Copper production began on a limited basis around 1880. Individuals and then companies with capital gradually became involved and took over individual claims and brought them into production. Phelps Dodge Corporation, through a subsidiary the Copper Queen Consolidated Mining Company, became the dominant force and eventually the sole operator of the mining district. Building on its base in Bisbee, Phelps Dodge has long been one of the largest copper producers in the United States.
The Development of the Bisbee Queen Mine Tour
Phelps Dodge Corporation closed the Bisbee underground mines in the
summer of 1975. Bisbee Mayor Chuck Eads, with the generous cooperation
of Phelps Dodge, brought to reality the idea of opening a mine tour
through a portion of the world-famous copper Queen Mine. Mayor Eads felt
that history of mining should be kept alive in Bisbee and in a manner
that would attract tourists to the community. Many faithful volunteers
cleared thousands of tons of fallen rock and re-timbered the old
workings. They were assisted by local individuals and groups who
furnished support and food for the workers. The local effort came to the
attention of a federal agency, the Economic Development Administration,
which approved a large grant to the City of Bisbee to help the mine tour
project and other improvements in downtown Bisbee designed to aid the
tourist business.
The Queen Mine Tour was officially opened to visitors on February 1,
1976. Since then, more than a million visitors, from all 50 states and
more than 30 foreign countries, have enjoyed the ride into the mountain
on the underground mine tour train.
The Queen Mine Tour is an authentic mining experience and the tour guides are all experienced miners, having worked in the local mines for many years, and assure you a safe tour set against a background of factual information.
We hope you enjoy your Queen Mine Tour visit and your
brief journey through the pages of time.
Queen Mine Tour Facts
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February 1976 – the Queen Mine Tour opens as a tourist attraction; Chuck Eads, Bisbee's mayor at the time, established the mine tour to keep miners employed
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More than 1 million visitors have toured the mine since it opened as a tourist attraction in 1976
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Currently, about 50,000 people tour the Queen Mine each year
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Visitors from all 50 states and more than 30 countries have toured the mine
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Tour participants travel 1,500 feet into the underground mine
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The Queen Mine Tour employs 12 people on a daily basis
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Bisbee's mines, of which the Queen Mine is just one, include more than 2,500 miles of tunnels
Bisbee's Mining History Tidbits
In 1875, Hugh Jones discovers copper, but leaves,
disappointed that it's not silver.
Two years after Jones leaves, Army scout Jack Dunn finds ore, but is unable to leave his post. George Warren strikes a deal with Dunn and his partners to establish a claim. Later, he loses the stake in a horse race. A colorful character, Warren is on Arizona's state seal.
San Francisco's DeWitt Bisbee, purchases the Queen Mine with a group of investors in 1880. The town is later named for Bisbee, but he never visited.
Bisbee's mines produced:
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8 billion pounds of copper
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2.8 million ounces of gold
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77 million pounds of silver
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30 million pounds of lead
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371 million pounds of zinc
Bisbee, located approximately 90 miles southeast of Tucson, offers old-world charm, new-world charisma and is Arizona’s premier destination for arts and culture, western heritage, bird watching and outdoor recreation.

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