August Paulsen
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August Paulsen was a Danish immigrant, born July 29, 1871, who arrived in America at the age of nineteen. Paulsen arrived in Spokane in the autumn of 1892, where he would later be regarded as a great asset to the community.
Paulsen initially worked in the dairy industry in Spokane and Wallace, ID. However, his interest lay in the mountains of the Coeur d'Alenes district, where productive mining claims were making hard working miners rich. Paulsen managed to save $850 to buy a quarter stake, in 1895, of the Hercules mining claim. Paulsen's partners in the claim included Harry, Eugene, and Jerome Day, three brothers, Charles H. Reeves (Dad Reeves) , L.W. Hutton, Frank Rothrock, Damien Cardoner, and the Markwells. These partners all came from working class backgrounds, like Paulsen, and their mining claim was considered "essentially a poor man's mine" as a 1927 article of the Spokesman-Review notes.
The partners had very little capital with which to work the mine, so much of the digging, drilling, shoring, hauling and other difficult mining work was done by hand. Paulsen is often credited with keeping the partners together, and keeping focus on working and exploring the mine. Upon manually drilling a 1500 foot shaft, the partners finally exposed a high quality ore body in 1901 that proved to be the best in the district. The now famed Hercules mine provided a full six-percent of the nations lead, and also produced good values in silver. The Hercules mine continued production until it's closure in 1925.
With Paulsen resultant wealth, he poured millions of dollars into the Spokane region, which still benefits the region today. He is perhaps best remembered within Spokane for the two downtown buildings he constructed that bear his name. The first, the August Paulsen Building, was designed by architects Dow and Hubbel, and built from 1908-1911 by the Fredrick Phair Company. It used the then new form of steel construction which allowed the 11-story building to become the tallest building in Spokane, at the time. In 1928-29, Paulsen built the Paulsen Medical and Dental Building, designed by Gustav Pehrson, adjacent to the August Paulsen Building. Together, they are referred to as the Paulsen Center. The Medical and Dental Building is a 15-story Art Deco style skyscraper, with Spanish Moor styled exterior.
Paulsen's interest in philanthropy and the civic needs of Washington and Idaho make him a notable character in the history of the Pacific Inland Northwest.
Sources:
Heritage From Heroes, Spokane's Dreamers & Builders
Chapter 49, Dairying Dane Makes Mine Miracles
by Dorothy Rochon Powers
published 1993
City-County of Spokane Historic Preservation Office
Statement of Significance regarding historic significance of the Paulsen Center