William "Coin" Harvey - Monte Ne AR
Posted by: Groundspeak Regular Member Where's George
N 36° 17.148 W 094° 03.966
15S E 404261 N 4016175
William Hope “Coin” Harvey founded the resort of Monte Ne and the Ozark Trails Association, establishing him as a pioneer in the promotion of Arkansas tourism. Harvey was also the 1932 Liberty Party nominee for the president of the United States.
Waymark Code: WMG65M
Location: Arkansas, United States
Date Posted: 01/18/2013
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member rangerroad
Views: 5

"Coin Harvey was born on August 16, 1851, on a farm near Buffalo, Virginia (now West Virginia), to Robert Trigg and Anna Hope Harvey. He attended the country schools and Buffalo Academy in 1865–67, and then briefly taught school. While teaching, he studied law and briefly attended Marshall College in Cabell County, West Virginia, in 1867. In 1870, he was admitted to the bar.

Harvey began his law career in West Virginia but soon moved on to Gallipolis, Ohio, where he married Anna R. Halliday on June 26, 1876; they had four children. The couple spent much of their married life on the move. Harvey practiced law in Cleveland, Ohio, and Chicago, Illinois, before returning briefly to Gallipolis.

In 1884, Harvey took his family to Ouray, Colorado, where he operated the Silver Bell, one of the most productive silver mines in the Red Mountain district. When the price of silver fell, Harvey abandoned mining and, in 1888, moved his family to Pueblo, Colorado, where he practiced law, sold real estate, and helped develop the Mineral Palace, an ornate exposition hall. By 1891, the family moved to Ogden, Utah, where Harvey led the organization of an extravagant carnival that ended in financial failure.

In the early 1890s, as the nation entered a period of deflation, bank failures, bankruptcies, and farm foreclosures, Harvey turned his attention to the free silver issue. Like other western business leaders, he believed that abandoning the gold standard and returning to the free coinage of silver would restore prosperity. In 1893, Harvey moved his family to Chicago to devote his time to the cause. He began writing and lecturing, arguing that the U.S. Treasury should buy all silver offered at a set price and issue silver certificates backed by the deposits.

In 1894, Harvey wrote the tremendously successful book, Coin’s Financial School, in which a fictional young financier named “Coin” presented the arguments in favor of silver. This book brought him fame, fortune, and his nickname, “Coin.” Other publications followed, and Harvey became a spokesman for the free silver cause. During the 1896 presidential race, he campaigned for William Jennings Bryan, the Democratic free silver candidate. Bryan lost the election, but Harvey remained an influential political figure.

Harvey had campaigned for Bryan in northwest Arkansas and noticed that the area had no large cities or extremely wealthy people. In 1900, he purchased acreage around a village then called Silver Springs, five miles southeast of Rogers (Benton County). He announced plans to build a resort around the community. Harvey renamed the area “Monte Ne,” which he said were the Spanish and Native American words for “mountain” and “water.”

Soon after the Harveys moved to Arkansas, their house burned. His wife returned to Chicago, and the couple never again lived together. Harvey continued work on his luxurious resort. By May 1901, the Hotel Monte Ne was completed. Within a few years, the resort had expanded to include two more hotels, a tennis court, and the first indoor swimming pool in Arkansas. Harvey built a railroad spur linking Monte Ne to the St. Louis and San Francisco Railroad line and purchased a gondola from Italy to ferry tourists from the depot across a spring-fed lagoon to the hotels.

In 1913, Harvey formed the Ozark Trails Association (OTA). Although the association’s stated purpose was the promotion of better roads, Harvey’s goal was the promotion of Monte Ne. The OTA marked routes, published route books, and erected obelisks that were lettered with the distance and direction to Monte Ne at major junctions. Despite the efforts, the association did little to increase business at the resort. Like many resorts, Monte Ne suffered with the growth of automobile travel, and in the 1920s, most of the resort was sold or foreclosed.

With the exception of a failed Democratic primary bid in the 1913 congressional election, Harvey generally avoided politics after moving to Arkansas. But he continued to write on political and economic issues. Among his works were The Remedy (1915), Common Sense (1920), and Paul’s School of Statesmanship (1924). In his later years Harvey became increasingly pessimistic. Convinced that the fall of civilization was imminent, he announced plans in the 1920s for the construction of a “pyramid,” a 130-foot-tall obelisk that would contain his warning to future generations. Harvey never completed the project but did construct an amphitheater that was to have been the pyramid’s “foyer.”

Harvey often had written against the evil of divorce, but in 1929, after nearly three decades of living apart, he obtained a divorce from his wife. He married his secretary of many years, May Leake, that same year.

Three years later, he again appeared in the national spotlight when he ran for president of the United States. Harvey founded the Liberty Party in 1931 because he was convinced the two major parties had become indistinguishable. While it shared a name with the earlier Liberty Party, this new third party was focused on economic reform. Although eighty years old, Harvey was the only candidate the delegates would support at the Liberty Party national convention held at Monte Ne in 1931.

The party platform was based on Harvey’s writings and called for government ownership of utilities and industry, limits on land holdings and personal wealth, and, of course, free silver. When the votes were tallied, he was in sixth place, with over 53,000 votes, of which 1,049 were from Arkansas.

Harvey died at Monte Ne on February 11, 1936, and was buried beside one son in a concrete tomb. Today, most of Monte Ne is beneath the waters of Beaver Lake, which was created in the 1960s by damming the White River. Before the lake was filled, Harvey’s tomb was moved up the hillside."

-above text from (visit link)

Cemetery information available here (visit link)
Description:
From the Huntington Herald-Dispatch (WV), February 12, 1936, is the following obituary and biography of William Hope "Coin" Harvey - "'Coin' Harvey, 85, Noted Bi-Metallism Champion, Succumbs One-Time Huntingtonian Dies of Peritonitis Following Attack of Intestinal Influenza At Monte Ne, Arkansas, Home MONTE NE, Ark., Feb. 11. - William Hope "Coin" Harvey, 85, veteran champion of bi-metallism and one-time presidential candidate, died at his home here at 9:20 o'clock (Central Standard time) tonight. Harvey was stricken with peritonitis following an attack of intestinal influenza. He passed into a semi- coma late today and death followed swiftly. With him at the time of his death was his second wife, Mrs. May Ellston Leake Harvey, to whom he was married seven years ago and who was his private secretary for more than 30 years. His three children, Tom Harvey of Huntington, W. Va., Mrs. Hammond Halliday of New York City, and Miss Annette Harvey of Huntington, were notified late today of their father's critical condition. Born at Buffalo, W. Va., August 16, 1851, Harvey was the son of Col. Robert and Anna M. Hope Harvey. He was educated at Buffalo Academy and Marshall College, West Virginia. 'Free Silver' Champion He practiced law from 1871 to 1874 and married Anna R. Halliday of Delaware, O., in 1876. They were divorced in 1929. Harvey, writer on money and economics, was the presidential candidate of the Liberal party in 1932 after he had been in retirement for years. He was best known to an older generation for his "free silver" campaign with the late William Jennings Bryan in 1896. Harvey claimed two outstanding successes in his life although it was his heroic "failures" that made him nationally famous. He built, with contributions from citizens, the mineral palace at Pueblo, Colo., in 1889 to house exhibits of the mineral resources of that state. An heroic statue of "King Coal" in the palace was cut by a Chicago sculptor from a solid piece of coal weighing 11,000 pounds. Started Ozark Trails Harvey also started the Ozark trails at Monte Ne, the route extending from St. Louis to Roswell, N. M. He spent thousands of dollars out of his own pockets on this venture, described as being the beginning of good roads and highways in the central and western states. Outside of his ill-starred political battles, Harvey's greatest "failure" was a pyramid he started to erect to a "lost generation" at his home here. But earlier than that he experienced serious financial reverses, among which was the collapse of his Monte Ne summer resort, established more than 30 years ago. Attracted Tourists For a time this attracted tourists from all sections of the United States who stopped at its two huge log hotels, played around its springs, pavilions, lakes and wooded valleys. Harvey's management drew him into a squabble with other stockholders and the resort was finally sold at auction. Harvey came to Arkansas after resigning as chairman of the ways and means committee of the Democratic national party in a rage over the abandonment of his free silver issue, made famous in the McKinley-Bryan campaign of 1896. The failure of his Liberty party in 1932 was another blow to Harvey's spirit. He expressed keen disappointment after the votes were counted and when funds to support the "Liberty Bell," official organ of the party, ceased coming in. Until recent months, however, the sage of Monte Ne was in excellent health and insisted that he would live to be 100. Harvey obtained a divorce from his first wife in 1929 and marries Mrs. May Leake, Springfield, Mo., in April of that year. The second Mrs. Harvey, a trained nurse, was in constant attendance at his bedside. The first Mrs. Harvey lives in Huntington, W. Va., with her daughter, Miss Annette Harvey. Author Of Books During the last few years of the nineteenth century, William Hope Harvey achieved a wide reputation as author o


Date of birth: 08/16/1851

Date of death: 02/11/1936

Area of notoriety: Politics

Marker Type: Tomb (above ground)

Setting: Outdoor

Visiting Hours/Restrictions: No restrictions

Fee required?: No

Web site: Not listed

Visit Instructions:
To post a visit log for waymarks in this category, you must have personally visited the waymark location. When logging your visit, please provide a note describing your visit experience, along with any additional information about the waymark or the surrounding area that you think others may find interesting.

We especially encourage you to include any pictures that you took during your visit to the waymark. However, only respectful photographs are allowed. Logs which include photographs representing any form of disrespectful behavior (including those showing personal items placed on or near the grave location) will be subject to deletion.
Search for...
Geocaching.com Google Map
Google Maps
MapQuest
Bing Maps
Nearest Waymarks
Nearest Grave of a Famous Person
Nearest Geocaches
Create a scavenger hunt using this waymark as the center point
Recent Visits/Logs:
Date Logged Log  
wardnkathy visited William "Coin" Harvey - Monte Ne AR 05/29/2014 wardnkathy visited it