This information is an early history of Nye County from History
of Nevada by Myron Angel and published by Thompson and West, Oakland,
CA. (1881)
CHAPTER L. HISTORY OF NYE COUNTY.
Early
Explorations—Petition and Remonstrance—Organization and
Boundaries—Appointments and Elections—Economy and Healthy Growth—Debt
and County Buildings—Grazing and Agriculture—Valleys of the
County—Principal Mining Districts—Principal Towns and Cities—Hon. George
Ernst —Hon. J. T. Williams.
ORGANIZED in 1864 and named in honor
of Gov. J. W. Nye. In the organization of the Territory of Nevada, all
that part south of the thirty-ninth parallel and east of Mason Valley
was assigned to Esmeralda County. Little was then known of the region,
excepting that about Aurora and a narrow belt leading thereto from the
north. All the east was an unexplored wilderness, with the exception of
a few localities. Some of the old maps had a line running through Smoky
Valley, designated as " Fremont's Trail in 1845," and along it were the
names of San Antonio Peak, Hot Springs, Twin Rivers and Smoky Creek.
Little or nothing more was known of that section of the Territory
prior to the Reese River excitement of 1862-63. Soon after the
settlement of Austin, prospectors went on exploring expeditions along
the Toiyabe range, which extends southward beyond the limits of Lander
County. In that range were soon organized the districts of Washington
and Marysville on the western slope, and Twin River on the eastern
slope. In Reese River Valley, part of which was in Esmeralda County,
several ranches were located and settlements were made.
Prospectors were thought exceeding bold who penetrated the unknown
country beyond sight or easy reach of known springs or water-courses,
and it was some time before any dry valleys were crossed. South of the
Lander County line the Toiyabe range is a high and precipitous ridge
from 8,000 to 12,000 feet in height, and flowing down both sides are
numerous streams, generally sinking in the border of the subjacent
valleys, but Reese River, coming from the southern part of the range,
continues its course 100 miles or more to the north. These supplies of
water led the prospectors south. Heading Reese River Valley and
inclosing it on the west is the Shoshone range, and this was next
explored. On the western slope of this range silver-bearing veins were
found in 1863. Union District was organized and the town of lone was
soon built in the midst of supposed rich mines.
PETITION AND
REMONSTRANCE.
The causes which led to the organization of Nye
County are partially set forth in a petition to the Territorial
Legislature, signed by a large number of pioneers, who had recently
discovered a new mining district, and reads, as follows:—
To His
Excellency, the Governor, and the Honorable members of the Legislature
of the Territory of Nevada—
We, the undersigned residents of
Nevada Territory, respectfully represent that we are residents of a
newly-discovered mining district, which is now known as "Union
District;" that the same is situated in the range of mountains lying
between the valley of Reese River on the east and the valley of Smith
Creek on the west. We are distant from the city of Austin, in Lander
County, in a southerly direction about sixty miles, and from Aurora, in
Esmeralda County, in an easterly direction, about 100 miles. Now we,
your petitioners and residents of this district, pray your honorable
bodies that you take into consideration the propriety of forming a
county for us, believing that our ends and the ends of justice will be
better subserved by so doing.
Immediately upon the presentation
of the above petition, a remonstrance was forwarded to the Governor and
Legislature, which was extensively signed by residents of Lander County,
protesting against the cession of any portion of their county to the
proposed new corporate body. Nevertheless, a bill was introduced into
the Assembly for the creation of Nye County, and was favorably reported
upon by the committee to whom it was referred. In reporting the
committee stated that the proposed county contained from 1,000 to 1,500
people.
ORGANIZATION AND BOUNDARIES.
The bill to organize
the county of Nye was approved and became a law February 16, 1864. The
territory of the new county was thus described:—
Beginning at the
intersection of the thirty-ninth parallel of north latitude with the
meridian of longitude 40° 30' west from Washington; thence running east
along said thirty-ninth parallel of north latitude to the eastern
boundary of the Territory of Nevada; thence running south along said
eastern boundary to the point of intersection with the thirty-seventh
parallel of north latitude; thence running along said thirty-seventh
parallel of north latitude west to the California line, and northwest
along said California line to the point of intersection with the
meridian of longitude 40° 30' west from Washington; thence running north
along said meridian to the place of beginning.
Subsequent to the
original creative Act the boundaries of Nye County have been changed six
times. On the ninth day of March, 1865, half a degree was ceded to
Esmeralda County, making the eastern boundary of the county the meridian
of longitude 40° 30' west from Washington. February 26, 1866, a large
part of the southeastern portion of Nye was 'formed into Lincoln County.
May 5, 1866, an Act was approved by the President of the United States
extending the eastern boundary of Nevada sixty miles into Utah, and
adding to this State all its present area south of the thirty-ninth
parallel of latitude. This addition on the south increased the territory
of Nye; but on March 2, 1869, a portion of Nye was added to White Pine.
March 5, 1869, the western boundary of the county was established as at
present. In 1875 that part of Nye east of the one hundred and fifteenth
meridian west from Greenwich was added to Lincoln and White Pine. The
area is 18,432 square miles.
APPOINTMENTS AND ELECTIONS.
Below, under appropriate heads, will be found the names of all the
persons who have filled the different offices of honor and trust in the
county from its organization down to the present time, either by
appointment or election, with the date of such appointment or election
and the particular office each has filled.
STATE SENATORS.
F. M. Proctor, elected November 8, 1864, and vacated his seat
September 20, 1866;
J. G. Riddle, elected November 6, 1866;
Robert
Mullen, elected November 3,1868;
D. P. Walter, elected November 5,
1872;
H. T. Cresswell, elected November 7, 1876;
J. T. Williams,
elected November 2, 1880.
ASSEMBLYMEN.
A. C. Bearss,
elected November 8, 1864, and re-elected November 7, 1865;
J. M.
Graves and W. T. Jones, elected November 6, 1866;
Wm. Doolin and John
Bowman, elected November 3,1868;
Bowman and A. H. Greenhalgh, elected
November 8, 1870;
Bowman and J. A. Prague, elected November 5, 1872;
John B. McGee and P. M. Ellison. elected November 3, 1874; T. J. Bell
and J. M. Caldwell, elected November 7, 1876; W. B. Taylor and J. T.
Williams, elected November 5, 1878; T. J. Bell and Geo. Ernst, elected
November 2, 1880.
COUNTY COMMISSIONERS.
Wm. B. Gould, G.
A. Swasey and Lucius B. Moore were appointed by the Executive April 4,
1864. Moore did not accept and E. C. Southworth was appointed to fill
the place July 6, 1864; J. M. Bowes, J. P. Courter and A. H. Simmonds
were elected September 7, 1864. Courter resigned March, 1865, John L.
Craig appointed. O. T. Clark, elected November 8, 1865; A. T. Hatch, J.
S. Bernard and W. N. Smyth were elected November 6, 1866. Hatch resigned
September 26, 1868; Samuel Tallman, J. A. Ball and J. S. Tipton, elected
November 3, 1868, E. G. Bruen, A. Pearson and E. A. Prior, elected
November 8, 1870. The vote between Pearson and Prior was a tie. E. M.
King, E. G. Bruen, and P. M. Ellison, elected November 5, 1872. Ellison
resigned September 27, 1873, Joseph Stowe appointed to fill the place.
C. E. Ashburn and B. McCann were ejected November 3,1874. W. C. Humphrey
and T. F. Morgan, elected November 7, 1876; Andrew Bradley and J. G.
Mitchell, elected November 5, 1878; A. H. Spaulding and John Gooding,
elected November 2, 1880. At a meeting of the Commissioners June 5,
1865, J. C. Johnson appears as a member of the Board, there is nothing
on the minutes to show how he came there.
DISTRICT ATTORNEYS.
Elias C. Brearley appointed by the Executive April 8, 1864, resigned
July 28, 1864, George W. Merrill appointed, and elected September
7,1864, and re-elected November 6, 1866; George E. Williams, elected
November 3, 1868, and re-elected November 8,1870; Frank Owen, elected
November 5, 1872; H. T. Cresswell, elected November 3, 1874; Benjamin
Curler, elected November 7, 1876, and re-elected November 5, 1878; J. I.
Griffith, elected November 2, 1880.
COUNTY SHERIFFS.
Edward Irwin, appointed by the Executive April 8, 1864. re-elected
September 7, 1864, resigned June 5, 1865. A. Eanney appointed to fill
vacancy, and elected November 7, 1865, re-elected November 6, 1866;
Eobert Stein, elected November 3, 1868, and re-elected November 8, 1870;
J. M. Caldwell, elected November 5, 1872, and re-elected November 3,
1874; W. H. Huyck, elected November 7, 1876; David O'Neil, elected
November 5, 1878, and re-elected November 2, 1880.
COUNTY CLERKS.
George W. Chandler, appointed by the Executive, April 11, 1864; E.
D. Turner, elected September 7, 1864; J. M. Bellrude, elected November
6, 1866; W. A. Brophy, elected November 3, 1868, re-elected November 8,
1870; G. Nicholl, elected November 5, 1872, and re-elected November 3,
1874, November 1, 1876, November 5, 1878, and November 2, 1880.
COUNTY TREASURERS.
Henry D. Groot, appointed by the Executive
April 4, 1864, resigned July 28, 1864, P. C. Turner was appointed to
fill the place; A. Eanney, elected September 7, 1864, resigned June 5,
1865, and A. A. Simmonds was appointed to fill the place; John Sharp,
elected November 7, 1865; William Locker, elected November 6, 1866;
Perry Coleman elected November 3, 1868, and failing to file additional
bonds the office was declared vacant August 20, 1870, and C. F.
Singletary was appointed, and elected November 8, 1870; A. McLean,
elected November 5, 1872, and re-elected November 3,1874, re-elected
again November 7, 1876, November 5, 1878, and November 2, 1880.
COUNTY ASSESSORS.
D. P. McHay, appointed by the Executive April
4, 1864; S. Brees, elected September 7, 1864, failed to qualify; James
H. Berry, appointed April 6, 1865; Stephen Roberts, elected November
7,1865, re-elected November 6,1866, November 3,1868, and November 8,
1870; Thos. Morgan, elected November 5, 1872; T. Warburton, elected
November 3, 1874, re-elected November 7, 1876, and November 5, 1878; T.
F. Morgan, elected November 2,1880.
COUNTY RECOEDERS.
Nicholas Smith, appointed by the Executive April 4. 1864; Joseph Stowe,
elected September 7, 1864, and re-elected November 6,1866; John Sharp,
elected November 3, 1868, and re-elected November 8, 1870; J. J.
Falkinheim, elected November 5, 1872; James A. Service, elected November
3, 1874, re-elected November 7, 1876; George Ernst, elected November 5.
1878; M. E. Delano, elected November 2, 1880.
COUNTY
SUPERINTENDENTS OP SCHOOLS.
H. D. Hoyt, elected September 7,
1864; Thomas Cahill, elected November 7, 1865; B. W. Crowell elected
November 6, 1866; G. E. Alexander, elected November 3, 1868, resigned
July 6, 1869, and Jno. Powers appointed; J. V. Hathaway, elected
November 8, 1870, re-elected November 5, 1872, resigned April 9,1873; C.
E. Ashburn, appointed, who resigned July 7, 1873, and E. C. Southworth
was appointed-F. C. Granger, elected November 3, 1874; M. E Delano,
elected November 7, 1876, and resigned April 2, 1878; E. M. King was
appointed; J. R. Daugherty, elected November 5,1878, and re-elected
November 2, 1880.
COUNTY SURVEYORS.
John F. Kidder, was
appointed by the Executive April 4, 1864; Francis Tagliabue, elected
September 7, 1864; D. S. Childs, elected November 6, 1866; J. A.
Phillips, elected November 3,1868, office declared vacant January 4,
1872, and A. D. Rock was appointed; John Jack, elected November 8, 1870,
office declared vacant January 4, 1872, and George Ernst was appointed;
J. C. Ogden, elected November 5, 1872, failed to qualify, and George
Ernst was appointed April 3, 1873, and elected November 3, 1874,
re-elected November 7, 1876; A. M. Hawkins, elected November 5, 1878;
Aug. Matthews, elected November 2, 1880.
PUBLIC ADMINISTRATORS.
S. L. Baker, appointed by the Executive, April 4, 1864; C. E.
Ashburn, elected November 6, 1866, failed to qualify, and G. A. Swasey
was appointed, January 6, 1868, and resigned, July 21, 1868; L. W.
Ferris, appointed to fill vacancy, was elected November 3, 1868, and
resigned November 18, 1868, W. W. Brown appointed to fill the place; J.
Cornell, elected November 8, 1870; J. W. Hollis, elected November 5,
1872; C. C. Dykeman, elected November 3, 1874; J. L. Thomason, elected
November 7, 1876, re-elected November 5, 1878; A.. Crabtree, elected
November 2, 1880.
ECONOMY AND HEALTHY GROWTH.
The
territory originally embraced in Nye County was carved out of Esmeralda.
April 2, 1864, in accordance with the Creative Act, the Governor
issued his proclamation, locating the county seat at lone City, and
appointing the first county officers.
The County Commissioners
thus appointed convened at .the county seat April 26,1864, and qualified
by taking the prescribed oath of office and the oath of allegiance.
A tax was then ordered of eighty cents on each $100 worth of taxable
property in the county, to be made immediately payable; and the Clerk
was instructed to notify the Auditor, Assessor, Treasurer and Tax
Collector of the fact. Thus was the machinery placed, and the wheels of
government were set in motion. Although the birth of the new county was
ushered in by the discovery of a new mining district, there was not that
unbridled extravagance in the management of its financial affairs which,
characterized and distinguished many of the county organizations of the
State.
A Court House was necessary, and the modest sum of $800
was deemed sufficient for the construction of a building for that
purpose.
The wisdom of the Commissioners, in this regard, is now
apparent, as the county seat was removed from Ione in three years' time.
February 6, 1867, the Legislature of the State passed an Act decreeing
that from and after the fifteenth day of the following May, the county
seat of Nye County should be at the town of Belmont, to which place the
public records, archives and officers were moved on the day provided.
The numerous mines located in that vicinity, and the rapid
developments that were being made, attracted wealth and population, and
Belmont soon became an important center for all kinds of business. The
year previous and the year following the change of the county seat,
several quartz mills were constructed in the district, of which Belmont
was the center.
DEBT AND COUNTY BUILDINGS.
In 1874 it was
found necessary to build a Court House and county jail at the county
seat, with accommodations to meet the wants of the growing county. The
sum of $34,000 was appropriated for this purpose, and the bonds of the
county were issued to cover the appropriation. This fact will explain
the great increase of the county debt in the year 1875, which was
$69,101. The total valuation of property for that year was $1,500,000.
The population was nearly 2,000. From that year to the present the
county indebtedness has steadily diminished, and the population remains
about the same.
The bullion product of Nye, although aggregating
nearly $8,000,000, has not been so great as that of some other counties,
nor the returns from her agriculture so satisfactory. Still the affairs
of the county are, and always have been, in a healthy and flourishing
condition.
In the tables, found on pages 135,136, 139 and 140 .of
the general history, can be seen the total products of the county, the
number of acres under cultivation, the stock and grain raised, and the
fruit trees and vineyards under training. For the bullion product of the
county see table elsewhere in this book.
GRAZING AND AGRICULTURE.
The topography of the county differs little from that of the major
portion of Nevada, consisting of valleys running north and south, and of
mountain spurs and ranges. A few years ago Nye was considered a fine
grazing country, but its feed supply has been nearly destroyed by the
large herds of stock which have been subsisted within its boundaries for
several seasons past. During the last two years more than 10,000 head of
cattle have been driven away. The summer feed consists of bunch grass.
The winter feed is white sage, a fine forage plant growing from eight to
ten inches high, which is not eaten by stock till after a heavy frost
occurs, which latter sweetens or softens the plant. Cattle are then very
fond of it, and prefer it to any thin g-else, and, where it is abundant,
will fatten on it through the severest winters known in Nevada. The
ranchers of this county have never been seriously troubled with
grasshoppers, but crops are frequently injured by frosts. With the
exception of barley, very little grain is raised. Alfalfa does well, and
is being introduced where sufficient water can be had for irrigation
purposes.
In 1874 the Surveyor General reported ten ditches in
the county for this purpose, and that 3,000 acres of land were being
supplied with water sufficient to make them productive. Fruit trees,
especially apples, pears and plums, were being cultivated with good
success. At that time the value of taxable property in the county was a
little over 11,500,000, nearly two-thirds of which was personal
property. Since then the value of personal property has been reduced
one-half, while the real estate value has remained about the same,
showing that while the mining interests of the county have materially
declined, the farming and grazing interests have about held their own.
VALLEYS OF THE COUNTY.
DUCKWATER VALLEY commences about seven
miles south of the north line of the county, and runs southerly into
Railroad Valley. It is three-quarters of a mile wide and about twelve
miles long, and is well watered by Duckwater Creek. It almost entirely
consists of meadow land, only about 800 acres of which are under
cultivation. It produces all kinds of grain and vegetables, which are
only slightly liable to injury by frost. Many fruit trees have been
planted, none of which are yet old enough to bear.
HOT CREEK
VALLEY runs nearly parallel with Railroad Valley, and is about eight
miles wide and 200 miles long. It affords good winter grazing, producing
white sage in abundance. Its water supply is insufficient, being
obtained from small creeks and springs. No families occupy the valley at
present. The towns of Hot Creek, Tybo and Morey are in the bordering
mountains.
MONITOR VALLEY lies to the westward of Hot Creek
Valley and extends about seventy miles southerly from the northern
boundary of the county, and is about eight miles wide. It is watered by
Pine and Mosquito Creeks and several other small streams. Only about 300
acres of its entire area are under cultivation; the balance consists of
hay land. This valley was first settled in 1866 by Jacob and Samuel
Stainenger. Soon afterwards George and Thomas Andrews settled near them,
and in a difficulty which ultimately followed, Thomas Andrews was
killed. The Stainengers were acquitted.
RALSTON VALLEY commences
at a point sixty miles south of the northern line of the county near the
town of Belmont, and runs to the southern line. It is about eight miles
wide, contains no water, and no attempts to settle it have ever been
made. It was named in memory of Judge James H. Ralston, who left Austin
on May 1, 1864, to go to his ranch, situated about thirty-five miles
southwest of Austin. Losing his way, he crossed several mountain ranges,
and on the eighth of May died of exposure and starvation at the edge of
the valley bearing his name, at a locality sixteen miles southeast of
Belmont. He had traveled more than 250 miles. Some days after his
departure from Austin, his friends feared that something had befallen
him, and a search party was dispatched to overtake him, but returned
unsuccessful. A second party was organized, and, accompanied by Indians,
trailed him to the place of his death, and recovered his body. Here and
there, on their way, they discovered evidences that he had fed on
mountain berries, and had been sufficiently refreshed to resume his
dreary pilgrimage. On the day he died he was observed by an Indian while
staggering along in a demented condition. The Indian remarked to his
squaw that "that man would die before night," and approaching the Judge
endeavored to take charge of him, but was unable to do so, and found his
body on the following morning. The Indian refrained from communicating
the fact to the whites for fear of being charged with murder. In 1837,
Judge Ralston succeeded Stephen A. Douglas as Judge of the Fifth
District of Illinois. Later he was a State Senator in Illinois, and a
Quartermaster in the army during the Black Hawk War. In 1850 he removed
to Sacramento, California, and became a State Senator, and about 1860
came to Nevada. At the time of his death his family resided at Austin.
RAILROAD VALLEY, on some maps called Warm SpringsValley, lies
between the White Pine Range and the Pancake range of mountains, and is
twelve miles wide and nearly 200 miles long. This valley was first
settled in 1867 by Alexander Beaty and others. There is a lack of water,
which is found only in occasional spots, but not in sufficient
quantities for use in irrigation. There is enough for stock-raising,
however, and the valley is a good stock-raising region, producing plenty
of white sage and sand grass. It also contains two salt marshes, which
supply the local demand for salt for milling and domestic purposes.
There is at present but one family in the valley.
REESE RIVER
VALLEY, which extends south from Lander County and reaches thirty miles
into Nye, is eight miles wide, well watered and contains eighteen
ranches and fifty inhabitants. About 900 acres have been brought under
cultivation, much of which is white sage land which yields well.
SIERRA, or WHITE RIVER, VALLEY extends across the eastern part of the
county and is an extensive grazing region with a number of fine ranches
in it.
SMOKY VALLEY also commences in Lander County and for 140
miles runs southward through Nye a little west of the center, being
about fifteen miles in width, and watered by numerous small streams and
springs. H. Robinson and William Shay were the first settlers. They took
up land as early as 1863. The valley now contains thirteen ranches and
forty inhabitants, and 500 acres of ground are under cultivation. The
crops suffer very little from frost, the reverse of which is the case in
the principal portions of the county. An extensive salt marsh is in the
central part of the valley, from which large quantities of salt is
gathered for the supply of the quartz mills of the neighboring
districts. Some remarkable hot springs, elsewhere described, are in the
southern part.
PRINCIPAL MINING DISTRICTS.
BLUE SPRING
DISTRICT is situated about fifty miles southerly from Austin, and about
seventeen miles northerly from the stage station of Hot Spring. Mineral
discoveries were made there in 1867, upon which a district was
immediately organized. Fifteen locations have been made. The formation
in which the veins are found consists of slate, quartz, porphyry and
granite. The veins run with the formation, in the direction of northeast
and southwest. The ore is low grade, is both free and base, and contains
a trace of gold. A fifty-foot shaft is the deepest in the district.
Freight charges to Austin are twenty dollars per ton. Timber and water
are scarce. No mills have yet been erected, and but little work has been
done in the district for several years. The ore-is worked by milling and
roasting, and has thus far been taken to Park Canon in North Twin
District. The name of the post-office at Blue Spring District is
Minnium. The mining records are kept by J. H. Greenhalgh.
DANVILLE DISTRICT is situated in the Monitor range of mountains, about
half way between Hot Creek and Eureka, and a little westerly of the
direct line. Ore was discovered by P. W. Mansfield in 1866, and a
district organized which was re-organized in 1870. Quartz veins are
found in a formation of limestone, running north and south with the
formation, and dipping to the west at an angle of forty-five degrees.
The ore is free, and bears a small trace of gold. It is most
advantageously worked by the milling process. Spring water is abundant,
and nut pine grows in close proximity. The freight rate to Eureka, by
team, is thirty-five dollars per ton. The principal mines are the Sage
Hen, Boston, Eucalyptus, Argonaut and Richmond. The greatest depth of
shaft is in the Boston, 150 feet; the greatest length of tunnel is in
the Eucalyptus, 125 feet. About thirty locations have been made thus
far. The ore is hauled to Morey. From 1877 to 1879 about twenty men
worked in the various mines, but only five are now employed, and very
little more than assessment work is done. Some of the ore assays from
$200 to $600 per ton. The mining records are kept by Frank Miller.
EMPIRE DISTRICT takes in a portion of the town of Tybo, and is in
the Hot Creek range, about 100 miles southerly from Eureka. Ore was
discovered in August, 1866, by John Centers, D. B. Haight, J. B. Saburn,
E. P. Sine, and others, and a district was immediately organized. The
principal mines are the Bunker Hill, Mayflower and Sclavonian Chief. The
greatest length of tunnel is in the Bunker Hill, 200 feet; the greatest
depth of shaft, 180 feet. The formation is of limestone, running
southeast and northwest, the veins running with it and dipping to the
east at an angle of thirty degrees. The ores are both free and base, and
contain lead, iron, a little copper and a small percentage of gold. The
number of locations in the district is 168, and the number of mines
twenty. Little more than prospecting has ever been done excepting in the
Bunker Hill Mine, from which about 2,000 tons of ore have been taken
that yielded from thirty to thirty-five dollars per ton. Small lots of
surface deposits have been shipped from the district which went as high
as $500 per ton, but no permanent ledge of such value has been found.
Sufficient spring-water is available, and at a distance of eight miles
nut pine is abundant. The ore is worked by the milling process. Freight
teamed from Eureka costs forty dollars per ton. The mining records of
the district are kept by J. D. Page, of Tybo.
GRANT DISTRICT was
organized on the twenty-seventh of October, 1868, and lies on the
western slope of the White Pine Mountains, at a locality seventy-five
miles south of Hamilton. The formation is of talcose slate, which dips
to the east. The two principal mineral veins also dip to the east at an
angle of forty-five degrees. They run parallel. The mountain is lofty,
broken and precipitous, and affords an abundant supply of white and
yellow pine, fir and other woods valuable either for fuel or timber.
Water and grass are also abundant. The Meridian ledge is about four feet
wide, the ore of which contains carbonate of copper and chloride of
silver. The width of Blue Eagle ledge is five feet, the ore of which is
a green and blue carbonate of copper. Assays show silver as high as $300
dollars per ton. Very little work has been done in the district.
Butterfield's Salt Marsh is adjacent, and could produce an unlimited
amount of salt for milling purposes. In 1869 a considerable quantity of
ore was shipped to Austin from Grant District, and yielded from $500 to
$600 per ton. The ore is base.
HOT CREEK DISTRICT was organized
in 1866, ore having been discovered by William Waters, William Robinson,
and others. The mining records are kept by W. Gluys. There are ten
miners in the district, and the-number of locations is 200. The
formation is limestone running north and south, the veins running with
it, and dipping to the east at an angle of eighty-five degrees. The ore
is free-milling, boars a small per cent, of gold, assays as high as $900
per ton, and averages about $250. The principal mines are the Old
Dominion, New Dominion, Coal Burner, Wyandott, Mountain View, Free Ore
Ledge, Oliver Twist and Night Watch. The Old Dominion has a shaft 300
feet deep, and the Night Watch a tunnel 300 feet long. Freight is teamed
from Eureka, a distance of eighty-five miles, at the rate of forty
dollars per ton. Water is abundant, and plenty of nut pine is to be had
at a distance of two miles. The mineral belt included in this district
is about six miles long and a mile in width. There is a belt of slate on
the east of the mines, and near them an outcropping of transition rock.
The district received its name from a great natural curiosity, being a
stream of hot water of several hundred inches in measurement, and
running for several miles in a deep chasm through the mountains, sinking
in a tule marsh in a valley east of the range.
JACKSON DISTRICT
is in the lone, or Shoshone, range of mountains, thirty miles south of
the railroad station of Ledlie, and ten miles west of the stage station
of Barrett. Ore was discovered in 1864 by a prospector named Thomas
Barnes, and the North Union District was organized. In 1878 it was
reorganized under the name of Jackson District. The veins are found in a
formation of porphyry and syenite, and run north and south, the veins
running with it, and dipping to the east at an angle of from forty to
sixty degrees. The ores are free and contain metal that is forty per
cent, of silver and sixty per cent, of gold. The principal mines are the
San Francisco, Arctic and North Star. The Arctic has a shaft sixty feet
deep, and the North Star, a shaft fifty feet deep. Wood and water are
found in abundance immediately around the mines. The wood consists of
nut pine and cedar. About twenty locations have been made in the
district, and there are about six miners there. The district was
distinguished, in the early years of its organization, for the many
beautiful specimens of geodes, chalcedony, agates, silicified wood and
other stones, valuable to the jeweler and lapidary, found in it.
JETT DISTRICT is situated in the Toiyabe range, near Summit Canon,
thirty miles west of Belmont. Hot Springs, ten miles to the northward,
is the nearest stage station. Belmont is the nearest post-office. Ore
was discovered in the district in 1875, by John Davenport. During the
ensuing year, the district was organized, but not until 1880 did active
operations begin. More than a hundred locations have been made, although
no miners are now resident there. The records are kept by J. W. Bolen,
of Hot Springs. The principal mines are the Centennial, Seventy-six and
the Idlewild. In the Centennial, the ores are of a varied character,
such as carbonate of lead, argentiferous galena, zincblende and
antimony. They are very rich, assaying from $100 to $300 per ton. The
general character of the ore in the district, however, is low grade and
base, with no trace of gold. The veins are found between slate and
porphyry. The greatest depth of shaft, 190 feet, is in the Centennial;
the greatest length of tunnel, 200 feet, is in the Idlewild. Plenty of
wood and water are to be had near the mines. Considerable ore has been
shipped to Eureka and smelted. Freight is teamed from Austin, sixty
miles distant, at the rate of thirty dollars per ton. A New York company
contemplates active operations at an early date.
LONE MOUNTAIN
DISTEICT takes its name from a solitary mountain standing in Smoky
Valley. On this mountain the mines are located. They were discovered by
Mexicans in 1863, and were worked in a rude way for several years, in
quest of gold. A district was organized in 1864. In 1866 the mines were
abandoned. In 1878 new mines were opened, and the ore was transported to
Belleville and milled, yielding from seventy to seventy-five dollars per
ton. The number of miners now in the district is fifteen; the number of
locations, twenty. The veins are found between slate and porphyry, and
run with the formation in a northeast and southwest direction, dipping
to the east. The ore is base, being adapted for smelting, and contains
copper, lead, silver and some gold. The greatest depth of shaft is
thirty-five feet. The nearest railroad point is Austin, 120 miles
distant, from which freight is brought by team. Spring-water is
abundant, and there is plenty of nut pine and cedar convenient of
access. Not very far west of Lone Mountain is a salt mine, but it has
never been worked to a great extent.
MANHATTAN DISTRICT is ten
miles southwest of Belmont. Ore was discovered in 1866 by George
Nicholl, and a district was organized the following year. Fifty
locations have been made. The principal mines are the Mohawk and Black
Hawk. The veins are between limestone and porphyry, which formation runs
north and south. The veins run with it in most cases, but in others,
across it. The dip is westerly, at an angle of thirty-five to
thirty-seven degrees. The ore is base, containing copper and iron, but
no trace of gold. The Black Hawk Mine has a shaft sixty feet deep, and
the Mohawk a tunnel 100 feet in length. Freight from Austin, ninety
miles to the northward, is teamed at sixty dollars per ton. Plenty of
nut pine and cedar are close by the mines, and the supply of
spring-water is ample. The ore has been milled at Belmont, and has
averaged about 1100 per ton. Very little work has been done in the
district since 1869. The mining records are kept by George Nicholl.
MILK SPRING DISTRICT joins Tybo District on the south, and was
organized in 1867. About forty locations have been made. In the fall of
1867 Colonel Buel worked six or eight mines. Considerable ore was taken
out, much of which yet remains on the dumps. Since then nothing has been
done. The district receives its name from the appearance of the water
which rises in a large spring, which although pure to the taste, is
milky in color.
NORTH TWIN RIVER DISTRICT lies on the east side
of the Toiyabe Mountains, forty miles south of Austin. A mill was built
there in 1867, by the La Plata Mining Company, of Beading, Pennsylvania
but ran only for a short time. The Buckeye Mining Company, of New York,
worked extensively for several years upon the Buckeye Mine, which was
discovered and opened in 1865. The mine produced considerable silver,
the ore being in irregular bunches sometimes very rich and promising,
but not equaling the great expectations, the mine was abandoned by them.
Ore is occasionally taken out and shipped to Austin.
SAN ANTONIO
DISTRICT is situated in the Toiyabe Mountains, about thirty-six miles
southwest of Belmont. Ore was discovered in 1863 by a party of Mexicans,
and a district was at once organized. Considerable work was done during
the ensuing few years. In 1865 a ten-stamp mill was built at San Antone
Station, in Smoky Valley, twelve miles distant, but after being operated
a year it was pulled down and removed to some other mining locality. A
four-stamp mill was also built in 1867, but was only run a year. Slate,
lime and porphyry are the prevailing formations, and run north and
south, the veins running in the same direction. The ore is base. It is
of high grade and bears lead and antimony, but no gold. It is worked by
the milling and roasting process. The principal mines are the Potomac
and Liberty. The latter contains a shaft 400 feet deep. Plenty of nut
pine and cedar are found at the distance of twenty miles from the mines.
Water is hauled from springs three miles distant. Freight is teamed from
Austin, 100 miles distant, at a cost of thirty dollars per ton.
SILVER POINT DISTRICT is twelve miles south of the stage station of Hot
Spring. The nearest post-office is Belmont. Ore was discovered in 1865
by Edward Shumway and others, and a district was organized under the
name of Argentore. In 1871 it was reorganized under the present name.
Twenty-one locations have been made. The veins are found between slate
and porphyry, and run north and south with the formation, dipping to the
southwest at an angle of forty-five degrees. The ores are base,
containing copper and iron, and average about §130 to the ton. About 100
tons have been taken out that have not been milled. The principal mines
are the Minnesota, Blue Bell, Modoc and Monte Christo. The shaft of the
Minnesota is eighty feet in depth. Water is scarce. Plenty of wood is
found within three miles of the mines. Freight is brought from Austin,
seventy miles to the northward, at thirty dollars per ton. The ores of
the district are worked at Austin and Jefferson. The mining records are
kept by the County Clerk.
SPRINGFIELD DISTRICT is on the west
side of Monitor Valley, in Silver Bend Mountains, about thirty-five
miles north of Belmont. It was organized November 24, 1874. More than a
hundred springs furnish an abundant supply of water, while the slope of
the mountain is covered with white and nut pines. The ores are base,
containing iron, lead and silver, and best adapted for smelting. The
belt has been traced for five miles along the range, some of the veins
being shown by continuous croppings for a mile or thereabout, which
reappear in the distance. Considerable work has been done on the Sheba
Mine, which produces ore assaying ninety dollars to the ton.
THE
DEVIL'S PUNCH BOWL. About a mile east of the district is the remarkable
feature of nature known as the Devil's Punch Bowl. It consists of a
butte in the form of an inverted wash-bowl, which is a quarter of a mile
in diameter where it touches the ground, and a hundred feet in diameter
at the apex. Upon ascending the smooth side of the bowl to the top, the
visitor is confronted by an immense chasm, almost perfectly circular,
with vertical walls, and of great depth, at the bottom of which is a
seething cauldron of boiling water of unfathomable depth, which is
incessantly foaming and exhaling hot vapors and steam.
SUMMIT
DISTRICT is in the Toiyabe range of mountains, thirty miles south of
Austin, on the southeast side of Bunker Hill. Ore was discovered in
1863, a district organized, and three mills erected. Operations were not
successful, however, owing to inadequate machinery, and lack of proper
knowledge of the ores. The companies engaged in mining failed, and very
little work has been done since. The principal mines are the Victorine
and Phoenician. The formation of the latter is limestone and slate. The
vein is five feet thick, has a course east and west, and dips north at
an angle of forty degrees. A tunnel fifty feet in length has been driven
into the ledge, and from the end of it an incline has been sunk forty
feet. The ore contains a large per cent, of gold. Assays have been made
which show $150 gold, and $125 silver per ton. Some years ago, 1,800
tons of ore from the Victorine were worked, the average pulp assays of
which were sixty dollars per ton. Thirty-seven per cent, only of this
was saved, which was not sufficient to pay the expenses of milling and
mining. There is plenty of good ore in this district, which improved
machinery could handle at a profit. There is an abundance of water, and
wood can be had at five dollars per cord. The ore can be mined and
delivered at the mills for two dollars and fifty cents per ton. [This
district is probably in Lander County.]
TOIYABE DISTRICT is
fifteen miles north of San Antone Station. Ore was discovered in 1876 by
Messrs. Nicholl, Wallmer and Terrill. In 1878 a district was organized,
but no town has ever been built there. The veins are between limestone
and slate, and between slate and porphyry, and run north and south with
the formation, dipping to the west at an angle of forty degrees. The
ores are both free and base, and bear gold and silver. The base ores
contain lead and antimony. In some of the mines there is very little
silver, the ore going about $300 per ton. About thirty tons have been
milled at Jefferson. The base ore yields from sixty to eighty dollars
per ton. Wood and water are abundant, the latter being obtained from
springs. Freight is teamed from Austin, eighty miles to the northward,
at the rate of twenty-five dollars per ton. The principal mines are the
Toiyabe North, Wykiup, California North, California South and Toiyabe
South. The deepest shaft in the district is seventy-two feet. The mining
records are kept by S. Compton at Peavine.
Other districts are
described in connection with the principal towns within their limits.
PRINCIPAL TOWNS AND CITIES.
BELMONT, the county seat of Nye
County, is situated on a sloping plateau of the Toquima range of
mountains, and has an altitude of 8,000 feet. Its environs are
picturesque in the extreme. The location is also at the center of the
important Philadelphia Mining District, the principal mines of which are
about a mile east of town. They are the Belmont, Highbridge, Arizona, El
Dorado South, El Dorado North, Combination, Green & Oder, North Belmont,
Monitor-Belmont and Quintero. Ore was discovered by an Indian, and the
first locations were made in October, 1865, soon after which a district
was organized called the Philadelphia. In 1866 the name was changed to
Silver Bend, but in the same year was changed back to the one originally
adopted. The quartz veins are found between slate and porphyry, which
formation runs north and south, the veins running with it, and dipping
easterly at an angle of from thirty-seven to forty-five degrees. The ore
is base, containing copper, lead and antimony, and is worked by milling
and roasting.
Spring-water is abundant for all purposes, and nut
pine and cedar are found within eight miles of town. Freight is teamed
from Austin, ninety miles distant, and from Eureka, 109 miles distant,
at the rate of from two to three dollars per 100 pounds. The completion
of rail communication to Walkers Lake will probably somewhat reduce
these rates. Three hundred locations have been made in this district.
The first mill was built in 1866, having ten stamps. During the
following year a twenty-stamp mill was put up, and in 1868 a forty-stamp
mill. The first mill erected ceased operations in 1869. The second was
idle from 1868 until 1878, after which it ran at intervals for two
years, and was then taken down and moved to Gold Mountain. The third
stopped running in 1876. The present facilities for working ore consist
of a five-stamp and a twenty-stamp mill. The richest of the ore has
yielded as high as $1,000 per ton.
The deepest shaft in the
district is in the Belmont Mine, and penetrates to the depth of 500
feet. At the depth of 360 feet a level has been run in the vein for the
distance of 1,400 feet. In sinking winzes from this level two chimneys
of ore were discovered, pitching south, which were so remarkably rich
that the stock of the company rose from$1.50 to $30 per share within a
few days. One of these chimneys was within 200 feet of the locality from
which the Canfield Company took half a million dollars' worth of ore a
few years ago. Considerable difficulty is experienced in working the
Belmont Mine, on account of the flow of water. Pumps throwing out 200
gallons of water per minute can scarcely remedy the difficulty.
Nevertheless the mine has been most entensively developed, which can
also be said of the El Dorado South. The shaft of the Monitor-Belmont
has been sunk to a depth of 250 feet, and much rich ore has been taken
out. An incline in the Arizona Mine is 175 feet in depth. Some of the
ore extracted from the Green & Oder Mine has yielded $400 per ton. The
records of the district are kept by George Nicholl, of Belmont.
The first settler of Belmont was Antonio Borquez, who arrived in 1865.
He was soon followed by A. Billman, H. G. C. Schmidt, J. M. Reed, C. L.
Straight, E. Kelley, D. E. Dean, Len. Martin, O. Brown, S. Tallman, J.
Grover, D. B. Buel, Dr. Wm. Geller, Charles St. Louis, J. W. Gashwiler,
S. M. Burk and others. Ore discoveries, the convenience of wood and
water, and a naturally fine location, caused the selection of the town
site. Belmont was most prosperous in 1866-67, and again in 1873-74, at
which times it contained about 1,500 inhabitants. Its streets are
partially shaded by maples, locusts and Balm of Gilead trees.
The
nearest towns are these: Barcelona, eight miles west; Jefferson,
fourteen miles north; Hot Creek, thirty-five miles easterly, and Tybo
about the same distance southeasterly. Nut pine, cedar and mountain
mahogany are obtained from the surrounding hills. At present the town
contains four stores, two saloons, five restaurants, one livery stable,
a post-office, an assay office, a blacksmith shop, and about 400
inhabitants. The buildings are constructed of stone, brick, adobe and
wood.
The Episcopalians and Roman Catholics have organizations,
and frame houses of worship. The Episcopalian Church will seat 200
persons, and the Catholic Church 150. There are no clergymen at Belmont,
however. There are four lawyers, and the extreme healthfulness of the
township enables it to fare well with one physician.
The number
of quartz mills is three—one of five stamps, one of twenty stamps, and
one of thirty stamps. The water supply is obtained from springs and
wells, and is ample for general use. Merchandise is procured both from
San Francisco and Chicago. Secret societies consist of one Masonic lodge
and one lodge of Good Templars. A stone school house 20x24 feet in size,
is capable of seating 100 pupils but only about half that number are in
attendance. The public hospital is under the management of the County
Commissioners, and at present contains ten patients. The aggregate
length of streets is three miles. The sidewalks are of wood and stone.
Agricultural interests in the vicinity are not of an important
character. Some stock-raising is carried on. In Smoky Valley are
numerous hot springs, which have attracted much attention.
In
1867 a weekly newspaper called the Silver Bend Weekly Reporter was
established and continued in existence about two years. Another paper
The Mountain Champion was published in 1868 during the election
campaign, and in 1874 the Belmont Courier was established and still
continues.
The prices of board, and commodities in general, as
they were in March, 1867, may be learned from the following extract from
the Silver Bend Reporter of that time:—
For the information of
persons contemplating a trip to Belmont, we append the following list of
prices of various articles at this time. Lumber per 1,000 feet, $140;
stone wall per perch, $5; passage from Austin, $15; freight from Austin
per pound, fast 4@5 cents, slow do 2 1/2@3; board per week, $10@$12;
flour, per 100, $13; sugar, (crushed) per pound, 33 1/3 cents; coffee,
45@50 cents; bacon, 35@40 cents; wood per cord, $4@$6; beef, 15@25
cents, eggs per dozen, $1.25; tea per pound, $1@1.50; beans, 15@20
cents; butter, 75 cents; barley 9@10 cents; hay per ton, $75. Adobes are
valueless, and there is no brick, shingles, nor shakes in the market.
Nye County, at present, is classed among the undeveloped counties,
being distant from, and untouched by any railroad. Every other county
has some railroad history, but this great means of development promises
to reach these most distant parts at an early day. From the east is
promised the extension of the Utah Southern from Milford, through the
northern part of Lincoln, crossing this county by Reveille and Turn
Pah-Ute, opening easy communication to Belmont, San Antonio, Smoky
Valley and to a junction at Silver Peak with a railroad from California.
The work of construction has already begun for the extension of the
Nevada Central from Ledlie in Lander County, under the name of the
Nevada Southern Railway, which will pass through the rich mining region
of Grantsville, and extending to a junction with the road from
California and from the East.
HON. BENJAMIN CURLER, was born in
Ferrisburgh, Addison County, Vermont, September 27, 1834.
The
father of our present subject being a farmer of no great wealth, his
early days were spent in active pursuits, and were only varied by his
attendance at the district school. In September, 1853, he entered a high
school kept by B. B. Allen, at Vergennes, Vermont, and at the expiration
of the term, returned to his father's farm, and worked until the school
opened again the next September, when he once more settled down to his
studies in good earnest. After his second term, he taught a school for
four months. During his twenty-first year of life he emigrated to
Illinois, but returned to his native State, and taught school that
winter. In the spring of 1856 he again went to Illinois, and for a
period of nearly two years was engaged in teaching school, and reading
law. In the fall of 1857 he went to Wisconsin remaining but a short
time, however, when he returned to Illinois, and engaged in the
mercantile business. In the spring of 1859 he started for the mines at
Pike's Peak, Colorado, and not realizing what he expected in that
region, he continued his journey, and reached Carson City, Nevada, on
the fifteenth of September of that year, and followed the occupation of
carpentering for some time. In 1862 he kept a stage station on the
Carson .River, and continued the study of his profession. In 1863 he was
elected a member of the Territorial Legislature. March 9, 1864, was
appointed County Commissioner, by Gov. James W. Nye, for Churchill
County; and during the same year he was elected District Attorney, and
admitted to practice law in all the Territorial Courts. At the general
election in 1866, he was elected District Judge of the Fifth Judicial
District, comprising the counties of Nye and Churchill; and was
re-elected to the same office four years later, his opponent being the
Hon. C. H. Belknap. At the expiration of his last term, he resumed the
practice of his profession. In 1876 he was elected District Attorney for
Nye County; and was re-elected in 1878, which office he still holds. Mr.
Curler is well known throughout the State of Nevada, and is universally
esteemed. He was married in Vermont, November 6, 1856, to Miss Rhoda A.
Thompson.
HON. GEORGE ERNST was born in Kirchheim, Hessen Cassel,
Germany, A. D. 1837. His father is a stone mason, and is still living.
At the early age of two years the subject of this sketch emigrated with
hie parents to America. In 1845 his family settled in Dubuque, Iowa, and
George received his education in the common schools of that place, and
also learned the trade of his father. He subsequently entered Kenyon
College, in Ohio, from where he graduated with high honors in 1862. In
1863 he came to Nevada, and located at Dayton, Lyon County, where he
soon after received the appointment of Deputy County Surveyor, under
John Day, and for three years remained in that office. In the spring of
1866, Mr. Ernst accompanied Governor H. G. Blaisdel on an expedition to
Pahranagat Valley, and for a time remained there. In 1867-68 he was
Assessor for Lincoln County, being the first man elected to that office
in the county. In 1870 we find him a farmer at Hot Creek, in Nye County,
and in 1872 he was appointed County Surveyor of the same, to which
office he was elected in 1874 and 1876. In 1877 he had charge of the
office of County Recorder and Auditor, and was elected to perform the
duties pertaining to that office in 1878. In 1880 he was elected to the
Assembly of the Nevada Legislature. Mr. Ernst was the first to suggest
to Adolph Sutro, the feasibility of the enterprise resulting in the
construction of the famous Sutro Tunnel, and to him is accorded the
honor of making the first survey, locating the tunnel and shafts. In
connection with his many other duties he has been Deputy United States
Mineral Surveyor for eight years. In politics he is a Democrat, but was
a strong Union man during the slight misunderstanding between the North
and South. He was married to Miss Ellen Mary Hinton at Dayton, in 1865.
BARCELONA is eight miles west of Belmont, in Spanish Belt District,
which is situated in the Smoky Valley, or Toquima, range. Ore was
discovered by a party of Mexicans in 1867. In 1875 the district was
detached from the Philadelphia District and organized as at present.
During the following year Barcelona was started, and attained a
population of 150. It contained a store, blacksmith shop, assay office,
three boarding-houses, etc., but was deserted in the latter part of
1877, by reason of the cessation of work in the mines. In 1879 the mines
started up again, and about 500 tons of ore were taken out. The ores of
the district are rich, and prospects are promising. The formation is
between slate and porphyry, running northeast and southwest, the veins
running with it, and dipping to the east at an angle of forty-five
degrees. The ores are base, requiring roasting. They contain antimony,
zinc and iron, and some have yielded twenty dollars per ton in gold and
$380 per ton in silver. There is plenty of spring-water at the mines,
and nut pine, white pine and cedar are abundant in the neighborhood. The
principal mines are the Barcelona, Ligusia, Altocana, Enterprise, and
San Pedro. The shaft of the Barcelona is 180 feet deep; the tunnel of
that mine is 1,300 feet long. Freight is teamed from Austin, eighty
miles to the northward, at the rate of fifty dollars per ton. The ores
taken out are worked at Belmont, Austin and Eureka; but it is believed
that a mill will soon be erected at the mines. The records of the
district are kept by George Nichoil, at Belmont.
BARTLETT is
twenty miles east of the stage station of Minnium, on Miner's Mountain,
in the midst of a good mining region. Ore was discovered in 1866 by a
prospector named Logan, and a district was organized called
Northumberland. In 1875 the name was changed to Monitor, but was changed
back to Northumberland in 1879, at which date the town was started. It
once contained a store, boarding-house, post-office, numerous saloons,
etc., but is now entirely deserted. A ten-stamp mill was erected in
1879, but was operated only three months. The quartz veins are between
slate and porphyry, running north and south with the formation, and
dipping to the east at an angle of thirty-seven degrees. The ore is
free-milling, containing gold and silver. Some of it is very rich in
gold. The principal mines are the Monitor and Blue Bell. The shaft of
the latter is 120 feet deep. Freight is teamed from Austin, sixty-five
miles distant, at the rate of twenty dollars per ton. Nut and white pine
are abundant. Water is scarce, and is procured from springs. Belmont and
Austin are the nearest post-offices. The books of the district are kept
by S. Slusher, of Eureka.
ELLSWORTH is in Mammoth District,
thirty miles south of the old overland road through the Cold Spring
range of mountains, and about twelve miles westerly from lone. It
contains a post-office and stage station. Ore was discovered in 1863 by
the Indians, and in 1864, Sam. McKeon, A. T. Hatch, and others,
organized a district. The town was started soon afterwards, but its
growth was slow and discouraging until 1870, when a ten-stamp mill was
built. Its population then increased to 200, and it became very lively.
Since 1874 the mill has been operated only a portion of the time, and
the population of the town has dwindled down to twenty persons,
including six miners. The quartz veins are found in a formation of
granite, which runs northeast and southwest, the veins running with it
and dipping to the west at an angle of forty-five degrees. The ores are
mostly free-milling, and average about 1100 to the ton. The principal
mines are the Peoria, Morning Call, General Lee, Silver Wave, Mount
Vernon and Lisbon. The greatest depth of shaft is in the Mount Vernon,
180 feet. When the mill was in operation, Indians were employed at the
pans, settlers, concentrators and furnaces, with a couple of white men
to oversee them, and proved very efficient laborers. The cost of wood
delivered at the mills, has usually been three dollars and a quarter per
cord. Salt is worth thirty-five dollars per ton. Water for the mill is
obtained from a forty-foot well. Some very rich ore has been taken from
the Esta Buena Mine, located and owned by Don Manuel San Pedro, of
Grantsville. Some of it has gone as high as $1,600 per ton. Several tons
worked in the mill yielded $325 each. The nearest railroad point is
Austin, sixty-five miles to the. northeast. Freight is brought from
Wadsworth at the rate of fifty dollars per ton.
GRANTSVILLE is in
a beautiful canon about four miles from lone Valley. It is in Union
District, which is situated in the Ione, or Shoshone, range of
mountains, just west of the Toiyabe range. Ore was discovered in 1863 by
P. A. Haven, and a district was at once organized. Haven also laid off
the town of Grantsville, and about fifty persons settled there, among
whom was John Bowman, J. C. Johnson, Mr. Veach, Peter Lefler, M. C.
Mahone, Manuel San Pedro, and others. Its growth has been most
promising. Its altitude is about 8,500 feet, and fine mountain scenery
stretches away on every hand. Ten miles to the northward is Ione, and
seventy miles to the northeastward is Austin.
In September, 1877,
the Alexander Company became interested in the mines in and around
Grantsville, and re-located and laid off the town, and built a
twenty-stamp mill there, the capacity of which was increased to forty
stamps in 1880.
The present population of Grantsville is 800,
including 356 registered voters. It contains ten merchandise stores, two
drug stores, one hardware store and tin shop, one furniture store, five
restaurants, two bakeries, five saloons, two barber shops, one jewelry
store, two blacksmith shops, two meat markets, two livery stables, one
brewery, two assay offices, an express office, bank, newspaper, and a
foundry. The climate is healthy and the atmosphere pure. Three mails
arrive and depart every week, and stage lines connect with Wadsworth and
Austin by way of lone, and with Eureka by way of Belmont. Town lots sell
all the way from $50 to $500.
In the vicinity of Grantsville
there are fourteen valuable silver mines, as follows: The Elizabeth,
Bonanza, Lefler, Harvey, Success; Galatea, Chicago, Centennial, Cooper,
Silver Crown, Cadiz, Alameda, Brooklyn, and the Alexander series.
The veins of the district are found in porphyry, quartzite and
limestone, running northwest and southeast with the formation, and
dipping to the southwest at an angle of sixty degrees. Porphyry is the
predominating formation. The ore contains native gold and silver,
chloride and sulphuret of silver, antimony, copper, and the carbonate of
lead. Some exceedingly rich specimens, containing gold, have been found
in the Shamrock and Franklin Mines. Large-sized specimens have been
obtained from the former mine, showing more gold than quartz. The
deepest shaft is in the Alexander mine, 1,200 feet. The incline of the
same mine is 500 feet long. The ores of the district are worked by the
milling and roasting process. •
Wood and water are convenient and
abundant. Freight is teamed from Austin at the rate of forty dollars per
ton. The number of miners now in the district is 140. Thus far the total
bullion product has been to the value of about $1,000,000. The mining
records of the district are kept by J. F. Duchet.
The Odd Fellows
have a well-organized lodge. Educational facilities consist of a good,
brick school house, capable of seating sixty pupils, about forty pupils
being in regular attendance. The aggregate length of streets in the town
is two miles. About ten miles to the westward, on Reese River, are a few
small ranches, and some stock-raising is also carried on.
In
November, 1879, the Grantsville Sun, a weekly paper, was started in the
interest of Senator Jones, but suspended in 1880. In January, 1881, the
Grantsville Bonanza was started by Maute & Donald, and is now being
regularly published.
A tunnel in the hillside answers the purpose
of a jail. In February, 1881, a Spaniard was lynched for the murder of a
countryman of his. Another murderer was arrested in August, 1880, and
after conviction, was sent to the State Prison, where he is now
incarcerated. The prospects of Grantsville are favorable in the extreme.
THE TOWN OF HOT CREEK is situated in the center of a rich mining
region, with wood and water convenient and abundant. Among its earliest
settlers were Jeremiah Miller, David Baker, Eli Baker, G. B. Montgomery,
Dr. Walter, B. G. Brown, Garrett & Joslyn and Capt. A. D. Rock—who
arrived in 1867. The town was most prosperous in 1868, when its
population numbered about 300. The altitude is 6,800 feet. It is
situated in a beautiful valley in the foothills of the Hot Creek
Mountains, and is fifteen miles south of Morey District, twelve miles
north of Tybo, and thirty-five miles southeast of Belmont. Its present
inhabitants number only twenty-five. The site of the town is now the
property of Hon. J. T. Williams. A saloon, restaurant, hotel,
post-office, blacksmith shop and assay office meets the present wants of
the community. The buildings are of stone and iron. In 1867 a
twenty-stamp mill was built, but it was soon afterwards burned down. The
town at that time consisted of two camps, arid the upper one was then
abandoned. In 1880 a ten-stamp mill was built at the lower town, but it
has never been operated much.
The bullion product of the town to
date has been about $1,000,000. The water supply consists of 300 inches,
and is private property. Austin, about ninety miles to the northwest, is
the nearest railroad point, and to team freight from it costs two cents
per pound. The taxable property of the township is valued at $200,000.
Large herds of cattle and horses are raised in the vicinity, and one
fine ranch raises a large amount of hay and other produce.
Near
the town are boiling hot springs of great medicinal value, and mineral
water is also abundant of a quality highly appreciated.
The
principal fire occurred in 1867, when the Old Dominion twenty-stamp mill
was burned down, causing a loss of $90,000.
The Eureka Sentinel
of September 2, 1877, contains the following information concerning Hot
Creek:—
Henry Allen, the well-known contractor of Eureka, has
just finished a work of considerable magnitude at Hot Creek. Last summer
he was employed by the Tybo Consolidated Company to build fifteen kilns,
in which the company proposed to burn the charcoal necessary to supply
their furnaces at Tybo. He finished the work about a week ago, and some
idea of its magnitude may be gathered from the fact that 600,000 bricks
were used in building the kilns. They are oval in shape, having a
diameter of twenty-five feet. Each one has a capacity of 1,400 bushels,
turning out that quantity of coal to each charge, the operation
consuming five days. A great economy of time results from these kilns,
instead of burning in the old-fashioned way, and as the company owns a
vast quantity of wood in the immediate vicinity, they calculate on their
fuel costing them about one-half the usual rates. A force of twenty men
were employed about three months in building the kilns.
The White
Pine excitement proved a great injury to Hot Creek, from which its
recovery has been slow.
HON. J. T. WILLIAMS
Is a native of
Arkansas, born in Conway, July 21, 1842. His father was a planter and
died when the present subject was quite young. At the early age of
seventeen years he came to California, by way of the plains and arrived
in 1859 in the land of promise. He having no relatives or friends on
this coast, was obliged to follow the promptings of his own nature. He
settled in Calaveras County and engaged in mining until 1862, when he
came to the then Territory of Nevada, and followed the occupation of
silver mining.
In 1863 he went in company with Gov. L. B. Bradley
to Austin, during the Reese River excitement, and assisted in the
organization of Nye County, and has since resided in that county. He was
married to Miss Sophia Ernst, September 20, 1870, a lady of cultured
tastes, and more than ordinary ability.
Mr. Williams is a
descendant of an old Democratic family, and is himself a Jackson
Democrat of the strictest kind. His ancestors on his father's side were
from Wales, and settled in North Carolina long before the American
Revolution. His mother's ancestors were of French descent, settling in
Virginia about the same time, both families being strongly identified in
the cause of American Independence. His grandfather was an officer in
the Revolutionary War, and his brother, Colonel Williams, fell at a
place known as Williams' Pond, in South Carolina. The works of Thos.
Benton, "Thirty years in the United States Senate," reveals the fact
that Mr. Williams comes from good stock. His brother Lewis Williams, of
North Carolina, was a member of Congress for many years, and Jonathan
Williams, at one time United States Senator from Tennessee, whose father
fought in the Revolution, and who participated himself in the war of
1812, was also a member of the same family.
The great triumph of
the subject of this sketch is in the authorship of the Williams
Resolution regulating freights and fares on the railroads of the State,
which he introduced in the Nevada Senate in 1881. His present residence
is at Hot Creek, Nye County, and his business is divided between mining
and farming. He is extensively interested in mining, owning several
paying claims. He also owns a hotel, and has some 500 acres of fine
bottom-land at his home place and his hay crop is very valuable, being
worth about forty dollars per ton. Mr. Williams is a gentleman, esteemed
by all who have the honor of his acquaintance.
IONE, the original
county seat of Nye, is about twelve miles north of Grantsville, and is
situated in a romantic canon surrounded by lofty mountains. Among its
first settlers were Messrs. Veach, Carmack Bowman, Barker, Baker,
Johnston, Williams and other prospectors. In 1865 Ione contained a
population of about 600. At present it contains a store, hotel, saloon,
livery stable, post-office, blacksmith shop and twenty-five
inhabitants.. Its two quartz mills are idle. Their total bullion product
to date is estimated at $500,000. Austin is the nearest railroad
station, and the freight rate, by team, is one and one-half cents per
pound. The taxable property of the township is valued at $50,000. About
a thousand head of horses and cattle are owned in the vicinity. In 1865
a weekly newspaper was started, called the Nye County News, but it
discontinued publication in 1867. The wood and water supplies of the
town are abundant. Its buildings are chiefly frame structures.
JEFFERSON is situated in Jefferson District, in Jefferson Mountain, a
lofty section of the Toquima range, and is about twelve miles north of
Belmont. Ore was discovered in 1873 by John Johnson and Robert
Furgerson, and a district was organized under the name of Green Isle,
which name was subsequently changed to the present one. In 1874 the town
of Jefferson was started, which, in less than two years, contained a
population of 800 and polled 600 votes. It contained two stores, three
blacksmith shops, three boarding-houses, a post-office and an express
office. Two mills were also in operation, and eight of the mines were
producing ore. In 1876 the ten-stamp mill stopped work, and in 1878 the
other one stopped, upon which the town was abandoned. Only four miners
are now there. One hundred and twenty locations have been made. The ore
is free and contains chloride of silver, containing a small percentage
of gold, and is very rich, and is worked by the milling process. The
veins are small, and are found between porphyry and slate. They run with
the formation, nearly north and south, and dip to the east at an angle
of sixty degrees. The Jefferson Mine contains a tunnel 625 feet long,
and a shaft 700 feet deep. Selected specimens of ore from this mine,
having the appearance of granite, and betraying no evidence of metal,
yielded as high as $10,000 and $20,000 per ton, and took the premium at
the Centennial Exhibition. General ore from the district assays from $40
to $1,700 per ton. Freight is teamed from Austin, seventy-six miles, at
thirty dollars per ton. An ample quantity of spring-water exists, and
nut pine is abundant at the distance of three or four miles, the records
of the district are kept by E. E. Shumway.
LODI is in Lodi
District, in the northwest corner of the county, about a mile from the
line of Churchill County. The district is situated on a mountain spur
running northwest from the Mammoth Range. It is seven miles from
Porter's Stage Station, and the nearest post-office to it is
Downeyville. Ore was discovered in 1874 by Henry Welch and J.
Kirkpatrick. On May 14, 1875, a district was organized. In 1878 the town
contained a population of 100, and boasted a store, blacksmith shop,
boarding-house, saloon, a ten-ton smelting furnace, and other
indications of business life. It has since been abandoned, however, and
there are only six miners in the district. The records are kept by Mr.
Massey. About twenty-five locations have been made.
The formation
is of limestone, running southeast and northwest, the veins running with
it, and dipping to the southwest. The ore is base, and contains lead and
a little antimony, but no trace of gold. The principal mine is the
Illinois, on which a large amount of work has been done. Its shaft is
450 feet in depth. At a depth on the vein of 100 feet, a tunnel has been
run 200 feet, from which level winzes have been sunk at different
points. The vein is from two to eight feet in width, and the ore in it
is chiefly carbonate of lead, which carries a large per cent, of silver,
some of which assays as high as $500 per ton.
Water is brought in
pipes from springs five miles distant. Wood is scarce. Freight is teamed
from Wadsworth, on the Central Pacific Railroad, 100 miles to the
northwest, the rate being forty-five dollars per ton. The present
facilities for working ore consist of a small water jacket furnace.
Since its organization the district has yielded ore to the value of
$400,000.
MOREY is in a mining district of the same name,
situated in the mountains about fifteen miles north of Hot Creek, and
four and a half miles from More's Stage Station. Ore was discovered in
1865 by T. J. Barnes. and in 1866 S. A. Curtis, Wm. Muncey, John Emerson
and others organized the district. In 1869 the town was started. A
ten-stamp mill was built in 1873, but, after running a month, it
discontinued operations, and the ore was shipped to Tybo until April,
1880, when the mill started up again, and ran until the following
December, turning out $9,000 worth of bullion per month. Another
resumption of milling operations is soon expected. Morey contains a
store, blacksmith shop, post-office, boarding-house, express office, and
a population of about sixty persons. Thirty-five locations have been
made in the district, and there are twenty miners there. The records are
kept by George Hammond.
The quartz veins are found in a formation
of porphyry, which runs east and west, the veins running with it, and
dipping to the south at an angle of fifty degrees. The ores contain
zinc, lead, antimony, some copper, and a small percentage of gold. The
principal mines are the Bay State, American Eagle, Cedar, Keyser,
Monterey, Little Giant and Black Diamond. The shaft of the American
Eagle is 200 feet deep; the tunnel of the Bay State, 1,000 feet long.
Freight is teamed from Eureka, a distance of seventy-five miles, at
the rate of thirty dollars per ton. Wood and water are in sufficient
quantities for all purposes. The ores averaged about eighty dollars to
the ton. Most of the mines in the district have been self-sustaining
from the outset.
OPHIR CANON is situated on the eastern slope of
the Toiyabe range of mountains, in Twin River District. The nearest
stage station and post-office is Minnium, twenty-six miles to the
northeast. Ore was discovered in 1864, by G. H. Willard, Joseph Patty
and John Murphy, and a district was organized. In 1865 a twenty-stamp
mill was completed, costing over $200,000; connected with it was the
first experimental Stetefeldt furnace ever built. The mines proved very
rich at the outset, but after penetrating below the water level, the
wall rock was found to be so hard that it could not be worked
profitably. Over $2,000,000 worth of ore was taken out of the Murphy
Mine. When the mill was built the town was started, and it grew to a
population of 400, but work on the mines ceased in 1868, and the town
became deserted.
In the Murphy Mine the vein is from eight to
forty feet in width. Its course is northeast and southwest, and it dips
to the east at an angle of forty-five degrees. The ore is found in
pockets near the hanging-wall, and contains a large per cent, of iron,
copper, and arsenic. Beautiful specimens of native silver have been
found in this mine. The country rock on both sides of the canon, where
the metal-bearing veins are found, is slate. It contains a large amount
of the pyrites of iron; small stringers of white quartz cut through it
in all directions. The Murphy Mine contains a shaft 300 feet in depth.
Freight from Austin, sixty miles to the northward, is teamed at the rate
of twenty-five dollars per ton. Timber is scarce; Ophir Canon Creek
supplies an abundance of water. The mining records are kept by A. H.
Greenhalgh; the number of locations is 100; only four mines still remain
in the district, but the massive stone walls of the costly and splendid
mill, and the brick walls of the elegant office and mansion connected
with the works, mark the scene of the once busy place, monuments of
great expectations and wasteful extravagance.
REVEILLE is in a
mining district of the same name in the Reveille, a continuation of the
Pancake, range of mountains, about thirty-five miles southeast of Tybo.
Ore was discovered in August, 1866, by W 0. Arnold, M. D. Fairchild and
Alonzo Monroe, and a district was at once organized, and named in honor
of the Reese River Reveille, of Austin. By the ensuing year fifty mines
were in course of development, and the ore shipped to Austin and other
places. A town sprung into being, containing two stores, a blacksmith
shop, a boarding-house, a post-office, and 150 inhabitants.
In
1869 a five-stamp mill, and another one of ten stamps, were built about
twelve miles west of the town, where water was to be had in abundance.
They were operated only a short time owing to the failure of the company
interested. In 1875 the ten-stamp mill again started up, and was run at
intervals for four years, producing about $1,500,000 worth of bullion.
It then ceased operations. In the spring of 1880 work was stopped on all
the mines and the town was abandoned, but the indications are that it
will again be re-peopled.
The number of locations in the district
is 950. The formation is of limestone, quartzite and porphyry, and runs
northeast and southwest, the veins running with it and dipping to the
east at an angle of forty degrees. Most of the ores are free-milling.
The base ores contain lead and antimony. The principal mines are the
Gila, Spy, Liberty, Fisherman, Good Hope, La Salle, and Joliet. The Gila
mine has a shaft 460 feet deep and a tunnel a thousand feet long.
The water supply of Reveille is obtained from wells, and is
insufficient. Wood is scarce, but there is an ample supply of nut pine
and cedar ten or twelve miles distant. The mining records are kept by J.
H. Taylor, of Grantsville. Much of the ore of this district has averaged
from $75 to $100 per ton, and in several instances has yielded $1,500
per ton.
Reveille District is remarkably healthy, most of the
deaths which have occurred having originated from accidents. There have
been some cases of pneumonia. The town of Reveille now consists of one
hotel, a saloon, post-office, butcher shop, livery stable, and a
blacksmith shop, and about thirty inhabitants. The buildings are
constructed of wood and stone. Freight is hauled from Eureka, a distance
of 125 miles, at a cost of two and one-half cents per pound. In the
vicinity of Reveille are five or six cattle ranches, but agricultural
interests are not flourishing.
TROY is situated on Grant
Mountain, about fifty miles east of Hot Creek. The nearest post-office
is Duckwater; the nearest railroad station, Eureka. In 1867 the
attention of A. Beaty was attracted to some float rock in a ravine. He
immediately sunk a shaft on the side hill above and struck ore, and a
district was soon organized. In 1869 the town of Troy was laid off, and
it soon contained two stores, a boarding-house, a blacksmith shop, a
post-office, an express office and other adjuncts of embryo
civilization.
In 1871 a twenty-stamp mill was built, with a
furnace in connection. It ran about six months and was then moved to
Ward. The ore was of such low grade that its reduction was considered
unprofitable. Work ceased on the mines and the town became deserted. The
formation is slate and limestone, running northeast and southwest, and
dipping to the southeast at an angle of fifty-five degrees. The ores are
base, containing lead and copper. The principal mines are the Clifton,
Troy and Blue Eagle. The latter has a shaft 300 feet deep and a tunnel
700 feet long. The Troy Mine is also well developed. Plenty of black
pine, nut pine, yellow pine and fir are in close proximity to the mines.
Water is abundant, a fine creek flowing past the town and mines. Freight
is teamed from Eureka, 125 miles distant, at the rate of sixty dollars
per ton. No ore is now being taken out. The mining records are kept by
A. Beaty, at Blue Eagle Ranch. There are seventy miners in the district.
TYBO is twelve miles south of Hot Creek, and about forty miles
southeast of Belmont, in a mining district of the same name, which is
situated on the eastern slope of the Hot Creek Mountains. Ore was
discovered in 1866; and in 1870 some important locations were made,
including the Two G Mine, by Dr. Gaily and M. V. B. Gillett. Tybo
District was organized in 1870, being composed of the southeast portion
of Empire District. In 1874, the town of Tybo was started in Tybo Canon,
about two miles from its mouth at Hot Creek Valley. John Centers was its
first settler, having made his home there in August, 1866. Its altitude
is 6,500 feet, and it is surrounded by fine mountain scenery.
Soon after the organization of the district, a smelting furnace was
built at the town, and put in operation, and in 1875 still another
furnace was built, and also a twenty-stamp mill. In 1876 the town
contained five stores, two blacksmith shops, numerous saloons and 1,000
inhabitants. From the opening of the mines until 1879, most of the ore
worked in the district was smelted, but in that year the process of
crushing and roasting was adopted, since which time the.smelting
furnaces have not been run. Closing them threw more than 400 men out of
employment, and the town commenced declining. The present population is
100. It contains three hotels, one saloon, two restaurants, two livery
stables, a post-office, an express office, an assay office and a
blacksmith shop. Pneumonia is the only disease which can be called
prevalent, for the whole region is remarkable healthy. The buildings are
of wood and stone. The fuel supply is obtained from the mountains, at
distances varying from ten to twenty miles.
The Tybo Consolidated
Company has two furnaces, having a total daily capacity of eighty tons,
and a twenty-stamp mill. The water supply is obtained from springs,
which are private property. Eureka is the most convenient railroad
station, 100 miles distant, and the freight, rate by team there from is
two dollars per 100 pounds.
Tybo has a Good Templar's lodge, a
brick school-house, 18x20 feet in size, with twenty-five pupils in
attendance; and the taxable property of the township is valued at
1200,000. In the vicinity of the town are numerous fine ranches, and
about 2,000 head of horses and cattle. The Tybo Sun was started in 1876
by Mr. Ragsdale, who sold out to Wm. B. Taylor. William Love and D. M.
Brannan in turn succeeded Taylor, and in 1879 the paper suspended. The
jail consists of a stockade, and is, fortunately, but little used.
Several shooting affrays occurred at Tybo during its palmy days,
resulting fatally; but the victims and the slayers were desperadoes, and
little attention was paid to the matter.
The reduction mill is
now working about twenty-five tons per day, which average about
twenty-five dollars per ton. The formation of the district is limestone
and porphyry, running east and west, the veins running with the
formation, and dipping nearly perpendicularly. The ores are base,
containing lead, iron and zinc, and seven-eighths silver and one-eighth
gold. The principal mines are the Lafayette, Casket and Two G. The
latter is the most thoroughly developed, having a shaft 450 feet in
depth. The vein is very regular and dips slightly to the northeast. The
ore is principally gray and yellow carbonates and argentiferous galena.
The tunnel is 3,000 feet in length, extending through the three
principal mines. The mill is supplied with water from the mines. It
contains twenty stamps and a White roaster. The records of the district
are kept by George Turin. Total number of locations, 100.
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