Copper Flats, White Pine County, Nevada
Copper Flat began as
railroad yards for the loading and switching of ore cars coming from the
Liberty Pit. Copper flats developed into a small residential section
with a small area of houses which bordered the eastern rim of the
Liberty Pit.
There was a road along edge of the pit with metal
guard rails between the pit and the company houses. Copper Flat was
physically separated from Old Ruth by a small hill. One had to go
through old Ruth to get to Copper Flats. Old Ruth was further east of
Copper flat and both railroad tracks and a road separated the two towns.
Kimberly and Riepetown were on the opposite side of Liberty Pit.
Some Japanese people lived in Copper Flat before they were interred in
prisoner of war camps in California in the early part of WW II.
Esther Marie Versch relates, "My father lost his job when the Copper pit
closed, and we had to leave our company house. My parents rented a house
on the hill across from the Ruth grade school, It was great for my
sister Stella and me as we no longer had to walk over the hill from
Copper Flat to school. To us, as small children, that hill was like a
mountain especially in winter when it was so cold walking through the
snow. We would arrive at school half frozen. My father started to work
at the Emma mine in Riepetown but we stayed in Ruth until I graduated
from the 8th grade, then we moved to Riepetown."
The winters in
Copper Flat were long and cold, but our little house was kept warm with
the coal burning stove. On the days that my mother would do the laundry
in the round metal tub, the kitchen would become the laundry room. We
had to duck under the clothes that mom had hanging on a line. It was fun
to play hiding o seek with my sister. We would hide behind the clothes.
Some days my mother braved the weather and would hang the clothes on the
outside clothes line. My dad's long johns looked so funny as they hung
there stiff as a board.
When we lived in Copperflat, and when we
moved to Ruth, my father worked at the copper pit. For lunch he took
sandwiches. We children had soup for lunch if we were at home for
school. We took a sack lunch of a sandwich and fruit. The games we
played when we were outside were hopscotch, hiding o seek, kick the can
and jump rope. Inside games we would play with jacks, dolls and cut out
paper dolls, an empty shoe box would soon become a make believe house.
We would go through the Sears catalog and cut out curtains, furniture
etc. paste in the side of the box after cutting out a door and windows.
Some times we would play store with empty food cans and making our own
paper play money.
One Thanksgiving in Copperflat. The approaching
holiday was an exciting time. In Mrs. Gooding's class we were making
Pilgrim and Indian head gear out of colorful construction paper and
studying about the Pilgrim's first Thanksgiving in America. Mrs. Gooding
had us sit in circle on the floor with our hats and feathers on and we
pretended we were pilgrims and Indians. After school the kids all
excited, talked about family plans for the holiday. When I arrived at
home I asked my mother if we were going to have a turkey for
Thanksgiving. She said no, we couldn't afford one. I was sad but forgot
about it as I began playing with my sister. The next morning the ground
was covered with snow. My mother was looking out of the kitchen window
when she saw a live turkey walking between the houses. My sister and I
ran to the window and sure enough there it was. My mother, on seeing
that no one was following it, went out and looked for the owner. No one
claimed it so she took her apron off and chased it and threw her apron
on it. She caught the turkey and brought it into the house. We had a
great Thanksgiving. To this day I believe God had something to do with a
little girls' wish.
Our neighbors in Copperflat were Italians,
Yugoslavs, Greeks, Armenian, Hispanics, and Japanese. One of my memories
was going to the Japanese movies, we children got in free. We sat on the
floor in the front. Though we didn't understand the language, we enjoyed
the thrilling sword fighting by the Samurai Warriors and the romantic
sad tear jerking movies. The women would be crying and blowing their
noses, the men would clap for the Warriors. After the movie they would
pass a collection plate to pay for the entertainment. The movies were
held in one of the wooden company buildings. There was also a Japanese
small cafe that had the best chopsuey. My parents would take us there
some times. Once I ate so much of the delicious chopsuey, Boy, was I
sick!!
Celebrating a Mexican holiday in Old Ruth. The Hispanics
living in Ruth and Copper Flat got together and shared the cost of
hiring a Mariachi band from Calif. They rented, I believe, the American
Legion hall and bought food to make the Mexican traditional dishes. All
of us kids of Hispanic descent were taught to sing a Mexican National
Anthem. The adults would dance to the Mariachi music and we kids would
try to dance but mostly skidded across the floor getting in the way. My
parents came to the United States from Mexico legally in 1926 when they
were hiring men to work in Calif. and later in the copper pit and the
mines.
In Riepetown and in Copper Flat there were no indoor
bathrooms, only out houses. In winter you had to bundle up, take the
broom or shovel depending on the amount of snow on the ground, and make
a path to the out house. The walls were insulated with old newspapers or
pages out of the old Sears catalog to keep the snow and wind out. It was
fun to choose a pretty dress or a doll right off the wall!. In the
summer a man would come to disinfect the out houses. He had a long round
metal tank strapped to his back. The tank had a rubber hose with a
nozzle on the end with which he would disinfect the out houses. He was
called the honey dipper."
Copper Flats developed by 1907 and
lasted until sometime after 1947 and by the middle 1950's. Apparently
the Copper Flats homes were moved to the other nearby towns because of
the extension of the Liberty Pit. It no longer exists.
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Coordinator : AVAILABLE
State Coordinator: Rebecca Maloney
Asst State Coordinator: Norma Hass
If you have questions or problems with this site, email the County Coordinator. Please to not ask for specfic research on your family. I am unable to do your personal research. I do not live in Nevada and do not have access to additional records.