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Atlantic City, Wyoming – Booming & Busting For Over
100 Years
Situated some 27 miles south of Lander,
Wyoming, lies the once prosperous gold mining camp of
Atlantic City. One of several gold camps that were
outgrowths of nearby South Pass City, prospectors
discovered gold near Rock Creek in the summer of 1868.
The mineral-rich quartz vein, called the Atlantic Ledge
due to its location on the east side of the Continental
Divide, was several feet thick and thousands of feet
long. Word quickly spread, and the area was flooded with
miners within no time. To accommodate these many
prospectors, three men named Collins, Thompson, and
Tozier soon platted the town, sold lots, and Atlantic
City was born.
Though its location was isolated, some 100 miles
from the nearest railhead, winters were harsh, and
Indian attacks were frequent, it didn’t keep the men
from flocking to the new gold find. The camp boomed to a
population of some 2000 people and boasted a church, a
general store with a dance hall on its second story, a
brewery, an opera house, a school, a drug store, and
several saloons. Atlantic City’s first boom lasted about
a decade before the gold ore began to play out.
However, in 1884, a French engineer named Emil
Granier came with investment capital to begin a
hydraulic mining project. Hiring some 300 men, he began
to build a 25-sluiceway to provide water to his claims
east of Atlantic City down from Christina Lake, high in
the Wind River Range. The ditch passed through miles of
hard rock before snaking its way to Atlantic City and
was finally completed in 1888. But, Granier’s dream
would be foiled when it was found that the ditch had
been built with too much slope, and when the water
rushed through it, many of the sluices were destroyed,
spilling water and gold along the way. Small miners then
rushed in and used the water for panning in the numerous
gullies, many of whom were successful.
By 1893,
Granier’s company was bankrupt, and the defeated man
returned to France to explain the project’s failure and
request additional financing. Instead, he was jailed,
tried, and sentenced to life in prison, where he died a
few years later. Though its boom days were over,
Atlantic City survived, and new businesses were created
over the next several years, including the Giessler
Store in 1893, which continues to stand today.
Constructed by Lawrence Giessler with adobe brick and
covered with metal siding, the building first served as
the Giessler Store. In addition to running the store,
Giessler also operated a freighting business and a ranch
on Willow Creek. After his death, his wife, Emma,
operated a cafe and boarding house in the building. The
building finally closed in the late 1930s and sat
abandoned for three decades. Today, the building listed
on the National Register of Historic Places operates as
a saloon and steakhouse called the Atlantic City
Mercantile.
In
1890, Clarence and Nellie Carpenter arrived in Atlantic
City, and the following year Nellie began serving meals
to miners in her home. When the Dexter Mine created a
small boom after the turn of the century, the Carpenters
built an addition to their home and began to take in
boarders. It soon became the Carpenter Hotel, which was
expanded in the 1930s and was run by their daughter,
Ellen, until she died in 1961. The buildings still
operate as a bed and breakfast called the Miner’s
Delight Inn.
In 1912, the historic St. Andrews
Episcopal Church was built, which continues to provide
services to parishioners today. It, too, is listed on
the National Register of Historic Places.
By 1920, the last of the area mines closed; however,
in 1933, the E.T. Fisher Company built a mining dredge
that operated on the streams near Atlantic City, which
provided the town with another small boom of prosperity.
Though the operation lasted only a few years, the dredge
recovered over $700,000 in gold along some ten miles of
Rock Creek. During the depression years, the town also
welcomed several new miners who began to work claims
again, and a few of the mines re-opened. However, this
spurt was also short-lived. By the 1950s, Atlantic City
had become a ghost town, with only a half dozen
residents, and the only open business was the Carpenter
Hotel.
By 1920, the last of the area mines
closed; however, in 1933, the E.T. Fisher Company built
a mining dredge that operated on the streams near
Atlantic City, which provided the town with another
small boom of prosperity. Though the operation lasted
only a few years, the dredge recovered over $700,000 in
gold along some ten miles of Rock Creek. During the
depression years, the town also welcomed several new
miners who began to work claims again, and a few of the
mines re-opened. However, this spurt was also
short-lived. By the 1950s, Atlantic City had become a
ghost town, with only a half dozen residents, and the
only open business was the Carpenter Hotel.
To get to Atlantic City, travel south of Lander,
Wyoming, on Highway 28, about 27 miles, then turn
southwest on Atlantic City Road for about three miles.
To the east of Atlantic City, on Fort Stambaugh Road, is
the tumbling old mining camp of Miners Delight, also
called Hamilton City. Located on BLM land, the site can
be accessed on about a ¼ mile walking trail.
Just
some four miles west is the old townsite of South Pass
City, which today is preserved as a Wyoming State Park.
Along the way, sitting atop a hill on the south side of
the road, is an old mine and mill. It can be accessed by
a road just west of the site.
© Kathy
Alexander/Legends of America, updated April 2023