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Bonanza King . Com |
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Bonanza King Mine & Mill - Providence California - Historic
Mining Town |
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History |
Providence & The Bonanza King
In the spring of 1880, George Goreman and P.
Dwyer, prospectors from Ivanpah, discovered rock that assayed from $640
to $5,000 a ton in silver. Their discovery, about 15 miles south of the
old Macedonia District, was the birth of the Bonanza King Mine. By April
the Trojan District had been organized, and a rush to locate claims had
resulted. Andy McFarlane and Charley Hassen “concluded to try their
luck, and were rewarded by the discovery of a wonderful bonanza.” Some
of the other nearby mines included the Rattler, the Treasury, the
Lucknow, the Mozart, and the Cashier. 92
On July 3, 1880, it was reported that ore was being prepared to ship to
the Ivanpah Consolidated Mining and Milling Company at Ivanpah from the
Bonanza King. However, further development was hampered by a lack of
capital. Sometime around the spring of 1881, J. D. Boyer and H. L. Drew,
San Bernardino businessmen, purchased the mine. In June, 1881, they also
paid $20,000 for the Pierce Mine. This was probably a good investment,
seeing that $28,000 in ore had already come out of it, yet the remainder
of 1881 is notably lacking in information from the mines. In December,
1881, J. B. Osborne, H. L. Drew, J. D. Boyer, and N. Hasson sold all
their interest in the old Amargosa Mining District for $22,500. This
sale gave H. L. Drew and Mr. Hasson, now in partnership with Mr. Osborne
(of Calico fame), some extra money. Work was to begin at once on the
Bonanza King, and negotiations for sale of their mines in the Providence
Mountains were stopped. 93
On the Bonanza King, in January, 1882, a rich vein assaying $100 to
$1,200 per ton was discovered and a plan was “on foot to erect a large
mill there in a short time.” Instead of going through with these plans
themselves, they sold the mine to the Bonanza King Consolidated Mining
Company, reportedly for $200,000. 94
In July, 1882, a new hoisting works arrived for the Bonanza King Mine
via Colton, and a ten-stamp mill built by Prescott, Scott and Company of
San Francisco was freighted from Mojave by Remi Nadeau. All was in
preparation for the mill. Between 100 and 150 men had actively been
employed since May or June. The main shaft was being sunk by 3 shifts of
men, and some 2,000 tons of ore worth $230 a ton sat waiting on the
dump. A post office had opened in June, and the town of Providence was
born. 95
In the meantime, the Southern Pacific was
rushing its way east from Mojave to stop the A and P before it reached
California. The S. P. Railroad was open to Waterman (Barstow) on October
23, 1882, and to Goffs on March 19, 1883. This no doubt was pleasant
news to the owners of the Bonanza King who, in January, 1883, shipped
their first 11 bars of bullion worth $19,000. During the first 12 days
of February, they shipped an additional $28,300 in bullion. The mill was
turning out 2,000 ounces of 930-fine silver a day! 96
In July, 1884, Thomas Ewing, the superintendent, reported ‘the Bonanza
King is better opened up, better worked, and we have obtained better
results from the ore than any other mine in this great mineral desert.
Nearly one million dollars has been taken out from the mine in 18 months
and ten days.' 97
The mine continued to make good profits, but at a high cost. A February
3, 1885 letter to the Calico Print blasted foreman H. C. Callahan and
shift boss John O'Donnell for being “heartless task masters.... forcing
men to work more than their health and strength will permit.”
On March 11, 1885, the mines and mill were shut down, and virtually all
the miners left. About a week later, the mines reopened with only 15
miners who earned $3 instead of the previous $4. The owners claimed the
low price of silver forced the action. By the end of March, 35 to 40 men
were back at the mine, which previously employed from 150 to 200. In
order to attract additional workers, the company purchased advertising
space in the Calico Print. 98
It was not until about June 20 that the mill started up again. The
company was milling 24 tons of ore a day, and in one month, 24 bars of
bullion had been produced. However, just two weeks later, on July 31,
1885, the mill burned to the ground, “the mines closed down and the
owners, after collecting the insurance, went east, probably with a sign
of relief.” 99
In 1890 Dr. Henry De Groot reported that
the mine had produced $60,000 a month, “the ore averaging one hundred
dollars per ton.” The mill operated more or less continuously from
January, 1883, to March, 1885, and during June, 1885. This is a total of
28 months which would equal about $1,700,000. 100
The spring after the mill burned, the Wallapai Tribune reported that a
railroad was being surveyed to Providence and that a smelter would be
erected at Needles as soon as the railroad was completed. In 1890 it was
rumored the company intended to erect a twenty-stamp mill to replace the
old mill, but this was not done.
Little took place on the Bonanza King property in the 1880s after the
mill burned, but at the nearby Kerr Mine, a five-stamp mill was erected
late in 1885. This mill ran continuously at least until 1890 and paid
good dividends. 101
In 1906 the Bonanza King Mine was reactivated by the Trojan Mining
Company. They installed a ten-stamp mill powered by three gasoline
engines. The mine was active only until September, 1907, but the
property was examined and a thorough report was written. This aroused a
great deal of interest, and in 1914 Hall Rawitser and Company of
Massachusetts purchased the mine, beginning development work. With Mr.
J. C. Gerney as superintendent, the mine was again a producer by 1915.
102
The company totally revamped the mill, and during 1919 was treating 40
tons of the old dumps a day. Some rich ore at this time was shipped and
reportedly carried 100 to 500 ounces of silver a ton. Operations were
suspended in 1920. During 1923 the property was leased to the Bonanza
King Consolidated Mines Company, and 6 men were employed, working on the
third, fourth, fifth, and sixth levels. One carload of ore was shipped
in May, 1924. 103
From: Desert Fever -
Vredenburgh, Shumway, Hartill -
1981
An overview of mining in the California Desert Conservation Area - Used
by permission
92. San Bernardino Weekly Times , July 3, 1880; Colton Semi Tropic ,
April 24, May 1, 1880.
93. San Bernardino Weekly Times , July 3, 1880; San Bernardino Valley
Index , June 3, December 31, 1881.
94. San Bernardino Valley Index , January 21, 1881; Crossman, January 3,
1891.
95. San Bernardino Weekly Times , June 1, 1882; Frickstad, 1955, p. 144.
96. Myrick, 1963, pp.765,766; San Bernardino Weekly Times , Jan. 20,
February 17, 1883.
97. L. A. Ingersoll, Ingersoll's Century Annals of San Bernardino County
California, 1769 to 1904 (Los Angeles: L. A. Ingersoll, 1904) pp.
62,63,281.
98. Calico Print, February 15, March 29, May 3, 1885.
99. Ibid., June 21, July 19, 1885; Myrick, 1963, pp. 765,766.
100. DeGroot, 1890, p. 532.
101. Kingman The Wallapai Tribune , April 10, 1886; DeGroot, 1890, p.
532; Calico Print, July 19, 1885.
102. Redlands Citrograph , March 31, December 8, 1906; Cloudman, 1919,
p. 227.
103. Tucker, 1921, p. 360; W. B. Tucker, “Los Angeles Field Division,
San Bernardino County,” California Mining Bureau Report 20 , 1924, p.
198.
http://mojavedesert.net/mining-history/providence/index.html
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The
Historical Mining Towns of the Eastern Mojave Desert
By Alan
Hensher 2005
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Abstract In 1869, a prospecting expedition discovered copper
and silver veins in the Clark Mountains. A supply center, named Ivanpah, arose
at Ivanpah Spring, several miles from the silver deposits; the two main
properties became the Beatrice and Lizzie Bullock. Mills were built at Ivanpah
in the mid-1870s. The district reached its peak about 1879 and then declined
rapidly during the early 1880s.
The Copper World, the other major strike, was developed in 1898, when a smelter
was built at nearby Rosalie Wells. Although the production was large at times,
the operations were erratic, and the Copper World shut down about World War I.
In 1879, gold and silver were found near Mountain Pass. This became the Mescal
Mine. The property was developed in 1882 and remained active at least into 1887.
The Mescal produced an estimated $250,000 in bullion.
Silver ore was discovered in the Providence Mountains in 1880. The main property
was the Bonanza King Mine. Two speculators in Colorado, Wilson Waddingham and
Thomas Ewing, bought the property several years later. They built a mill at a
nearby spring and sank a deep shaft. After producing $1,500,000 in bullion, the
mill burned in 1885; as the price of silver declined, mining became erratic, and
work in the district ended during the early 1890s. The Bonanza King was revived
in 1906-1907 and 1915-1920.
Bob Black, an Indian, struck gold ore near Vanderbilt Spring, in the New York
Mountains, in 1891, when a tent camp was founded. In late 1892, major
development began. The main mines were the Gold Bronze and the Boomerang.
Meanwhile, the Nevada Southern Railway was built into the area, and a railhead
was established at Manvel. The veins were small, and the district’s two mills
were inefficient. The district began to decline in 1894, though some mining
continued through the late 1890s.
Several prospectors from Goldfield, Nevada, found gold in the Castle Mountains
in late 1907. A town named Hart was founded in early 1908, and a mill was built.
The leading properties were the Oro Belle, Big Chief, and Hart Consolidated, but
the veins were small and broken, and the district began to decline in 1909.
Occasional mining continued until about 1915.
Mining began in the Vontrigger district during the 1890s, but the mines were
small. After 1904, Albert H. Cram, a promoter, developed a copper deposit known
as the California Mine, north of Goffs. He built a large camp and installed a
leaching operation, which produced some copper. The nearest shipping point was
Vontrigger, on the California Eastern Railway, two miles away. Cram discontinued
work about 1911. Several miles to the west, in the Hackberry Mountains, the
Getchell Mine was developed in 1925, and a large camp, also named Vontrigger,
was built there, but the work soon stopped.
Ivanpah,
Mescal,
Providence.
Manvel,
Vanderbilt,
Hart,
Vontrigger,
Bibliography
Map of the East Mojave Desert,
showing points described in text.
Click on graphic for pdf copy.
~
This paper was published as:
Hensher, Alan, 2005, The Historical Mining Towns of the
Eastern Mojave Desert in Robert E. Reynolds editor, Old Ores,
Mining History in the Eastern Mojave Desert: California State Uiversity, Desert
Studies Consortium and LSA Associates, Inc. pages 22-27
http://vredenburgh.org/mining_history/pages/hensher2005_east_mojave.html
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Providence from Vredenburgh |
Along the steep
slopes of the Providence Mountains, south of the Clark Mining
District, parties of prospects from Ivanpah found extremely rich
silver ore during the spring of 1880. Some of the rock assayed as
much as $5,000 a ton. The richest claim turned out to be the Bonanza
King, which was sold to Jonas B. Osborne, H. L. Drew, J. D. Boyer,
and Charley Hassen, all of whom had some knowledge of mining.
Though a rich vein was found in early 1882, the owners of the
Bonanza King sold their interests to the Bonanza King Consolidated
Mining & Milling Company, of New York. The owners were Wilson
Waddingham and Thomas Ewing, who had recently swindled investors in
a mine in Colorado. They put at least 100 men to work round the
clock, developing the mine. The company erected a 10-stamp mill at a
spring on Juan Domingo’s ranch, a mile and a half from Providence.
(The milling camp was known as Crow Town.) The mill started up on
January 1, 1883. During its first six months, the mill produced
$573,376 in bullion, according to mint reports. The company then put
its stock on the New York mining exchange and began paying regular
dividends. By early 1885, the main shaft of the Bonanza King reached
800 feet; the ore was worth as much as $100 in gold and silver.
About 100 men worked at the mine and mill then. The company spent
$20,000 on wages and supplies each month, whereas the operation was
producing at least $35,000 a month. By then, the mill had produced
$1,500,000 in bullion.
Meanwhile, Providence thrived. A post office was established in June
of 1882, and in October, the county supervisors created an election
precinct. By early 1883, the camp had 300 residents. The business
district contained the post office, several mining-company offices,
two general stores, two hotels (with livery stables), a saloon, a
contractor, a blacksmith and wagon maker, a deputy sheriff, and a
United States mineral surveyor. Many of the buildings were made of a
distinctive, locally quarried volcanic ash, called tuff. The
business district soon shrank, though: by early 1885, the only
lodging available was a mattress on a store counter.
Waddingham and Ewing paid their men promptly, but they weren’t
especially generous. The miners received $3.50 a day; board cost $8
a week. The company would fire any man found drunk. A foreman and a
shift boss were accused of working the men more “than their health
and strength will permit.” Meanwhile, the price of silver continued
to slip. After paying dividends through early 1885, the Bonanza King
suspended work in March. When the company reopened the mine a week
later, it hired 15 men—at $3 a day—and hired others as fast as they
could apply: 40 men in the mine and 35 in the mill when it started
up several months later. The shipments of bullion averaged $60,000 a
month. But in late July, the mill burned. The company discharged
most of its workers. Although it cleared away the debris, the
Bonanza King never rebuilt its mill. Finally, assured that the
coinage of silver would continue, the company reopened the mine in
early 1886. Rich assays encouraged Waddingham and Ewing to keep at
least 20 men at work, but it seems that they shut the operation down
about then. At the nearby Kerr and Patton property, however, Godfrey
Bahten, a widely traveled mining man, built a five-stamp mill, which
started up in January of 1887. The Kerr and Patton claim was worked
until at least 1890; it reportedly paid good dividends. As a sop to
mine owners and impoverished farmers, Congress passed the Sherman
Silver-Purchase Act. The measure pushed up the price of silver to
$1.05 an ounce. But it was only a token measure, and the price
dropped to its earlier level. The post office was discontinued in
May of 1892, although a store or saloon remained in business at
least into 1893.
Providence experienced several revivals. The Trojan Mining Company
built a gasoline-powered, 10-stamp mill and worked the Bonanza King
Mine from 1906 through September of 1907, but the stock market
crashed a few weeks later. Meanwhile, Thomas Ewing had returned,
from Arizona, and set up a small camp, where a short-lived voting
precinct was established in May of 1908. In 1915, the Hall-Rawister
& Company, of Massachusetts, rebuilt the mill, reopened the mine,
and hired 30 men; work went on round the clock. The presence of five
families gave the place “a more charming appearance.” The company
installed an electric-light plant, a water line, gasoline engines,
and the most modern hoisting and milling equipment. Two trucks made
daily trips to Fenner. During the next few years, the company
reopened several shafts, as far as 800 feet, and was taking out very
rich ore. But when World War I ended, the price of silver again
declined, to $1.01. The company suspended work in July of 1920.
http://vredenburgh.org/mining_history/pages/hensher2005-mescal_providence.html#providence
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Results for query
"bonanza king
http://vredenburgh.org/cgi-bin/webglimpse/home3/lvredenb/vredenburgh-www?query=bonanza+king&errors=0&age=&maxfiles=50&maxlines=30&maxchars=10000&cache=yes
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File name
(modification date), and list of matched lines
Name Index: California
GLO / BLM Land Patents, Oct 8 2006
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BONANZA KING
CONSOLIDATED MINI;San Bernardino ;CACAAA 072782
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BONANZA KING
CONSOLIDATED MINI;San Bernardino ;CACAAA 072815
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BONANZA KING
CONSOLIDATED MINI;San Bernardino ;CACAAA 072816
Barstow Printer, East Mojave Gleanings 1911, Oct 7 2006
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Parties from L. A. were
out looking at the Bonanza King mine.
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Mr. Gannon was at Cima
preparing to ship some ore from his mine, near the Bonanza
King.
Barstow Printer, East Mojave Gleanings 1912, Oct 7 2006
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Dr. Usher has taken hold
of the Bonanza King and is doing some preliminary
work, employing six men.
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W. M. Graham, who was
hurt in the Bonanza King mine some two weeks ago, is
under the care of Mrs. Sid Dennis, and has so far improved as to be
up and around. In the near future he will be fit for the hills
again.
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Joe Spencer, another old
timer, is at his property, adjoining the Bonanza King.
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The Bonanza
King is still pounding away.
Barstow Printer, East Mojave Gleanings 1913, Oct 7 2006
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Dr. Burcham, with two
autos, was a visitor in Fenner on January 2. He came from the
Bonanza King, where he is making some improvements.
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Dr. Usher of the
Bonanza King Mining Co., is sampling some of the Coner
workings, and expects to do some development in the near future.
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Two engineers from New
York have gone out to the Bonanza King, to examine it
for eastern parties.
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Mr. Steele, who has been
examining properties from Foshay Pass to the Bonanza King
mine, has completed his work and has taken options on all of the
following: The Jones iron mine, the Hill and Ozell holdings, the
Mora claims, Bonanza King and Perseverance mines.
Barstow Printer, East Mojave Gleanings 1914, Oct 7 2006
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A gentleman, who claims
to hold a mortgage on the Bonanza King mine and mill,
arrived in camp a few days ago, and states he is going to dismantle
the mill and ship same to Los Angeles.
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Mr. Steele is back again
and an auto left today for the Bonanza King.
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Hill & Izell have located
the country around the Bonanza King and the Ewing
property.
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It is reported that Joe
Spencer has closed a deal on the Perseverance mine by giving a
working bond on same to Cowan & Holbrooke. He has received a
payment, so the sale is as good as consummated. The Perseverance
adjoins the Bonanza King on the northwest.
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The Bonanza
King people are still working on the lower levels.
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The Bonanza
King is still increasing its forces. Their car takes daily trips
to the station and has improved the road by doing so. The mill will
be running soon it is said, and Mr. Hill, who is a practical mill
man, has been adjusting it to the conditions required.
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This represents the two
extremes and center of the Providence range-the Bonanza
King on the north, the Hidden Hill on the south and the Pilot
near the center.
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John Lampert has returned
from the Bonanza King, after a week's absence.
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The road to the
Bonanza king has been completed. Five carloads of mill
machinery is at Fenner for this company. This is in addition to the
10-stamp mill now running.
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The Bonanza
King is working 10 men and in another week hopes to start up the
mill.
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The company has a
considerable ore dump for milling, and are sure of writing the name
of the Bonanza King well up on the list of producing
mines, to the credit of California.
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The Bonanza
King has a deputy sheriff, as well as the Hidden Hill.
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Articles of incorporation
of the Hidden Hills Mining Co. were filed at San Bernardino April 9
th , with a capitol stock of $100,000, S40, 000 of which has been
subscribed. The headquarters will be at Needles, and the mines are
located in Providence Mountains. The incorporators are: A. D. Nescus
and T. J. Murphy, of Needles, Dan Murphy, of Los Angeles, Frank
Crawford, of Omaha, and Fred Eagans, of Sasgaton. The Hidden Hills
Mine Co. has taken the men off the road and started two shafts in
the Queen tunnel. Myles Lund, the foreman, and Pete Larson went to
Needles a few days, Lund to have a piece of rock taken from his eye,
and Larson on account of a sprained back. Sid Dennis is hauling to
the mine as John Domingo was compelled to quit. Monday the company
shipped its first car of ore to El Paso. This ore is from the Golden
Queen dump and is said to run well in gold values. The company will
also ship ore from the other claims in the near future. Buildings
are still going up according to Architect Ed Minahan, and the camp
is assuming the appearance of a village. Tom Johnson, who went to
Flagstaff, Ariz. On business some time ago, has returned. The garage
is nearly finished and is a distinctive feature in the building of
the camp. Mr. Steele, engineer in charge of the Bonanza
King mine, has the mill in commission. Mr. Steele represents the
operators of the mine, Messers. Holbrook, McGuire and Cohn. Tim
Lyons, who put up the Campbell mill, has taken a position with the
Bonanza King. The force of men at the Bonanza
King mine has been steadily increased and has reached the
standard the company hopes to maintain. The company has opened a
store for the accommodation of their employees. John Domingo has his
garden and orchard in splendid condition.
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Mr. Steele has a large
force of men at work at the Bonanza King mine and
everything is running smoothly. The mill is grinding away and doing
good work, being under Mr. Steele's personal supervision.
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John Domingo is happy for
the reason that his vineyard, orchard and garden look so well. Mr.
Domingo's ranch is about 2 2 miles east of the Bonanza
King mine, and though not large, it is cultivated with care and
shows the results.
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The Bonanza
king is still hauling concentrates to the station.
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The water supply on the
north end of the range, not withstanding the rains we have had this
spring, is not all that was expected. The Bonanza King
is feeling the existing conditions as a handicap to the successful
operation of the mill. Another well may be required or water may be
piped from Beecher Canyon.
Barstow Printer, East Mojave Gleanings 1915-1917, Oct 7 2006
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The Bonanza
King mine and mill are working day and night, with a force of
thirty men. E. H. Tracy, superintendent, has a well-organized force
under J. F. Guerney, foreman of the mill, and Walter Schinnle in
charge of transportation. The mill is working between forty and
fifty tons of ore daily and producing a high grade concentrate, as
well as precipitate. High grade ore is also shipped from the mine.
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There are five families
now in camp, thus giving a more charming appearance to the
surroundings. Two trucks are operated between Fenner and the mine,
hauling ore and supplies daily. Several properties near the
Bonanza King are being investigated and no doubt some of
them will be working in the near future.
Mining History of the Western Mojave Desert, Oct 5 2006
The Historical Mining Towns of the Eastern Mojave Desert, Jul 9
2006
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Silver ore was discovered
in the Providence Mountains in 1880. The main property was the
Bonanza King Mine. Two speculators in Colorado, Wilson
Waddingham and Thomas Ewing, bought the property several years
later. They built a mill at a nearby spring and sank a deep shaft.
After producing $1,500,000 in bullion, the mill burned in 1885; as
the price of silver declined, mining became erratic, and work in the
district ended during the early 1890s. The Bonanza King
was revived in 1906-1907 and 1915-1920.
Desert Fever, San Bernardino County, Clark Mountain, Oct 28 2005
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While the Ivanpah Company
was embroiled in turmoil, work continued as usual at the Alley Mine,
which shipped four silver bars worth $1,200 that fall. However,
after the excitement of 1880, mining at Ivanpah slowed and was
overshadowed by Calico and the Bonanza King. 136
Desert Fever, San Bernardino County, Providence Mountains, Oct
28 2005
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Like the New York
Mountains to the north, the first discoveries made in the Providence
Mountains were for silver. These discoveries, made in 1863,
transformed the Macedonia Canyon area into the mining camp of
Providence City. In 1880 another significant silver discovery was
made at the Bonanza King. With the decline in silver
prices, however, attention was turned toward gold, and the Hidden
Hill, Gold Valley and Out West mining camps sprang up. During World
War II, the immense iron deposits in Foshay Pass were mined, and
silver, gold and copper mining has occurred at various places in the
range during this century.
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In the spring of 1880,
George Goreman and P. Dwyer, prospectors from Ivanpah, discovered
rock that assayed from $640 to $5,000 a ton in silver. Their
discovery, about 15 miles south of the old Macedonia District, was
the birth of the Bonanza King Mine. By April the
Trojan District had been organized, and a rush to locate claims had
resulted. Andy McFarlane and Charley Hassen “concluded to try their
luck, and were rewarded by the discovery of a wonderful bonanza.”
Some of the other nearby mines included the Rattler, the Treasury,
the Lucknow, the Mozart, and the Cashier. 92
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On July 3, 1880, it was
reported that ore was being prepared to ship to the Ivanpah
Consolidated Mining and Milling Company at Ivanpah from the
Bonanza King. However, further development was hampered
by a lack of capital. Sometime around the spring of 1881, J. D.
Boyer and H. L. Drew, San Bernardino businessmen, purchased the
mine. In June, 1881, they also paid $20,000 for the Pierce Mine.
This was probably a good investment, seeing that $28,000 in ore had
already come out of it, yet the remainder of 1881 is notably lacking
in information from the mines. In December, 1881, J. B. Osborne, H.
L. Drew, J. D. Boyer, and N. Hasson sold all their interest in the
old Amargosa Mining District for $22,500. This sale gave H. L. Drew
and Mr. Hasson, now in partnership with Mr. Osborne (of Calico
fame), some extra money. Work was to begin at once on the Bonanza
King, and negotiations for sale of their mines in the
Providence Mountains were stopped. 93
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On the Bonanza
King, in January, 1882, a rich vein assaying $100 to $1,200 per
ton was discovered and a plan was “on foot to erect a large mill
there in a short time.” Instead of going through with these plans
themselves, they sold the mine to the Bonanza King
Consolidated Mining Company, reportedly for $200,000. 94
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In July, 1882, a new
hoisting works arrived for the Bonanza King Mine via
Colton, and a ten-stamp mill built by Prescott, Scott and Company of
San Francisco was freighted from Mojave by Remi Nadeau. All was in
preparation for the mill. Between 100 and 150 men had actively been
employed since May or June. The main shaft was being sunk by 3
shifts of men, and some 2,000 tons of ore worth $230 a ton sat
waiting on the dump. A post office had opened in June, and the town
of Providence was born. 95
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In the meantime, the
Southern Pacific was rushing its way east from Mojave to stop the A
and P before it reached California. The S. P. Railroad was open to
Waterman (Barstow) on October 23, 1882, and to Goffs on March 19,
1883. This no doubt was pleasant news to the owners of the
Bonanza King who, in January, 1883, shipped their first
11 bars of bullion worth $19,000. During the first 12 days of
February, they shipped an additional $28,300 in bullion. The mill
was turning out 2,000 ounces of 930-fine silver a day! 96
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In July, 1884, Thomas
Ewing, the superintendent, reported ‘the Bonanza King
is better opened up, better worked, and we have obtained better
results from the ore than any other mine in this great mineral
desert. Nearly one million dollars has been taken out from the mine
in 18 months and ten days.' 97
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Little took place on the
Bonanza King property in the 1880s after the mill
burned, but at the nearby Kerr Mine, a five-stamp mill was erected
late in 1885. This mill ran continuously at least until 1890 and
paid good dividends. 101
-
In 1906 the Bonanza
King Mine was reactivated by the Trojan Mining Company. They
installed a ten-stamp mill powered by three gasoline engines. The
mine was active only until September, 1907, but the property was
examined and a thorough report was written. This aroused a great
deal of interest, and in 1914 Hall Rawitser and Company of
Massachusetts purchased the mine, beginning development work. With
Mr. J. C. Gerney as superintendent, the mine was again a producer by
1915. 102
-
The company totally
revamped the mill, and during 1919 was treating 40 tons of the old
dumps a day. Some rich ore at this time was shipped and reportedly
carried 100 to 500 ounces of silver a ton. Operations were suspended
in 1920. During 1923 the property was leased to the Bonanza
King Consolidated Mines Company, and 6 men were employed,
working on the third, fourth, fifth, and sixth levels. One carload
of ore was shipped in May, 1924. 103
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After the fall of silver
prices in 1893, here, like everywhere else, gold became a much
sought after commodity. In February, 1894, a discovery of gold 9
miles south of Providence, at Hidden Hill, aroused extreme interest.
At a time when the Vanderbilt Mine was waning, Pat Dwyer (one of the
discoverers of the Bonanza King in 1880) with Jim
Walker discovered ore that ran 54.5 ounces of gold a ton. P. H.
Keane located the Hidden Hill Mine, and after a few shots of
dynamite, took out over $25,000 in gold ore that was worked in an
arrastre. The Goldstone District, as the area was dubbed,
experienced only a short-lived flurry of interest. About 1895
Monaghan and Murphy of Needles purchased 5 claims, including the
Hidden Hill, and Golden Queen (or Queen) and formed the Hidden Hill
Mine. They erected a small two-stamp mill. In the intervening years,
until 1901, the shaft on this property was deepened from 35 to 165
feet, a modest development that yielded $36,000 (including the
$25,000 discovery made by Keane). 105
The
Ghost Town of Reilly, Inyo County, Oct 28 2005
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The mine consisted of
four lode claims and two mill sites scattered over about two miles.
These claims were surveyed in October 1882 with the obvious intent
of patenting them. Most of the work was on the Bonanza
King, which straddled a small drainage 2 1/2 miles south of the
mouth of Shepherd Canyon.
An Overview of Mining in the California Desert, Oct 28 2005
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In the East Mojave the
Ivanpah silver mines were actively mined beginning mid 1870 with ore
shipped to the Selby smelter in San Francisco. A mill was erected at
the New York Mine, located in the New York Mountains, in December
1873, though it ran only briefly. The McFarlane brothers later moved
it to Ivanpah. By the mid-1870s two mills located near the town of
Ivanpah were processing ore. About 10 miles south of Ivanpah, the
Bullion and Cambria silver mines were productive in the early 1880s,
and the Bonanza King Mine was found in the spring of
1880 when two prospectors from Ivanpah discovered silver ore in the
Providence Mountains.
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After the Southern
Pacific Railroad reached Mojave in 1875, the line was pushed into
Los Angeles, then south through the Coachella Valley. In May 1877,
the line crossed the Colorado River at Yuma. The railroad had an
immediate impact on the mining industry. Silver-lead ore was hauled
from Darwin, Lookout and Panamint City to the new railhead at
Mojave. Borax ore, which had been shipped from Searles Lake to San
Pedro since 1873, was now only hauled 80 miles. Beginning in the
winter of 1882, and continuing for the next six years, William
Coleman hauled borax from the Harmony Borax Works in Death Valley to
Mojave in the world famous “twenty-mule teams.” The Bonanza
King Mine located far out in the east Mojave Desert had its
mill delivered in July 1882 from Mojave.
Mescal & Providence, Oct 28 2005
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Along the steep slopes of
the Providence Mountains, south of the Clark Mining District,
parties of prospects from Ivanpah found extremely rich silver ore
during the spring of 1880. Some of the rock assayed as much as
$5,000 a ton. The richest claim turned out to be the Bonanza
King, which was sold to Jonas B. Osborne, H. L. Drew, J. D.
Boyer, and Charley Hassen, all of whom had some knowledge of mining.
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Though a rich vein was
found in early 1882, the owners of the Bonanza King
sold their interests to the Bonanza King Consolidated
Mining & Milling Company, of New York. The owners were Wilson
Waddingham and Thomas Ewing, who had recently swindled investors in
a mine in Colorado. They put at least 100 men to work round the
clock, developing the mine. The company erected a 10-stamp mill at a
spring on Juan Domingo’s ranch, a mile and a half from Providence.
(The milling camp was known as Crow Town.) The mill started up on
January 1, 1883. During its first six months, the mill produced
$573,376 in bullion, according to mint reports. The company then put
its stock on the New York mining exchange and began paying regular
dividends. By early 1885, the main shaft of the Bonanza
King reached 800 feet; the ore was worth as much as $100 in gold
and silver. About 100 men worked at the mine and mill then. The
company spent $20,000 on wages and supplies each month, whereas the
operation was producing at least $35,000 a month. By then, the mill
had produced $1,500,000 in bullion.
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Waddingham and Ewing paid
their men promptly, but they weren’t especially generous. The miners
received $3.50 a day; board cost $8 a week. The company would fire
any man found drunk. A foreman and a shift boss were accused of
working the men more “than their health and strength will permit.”
Meanwhile, the price of silver continued to slip. After paying
dividends through early 1885, the Bonanza King
suspended work in March. When the company reopened the mine a week
later, it hired 15 men—at $3 a day—and hired others as fast as they
could apply: 40 men in the mine and 35 in the mill when it started
up several months later. The shipments of bullion averaged $60,000 a
month. But in late July, the mill burned. The company discharged
most of its workers. Although it cleared away the debris, the
Bonanza King never rebuilt its mill. Finally, assured
that the coinage of silver would continue, the company reopened the
mine in early 1886. Rich assays encouraged Waddingham and Ewing to
keep at least 20 men at work, but it seems that they shut the
operation down about then. At the nearby Kerr and Patton property,
however, Godfrey Bahten, a widely traveled mining man, built a
five-stamp mill, which started up in January of 1887. The Kerr and
Patton claim was worked until at least 1890; it reportedly paid good
dividends. As a sop to mine owners and impoverished farmers,
Congress passed the Sherman Silver-Purchase Act. The measure pushed
up the price of silver to $1.05 an ounce. But it was only a token
measure, and the price dropped to its earlier level. The post office
was discontinued in May of 1892, although a store or saloon remained
in business at least into 1893.
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Providence experienced
several revivals. The Trojan Mining Company built a
gasoline-powered, 10-stamp mill and worked the Bonanza
King Mine from 1906 through September of 1907, but the stock
market crashed a few weeks later. Meanwhile, Thomas Ewing had
returned, from Arizona, and set up a small camp, where a short-lived
voting precinct was established in May of 1908. In 1915, the Hall-Rawister
& Company, of Massachusetts, rebuilt the mill, reopened the mine,
and hired 30 men; work went on round the clock. The presence of five
families gave the place “a more charming appearance.” The company
installed an electric-light plant, a water line, gasoline engines,
and the most modern hoisting and milling equipment. Two trucks made
daily trips to Fenner. During the next few years, the company
reopened several shafts, as far as 800 feet, and was taking out very
rich ore. But when World War I ended, the price of silver again
declined, to $1.01. The company suspended work in July of 1920.
The East Mojave Desert, A Brief Summary of the History of Mining,
Oct 28 2005
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the Bonanza
King Mine set off a flood of prospectors who in turn made
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serious, yet failed
attempt to reactivate the Bonanza King Mine. A ten
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In the spring of 1880, George Goreman and P. Dwyer, prospectors from
Ivanpah, discovered rock that assayed from $640 to $5,000 a ton in
silver. Their discovery, about 15 miles south of the old Macedonia
District, was the birth of the Bonanza King Mine. By April the Trojan
District had been organized, and a rush to locate claims had resulted.
Andy McFarlane and Charley Hassen “concluded to try their luck, and were
rewarded by the discovery of a wonderful bonanza.” Some of the other
nearby mines included the Rattler, the Treasury, the Lucknow, the
Mozart, and the Cashier. 92
On July 3, 1880, it was reported that ore was being prepared to ship
to the Ivanpah Consolidated Mining and Milling Company at Ivanpah from
the Bonanza King. However, further development was hampered by a lack of
capital. Sometime around the spring of 1881, J. D. Boyer and H. L. Drew,
San Bernardino businessmen, purchased the mine. In June, 1881, they also
paid $20,000 for the Pierce Mine. This was probably a good investment,
seeing that $28,000 in ore had already come out of it, yet the remainder
of 1881 is notably lacking in information from the mines. In December,
1881, J. B. Osborne, H. L. Drew, J. D. Boyer, and N. Hasson sold all
their interest in the old Amargosa Mining District for $22,500. This
sale gave H. L. Drew and Mr. Hasson, now in partnership with Mr. Osborne
(of Calico fame), some extra money. Work was to begin at once on the
Bonanza King, and negotiations for sale of their mines in the Providence
Mountains were stopped. 93
On the Bonanza King, in January, 1882, a rich vein assaying $100 to
$1,200 per ton was discovered and a plan was “on foot to erect a large
mill there in a short time.” Instead of going through with these plans
themselves, they sold the mine to the Bonanza King Consolidated Mining
Company, reportedly for $200,000. 94
In July, 1882, a new hoisting works arrived for the Bonanza King Mine
via Colton, and a ten-stamp mill built by Prescott, Scott and Company of
San Francisco was freighted from Mojave by Remi Nadeau. All was in
preparation for the mill. Between 100 and 150 men had actively been
employed since May or June. The main shaft was being sunk by 3 shifts of
men, and some 2,000 tons of ore worth $230 a ton sat waiting on the
dump. A post office had opened in June, and the town of Providence was
born. 95
In the meantime, the Southern Pacific was rushing its way east from
Mojave to stop the A and P before it reached California. The S. P.
Railroad was open to Waterman (Barstow) on October 23, 1882, and to
Goffs on March 19, 1883. This no doubt was pleasant news to the owners
of the Bonanza King who, in January, 1883, shipped their first 11 bars
of bullion worth $19,000. During the first 12 days of February, they
shipped an additional $28,300 in bullion. The mill was turning out 2,000
ounces of 930-fine silver a day! 96
In July, 1884, Thomas Ewing, the superintendent, reported ‘the
Bonanza King is better opened up, better worked, and we have obtained
better results from the ore than any other mine in this great mineral
desert. Nearly one million dollars has been taken out from the mine in
18 months and ten days.' 97
The mine continued to make good profits, but at a high cost. A
February 3, 1885 letter to the Calico Print blasted foreman H. C.
Callahan and shift boss John O'Donnell for being “heartless task
masters.... forcing men to work more than their health and strength will
permit.”
On March 11, 1885, the mines and mill were shut down, and virtually
all the miners left. About a week later, the mines reopened with only 15
miners who earned $3 instead of the previous $4. The owners claimed the
low price of silver forced the action. By the end of March, 35 to 40 men
were back at the mine, which previously employed from 150 to 200. In
order to attract additional workers, the company purchased advertising
space in the Calico Print. 98
It was not until about June 20 that the mill started up again. The
company was milling 24 tons of ore a day, and in one month, 24 bars of
bullion had been produced. However, just two weeks later, on July 31,
1885, the mill burned to the ground, “the mines closed down and the
owners, after collecting the insurance, went east, probably with a sign
of relief.” 99
In 1890 Dr. Henry De Groot reported that the mine had produced
$60,000 a month, “the ore averaging one hundred dollars per ton.” The
mill operated more or less continuously from January, 1883, to March,
1885, and during June, 1885. This is a total of 28 months which would
equal about $1,700,000. 100
The spring after the mill burned, the Wallapai Tribune
reported that a railroad was being surveyed to Providence and that a
smelter would be erected at Needles as soon as the railroad was
completed. In 1890 it was rumored the company intended to erect a
twenty-stamp mill to replace the old mill, but this was not done.
Little took place on the Bonanza King property in the 1880s after the
mill burned, but at the nearby Kerr Mine, a five-stamp mill was erected
late in 1885. This mill ran continuously at least until 1890 and paid
good dividends. 101
In 1906 the Bonanza King Mine was reactivated by the Trojan Mining
Company. They installed a ten-stamp mill powered by three gasoline
engines. The mine was active only until September, 1907, but the
property was examined and a thorough report was written. This aroused a
great deal of interest, and in 1914 Hall Rawitser and Company of
Massachusetts purchased the mine, beginning development work. With Mr.
J. C. Gerney as superintendent, the mine was again a producer by 1915.
102
The company totally revamped the mill, and during 1919 was treating
40 tons of the old dumps a day. Some rich ore at this time was shipped
and reportedly carried 100 to 500 ounces of silver a ton. Operations
were suspended in 1920. During 1923 the property was leased to the
Bonanza King Consolidated Mines Company, and 6 men were employed,
working on the third, fourth, fifth, and sixth levels. One carload of
ore was shipped in May, 1924. 103
Providence Mountains (Gold-Iron)
The gold mines in the Providence Mountains that were first worked lay
south of Foshay Pass, and were discovered as early as 1882. In May,
1886, the Queen Mine, Relief, Red Cloud and Mexican Mine were being
developed. A mining district named the Arrow encompassed the mines, with
Sam King recorder at Arrow Camp (later known as Hidden Hill.) By 1890
little actual work had been done. On one mine known as the Domingo (or
Mexican), “Mexicans” had sunk a 40-foot shaft and milled ore in an
arrastre. 104
After the fall of silver prices in 1893, here, like everywhere else,
gold became a much sought after commodity. In February, 1894, a
discovery of gold 9 miles south of Providence, at Hidden Hill, aroused
extreme interest. At a time when the Vanderbilt Mine was waning, Pat
Dwyer (one of the discoverers of the Bonanza King in 1880) with Jim
Walker discovered ore that ran 54.5 ounces of gold a ton. P. H. Keane
located the Hidden Hill Mine, and after a few shots of dynamite, took
out over $25,000 in gold ore that was worked in an arrastre. The
Goldstone District, as the area was dubbed, experienced only a
short-lived flurry of interest. About 1895 Monaghan and Murphy of
Needles purchased 5 claims, including the Hidden Hill, and Golden Queen
(or Queen) and formed the Hidden Hill Mine. They erected a small
two-stamp mill. In the intervening years, until 1901, the shaft on this
property was deepened from 35 to 165 feet, a modest development that
yielded $36,000 (including the $25,000 discovery made by Keane). 105
In the spring of 1913 there was a serious revival of interest in this
section of desert. The Mable Mine, also known in 1913 as the Gannon
property, was discovered in the rush of 1894. Lying north of the Hidden
Hill, 94 sacks of high grade gold ore were shipped from there in June,
1913. The Hidden Hill was gearing up for renewed mining in December, as
“several tons of supplies and material” were sent to the mine. Two weeks
later it was reported “A. E. Nescus, E. M. has men working building a
camp on the Hidden Hill Group at the Golden Queen Mine. Myles Lund has
charge of the work. John Domingo is busy with a stage and freight team.”
106
By January the camp was constructed and Mrs. Nescus moved in to join
her husband. In February, eight men were employed mining on the
property. On April 9, 1914, the Hidden Hill Mining Company was
incorporated for $100,000. Also, it was reported that “Buildings are
still going up.... and the camp is assuming the appearance of a
village.” In June, 1914, the miners struck an ore body heavy with free
gold. This may be the pocket of ore that reportedly produced $13,000
from 300 pounds of rock. In spite of these incredible discoveries, the
mine appears to have closed down about this time. The buildings were
attached by the contractor, then Sid Dennis, who was building roads,
attached the contractors' team and wagons for debts incurred. Little
additional work is recorded from this mine. 107
As was mentioned above, the Mable Mine was active in 1913. The
property was again active from late 1918 to 1919. Production up to 1920
was about $100,000. In 1924 two men were working the mine, and in 1940,
four were. In 1940 there was a neat little camp at the mine, but the
mine has been idle since. 108
The Vulcan iron deposit, on the west side of Foshay Pass, probably
had been known for many years prior to its patent in August, 1908. About
that time there was a 100-foot tunnel at the mine, but economic
consideration forced the mine to remain inactive. It was not until the
demands of World War II that the mine was opened. A camp was constructed
to house 65 men near the mine, and another 35 men lived with their
families in trailers in Kelso. Between December, 1942, and July, 1947,
over 2,000,000 tons of ore were shipped by Kaiser Steel Company, the
owner of the property, to the Fontana Steel Mill. When the Eagle
Mountain deposits were finally opened up in 1948, the Vulcan property
closed down. Since 1947 some iron has been mined for use in the
manufacture of cement. 109
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Excerpt - BONANZA KING
During revivals of mining activity at the Bonanza King mine during
this century, two articles were published which give insight into the
early history of this mine. On February 10, 1906 The Mining World gave
this account:
In the Trojan mining district of the Providence Mountains are located
the properties of the Bonanza King Development Company of Los Angeles.
This property carries with it a history of the mining upon the desert
years ago, for about 1990 a 10 stamp mill and amalgamation plant were
shipped by rail from San Francisco to Mojave and form there to the
mountains, costing in the aggregate over $50,000. After its completion
and before its destruction by fire in 1885 it produced, according to
shipments by Wells-Fargo Company, over 1,800,000 silver bullion. At that
time the property was owned by Wilson Waddingham and Colonel Tom. Ewing.
Afterward it was bought in at sheriff's sale by J.H. West of Needles,
Cal., and by him sold to Philadelphia parties. In April, 1905, the
Bonanza King Development Company was organized.
The article below, found in The Salt Lake Mining Review of November
30,1925, is most likely inaccurate. The four prospectors mentioned are
probably none other than Osborne, Drew, Boyer and Hasson.
It is somewhat ancient history, but it is chronicled that the Bonanza
King was discovered by four prospectors. Before much work had been
performed in the development of this rich prospect Thomas Edwin (sic),
mining scout for George Hearst of San Francisco, father of W.R. Hearst,
owner of Hearst publications, attracted by the rich promise of the new
discovery, asked if it was for sale, and at what price.
‘There are four of us,' was the reply, ‘and we want $50,000
each.' ‘It's a sale,' said Ewing, as quick as a flash and securing a
piece of rough wrapping paper, he immediately drew a draft for the
amount. It read: ‘George Hearst, San Francisco; pay to bearer $200,000.
Within forty-eight hours the draft was paid though Wells Fargo.
The mine, according to the story, later produced millions in gold
for Hearst, who finally sold it to an English syndicate for several
millions more
Reference:
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IMPORTANT:
The East Mojave Desert
A Brief Summary of the History of Mining
1863-1947
Larry M. Vredenburgh -
1995
The 1860s
By late 1859 the Mojave Road was established as a viable wagon road
between Los Angeles and the Colorado River. As early as 1861 miners
working El Dorado Canyon, on the Colorado River, used the route to a
point about six miles east of Rock Spring where the trail to El Dorado
Canyon took off. Early in 1863 copper ore was discovered, probably by
soldiers from Fort Mojave, in the Dead Mountains 25 miles southwest of
Fort Mojave. And the Irataba Mining District was established - named
after the Mohave Chief.
In light of the presence
of prospectors passing through the east Mojave, the discovery of silver
ten miles west of Rock Spring, nearly astride the Mojave Road in 1863 is
not surprising. With the March 12 discovery by Charles Hamilton and
Francis Austin, the Rock Spring Mining District was established the
following month. The district embraced Macedonia Mountain. The townsite
of Providence was laid out, and consisted of a string of stone cabins
and tents. By March 1864 five mining companies with interest in the
district were listed in the San Francisco business directory, but little
true work was conducted.
Indians killed a
prospector, Moses Little, June 12, 1866 creating another kind of rush of
prospectors - out. Camp Rock Spring was established December 30, 1866 by
the U.S. Army to protect mail carriers on the Government Road, and
slowly prospectors returned.
The 1870s
Just to the north in the
New York Mountains, the New York Mining District was organized April,
1870. In June 1872 Matt Palen erected a smelter and in August 1873 the
Elgin Mining Company of Elgin, Illinois hauled a mill to the New York
Mine. By December the mill was running but was shut by May 1874.
The remainder of the
1870s were quiet in the East Mojave Desert, that is until the discovery
of silver at the Bonanza King Mine set off a flood of prospectors who in
turn made new discoveries.
The 1880s
George Goreman and Pat
Dwyer, prospectors from Ivanpah in the Clark Mountains, discovered rock
that assayed phenomenal silver values in the spring of 1880. By spring
1881 J. D. Boyer and H. L. Drew, San Bernardino Business men acquired
the mine, and by December J. B. Osborne and N. Hasson had joined them.
However, the investment needed to turn the ore deposit into a mine was
still a daunting obstacle.
According to one account, Thomas Ewing mining scout for George Hearst
asked if it was for sale, and at what price. "There are four of us," was
the reply, "and we want $50,000 each." "It's a sale," said Ewing, as
quick as a flash and securing a piece of rough wrapping paper, he
immediately drew a draft for the amount. It read: "George Hearst, San
Francisco; pay to bearer $200,000." Within forty-eight hours the draft
was paid through Wells Fargo.
A 10-stamp mill was
hauled from Mojave costing in all over $50,000 in July 1882, and a hoist
was shipped via Colton. Up to 150 were men employed sinking the shaft
and preparing for mill. The mill commenced operations January 1883. At
the mill a town named Crow Town grew up at what is the site of Domingo
spring. But there also was Providence near the mine, whose structures
were constructed of quarried volcanic tuff. On March 11, 1885 the mine
and mill were closed down by the owners. When they reopened a week later
the labor force was paid $3 a day, fifty cents less. The mill burned
July 21 1885. The mine had produced $1.8 million in silver.
At the nearby Kerr Mine,
experience mining man Godfrey Bahten constructed a five stamp mill which
started in January 1887.
A short distance south of
Providence at Hidden Hill, gold was discovered as early as 1882, the
Arrow Mining district established, and ore milled in an arrastra.
The 1890s
The early 1890s saw substantial mining activity in the East Mojave
desert.
In the early 1890s Isaac
Blake purchased the New York Mine, constructed the Needles Reduction
Works and by 1893 had 80 men developing the mine. But, the panic of 1893
silenced this silver mine. However the one remnant of Blake's empire was
the Nevada Southern Railway. By August 1893 the Railroad reached Manvel.
Manvel (later renamed Barnwell) served as the distributing point for a
vast area.
At the same time that all
of Blakes's energy was being poured into the East Mojave, the ephemeral
but thriving town of Vanderbilt literally sprang up overnight. Gold was
discovered by Paiute Indian Bob Black in January 1891. In 1892 M.M.
Beatty a relative of Black staked the first claims. Beatty and Allen
Green Campbell began developing the Boomerang Mine. Simultaneously, two
miners from Providence, Richard C. Hall and Samuel King filed claims
which became the Gold Bronze mine. Two other Providence miners Joseph P.
Taggart and James H. Patton joined them in June 1892. By the time of a
significant strike by Taggart that fall, the camp consisted of perhaps
300 men and a camp consisting of a store, boarding house and several
saloons. In March 1893 Campbell's mill started, and the Gold Bronze mill
by May 1894.
In April 1894 water was
struck in the Gold Bronze shaft, in June the Boomerang mine hit water.
Upon hitting the water, the character of the ore changed and the mills
were unable to recover the gold. The mines and town began their decline
and by 1897 were essentially finished.
At Hidden Hill in the
south portion of the Providence Mountains, some rich highgrade gold was
discovered February 1894, and a 2-stamp mill was erected 1895 by
Monaghan and Murphy, two Needles merchants.
The 1900s
The Nevada silver
discovery at Tonopah in 1900, and the gold discoveries at Goldfield
(1903) and Rhyolite (1904) stimulated renewed prospecting throughout
Nevada and Eastern California. Within the east Mojave numerous older
mines were reactivated in the wake of these discoveries, and some new
discoveries were made.
Gold discovered in the
western Castle Mountains on December 19, 1907, transformed the area into
the thriving town of Hart. In January there was a stampede to Hart with
people leaving Needles and Searchlight "in automobiles, buggies, wagons
and on bicycles and burro." Many came from Goldfield. By thee end of the
month there was telephone, and an estimated population of 200. In May
1908 a small mill capable of processing 8 tons (a day?) was installed by
the Big Chief mine. The Oro Belle Mine with a main shaft eventually 860
feet deep, produced very little gold, and never constructed a mill. Much
of the town of Hart burned December 1910.
In late summer 1908, high
grade gold was found 28 miles southwest of the new boom town of Hart.
This discovery, the Lost Burro, was made by D. G. Warfield and Mark
Neumayer. The townsite of Gold Valley was laid out. At the mine a 100
foot deep shaft was sunk, ore was worked in an arrastra. By 1910 a small
stamp mill was operational.
On the north end of Gold
Valley the mine camp of Out West drew some attention. In 1909 the camp
consisted of a stone house and 3 frame-tent houses.
The New York Mine was
revitalized in 1907 as the Sagamore Mine by N. P. Sloan. A mill with the
capacity of 50 tons per day was erected in 1908 - but shut down after 6
weeks.
In 1906 there was a
serious, yet failed attempt to reactivate the Bonanza King Mine. A ten
stamp mill was erected. The mine operated one year. There were
additional attempts in the late 1910s and in 1924.
The California Gold and
Copper Company led by the able hand of Albert Cram, of Riverside appears
to have been little more than a stock scam. Cram filed the first mining
claims southeast of Vontrigger Spring in 1902 at the height of a copper
rush that lasted until 1907. A huge mill was constructed as was a
company town with homes for the miners. Investors continued to be milked
until 1915 when operations were suspended.
In the old Rock Spring
District, the Macedonia Mine (one of the original locations) was renamed
the Columbia. In December 1910 a 5-stamp mill was installed.
In 1913 there was yet
another attempt to reactivate the gold mines at Hidden Hill. A
substantial camp was erected and some beautiful pockets of free gold
were found. All told up to 1920 perhaps $100,000 had been recovered from
the mines here.
In 1925 a camp named
Vontrigger sprang up at the Getchell mine, owned by J. L. Workman and
Senator Getchell of Nevada. This camp located in the Hackberry Mountains
consisted of 30 tents. The mines were worked intermittently in the 1930s
and early 1940s.
The biggest thing to
happen in the east Mojave was the Vulcan iron mine in Foshay Pass. The
claims here were patented as early as 1902 with only minor development.
There was a small camp here in the 1920s. However between December 1942
and July 1947 over 2.6 million tons of iron ore was mined and shipped to
the Fontana steel mills. A camp was constructed to house 65 men near the
mine and another 35 men lived with their families in trailers at Kelso.
This Paper
was published as:
Vredenburgh, Larry M., 1995, A brief summary of the history of mining in
the East Mojave Desert, 1863-1947, in Robert E. Reynolds and
Jennifer Reynolds eds. San Bernardino County Museum Association
Quarterly Vol. 42 no. 3, p. 83-84
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