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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #64699 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/64699)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of A History of the Comstock Silver Lode &
-Mines, by Dan De Quille
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: A History of the Comstock Silver Lode & Mines
- Nevada and the Great Basin Region; Lake Tahoe and the High
- Sierras
-
-Author: Dan De Quille
-
-Release Date: March 05, 2021 [eBook #64699]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-Produced by: Stephen Hutcheson and the Online Distributed Proofreading
- Team at https://www.pgdp.net
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A HISTORY OF THE COMSTOCK SILVER
-LODE & MINES ***
-
-
-
-
- A HISTORY OF
- THE
- COMSTOCK SILVER LODE & MINES
-
-
- DAN DE QUILLE
- [WILLIAM WRIGHT]
-
-
- PROMONTORY PRESS
- New York • 1974
-
- Published by Promontory Press, New York, N.Y. 10016
-
- Library of Congress Catalog Card No.: 73-92646
- ISBN: 0-88394-024-8
-
- Printed in the United States of America
-
-
- Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data
-
- Wright, William, 1829-1898.
- A history of the Comstock silver lode & mines, Nevada and the great
- basin region.
-
- Reprint of the 1889 ed.
- 1. Comstock Lode, Nev.
- 2. Nevada—Description and travel. I. Title. II. Series.
- TN413.N25W9 1973 338.2′74210979356
-
-
-
-
- A HISTORY OF
- THE
- COMSTOCK SILVER LODE & MINES
-
-
- NEVADA AND THE GREAT BASIN REGION;
-
-
- LAKE TAHOE AND THE HIGH SIERRAS.
-
-
- THE MOUNTAINS, VALLEYS, LAKES, RIVERS, HOT SPRINGS, DESERTS, AND OTHER
- WONDERS OF THE “EASTERN SLOPE” OF THE SIERRAS.
-
-
- THE
- MINERAL AND AGRICULTURAL RESOURCES
- OF
- “SILVERLAND.”
-
-
- TOWNS, SETTLEMENTS, MINING AND REDUCTION WORKS, RAILWAYS, LUMBER
- FLUMES, PINE FORESTS, SYSTEMS OF WATER SUPPLY, GREAT SHAFTS AND
- TUNNELS, AND THE MANY IMPROVEMENTS AND INDUSTRIES OF NEVADA.
-
-
- BY DAN DE QUILLE,
- author of
- “The Big Bonanza,”
- The Wealth and Wonders of Washoe,
- The Arid Zone and Irrigation, Etc.
-
-
- PUBLISHED BY F. BOEGLE,
- BOOKSELLER & STATIONER,
- VIRGINIA, NEVADA.
-
-
- Entered According to Act of Congress, in the Year 1889, by
- F. BOEGLE,
- in the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington.
-
-
- _NEW YORK AND SAN FRANCISCO,
- Pacific Press Publishing Company,
- Oakland, Cal.,
- Printers, Stationers, and Binders._
-
-
-
-
- INTRODUCTORY.
-
-
-The central idea in the preparation of this little book has been to
-give, as concisely as possible, such information in regard to the silver
-mines of the Comstock as the visiting tourist is likely to require. In
-doing this it was thought best to begin by briefly introducing the whole
-State of Nevada. When shown a portion of a thing we generally have some
-curiosity in regard to the appearance of the whole. Though much more
-space has been given to the mines, mining works, towns, and industries
-of the Comstock Lode than to anything else, yet it has been found
-necessary to the plan of the work to include much of surrounding
-regions, both in Nevada and California. However, we have endeavored to
-keep on the “Eastern slope” of the Sierras—have poached very little on
-the California side. The Sierra Nevada Mountains are a towering, rocky
-range, which constitutes a natural dividing line between the regions of
-country on either side. All on the east side of the Sierras partakes
-more of the general character of Nevada than of California—is
-characteristic of the Great Basin region. Although Owens River,
-Independence and Owens Valleys, Owens Lake and Mono Lake, are within the
-boundaries of California, yet they are essentially parts of that region
-the whole of which is known as the Great Basin.
-
-In speaking of the Comstock Lode, after giving an account of its
-discovery and something of its early history, it has been necessary in
-noting the progress of our towns and the improvements made in mining and
-milling operations and methods to go up into the Sierras to trace our
-water supply to its sources. It is also from the great pine forests of
-the Sierras that we derive our supply of lumber and timbers, and the
-Sierras are our natural sanitarium—it is to the lakes, valleys, and
-wilds of the “High Sierras” that our summer pleasure trips are made. For
-this reason mention has been made of lakes, valleys, mountains, and
-creeks not strictly our own—though a large slice of Lake Tahoe lies
-within our boundaries.
-
-In mentioning rivers, lakes, and railroads it has also been thought best
-to say something of all in the State. In the case of the railroads it
-became necessary to speak briefly of the towns they connect and pass
-through, with a passing glance at the country traversed.
-
-Although the Comstock Lode, and mining and milling in Western Nevada,
-are the principal subjects of this book, yet it is not wholly a book on
-Nevada. “No pent-up Utica” has for a moment been permitted to “contract
-our powers.” We have been guided more by the natural than the political
-divisions of the country, therefore our little book takes in the western
-edge of the Great Basin, climbing up to the top of the Sierras, and
-peeping over in a few places.
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS.
-
-
- PAGE.
- The State of Nevada 11
- Boundaries and Areas 11
- Physical Aspect of the State 13
- THE RIVERS OF NEVADA 17
- Humboldt River 17
- Truckee River 19
- Carson River 21
- Walker River 23
- Owyhee River 23
- Reese River 24
- Other Nevada Rivers 24
- Mineral Treasures of Nevada 26
- Agricultural Resources 28
- The Comstock Mines 31
- The Discovery of Silver 32
- Placer Mining on Gold Canyon 32
- The Grand Rush over the Sierras 38
- The Discoverers and Their Fate 39
- Early Mining and Milling 40
- Mining Difficulties and Inventions 42
- Various Mining and Milling Appliances 44
- The Comstock as a School for Miners 45
- VIRGINIA CITY AND SURROUNDINGS 45
- City Improvements 50
- The Great Fire 52
- Virginia City at Present 55
- Views from the City and Vicinity 58
- The View from the Summit of Mount Davidson 59
- The Virginia and Truckee Railroad 59
- The Days of Bull Teams 61
- The Comstock System of Water Supply 63
- The Virginia City and Gold Hill Water Works 63
- The Big Water Pipes 65
- Additional Great Pipes 66
- The Sutro Tunnel 68
- The Reduction Works of Early Days 70
- The First Silver Mill 70
- The Many Mills of the Early Days 72
- Reduction Works of the Present Day 74
- Description of the Process of Working Comstock Silver Ores 74
- The Two California Mills 80
- The River and Canyon Mills 81
- THE COMSTOCK LODE 82
- Hoisting Works, Shafts and Mining, Past and Present 82
- The Three Lines of Hoisting Works 84
- The Combination Shaft 86
- The Deepest Workings on the Lode 88
- A Return to the Second Line of Works 89
- The Old First Bonanzas 91
- The New Departure 92
- Present Yield of the Comstock Mines 93
- Vicissitudes of Fortune in Mining 96
- TOWNS OF WESTERN NEVADA 98
- Virginia City 98
- Gold Hill 99
- Silver City 101
- Dayton 102
- Sutro 104
- Carson City 105
- Empire City 109
- Genoa 110
- Reno 111
- Other Towns in Washoe County 113
- Washoe City 113
- Ophir 114
- Franktown 114
- Wadsworth 114
- Verdi 115
- LAKE TAHOE AND SURROUNDINGS 115
- Emerald Bay 121
- Fallen Leaf Lake 123
- Silver Lake 123
- Cornelian Bay 123
- Agate Bay 123
- Crystal Bay 123
- Shakespeare Rock 123
- Cave Rock 124
- Glenbrook 124
- Cascade Mountain 124
- Rubicon Springs 124
- Routes to Lake Tahoe 125
- The Route from Truckee 125
- Distances from Tahoe City to Points on the Lake 126
- The Route from Reno 127
- THE TOWN OF TRUCKEE 128
- Donner Lake 129
- The Donner Disaster 130
- Surrounding Points of Interest 131
- Independence Lake and Surroundings 132
- Webber Lake Wonders 133
- Pyramid Lake 134
- Winnemucca Lake 136
- Washoe Lake 138
- THERMAL AND MEDICINAL SPRINGS 138
- Steamboat Springs 139
- Shaw’s Springs 141
- State Prison Warm Springs 141
- Walley’s Springs 142
- Other Nevada Springs 143
- RAILROADS IN NEVADA 144
- The Central Pacific 145
- Virginia and Truckee Distances 146
- The Carson and Colorado 146
- Wabuska 147
- Hawthorne 148
- Luning 148
- Bellville 148
- Candelaria 148
- Benton 149
- Bishop Creek 149
- Independence 149
- Keeler 150
- Owens Lake 150
- Mono Lake 151
- Eureka and Palisade Railroad 151
- Town of Palisade 151
- Eureka 151
- Nevada Central Railroad 152
- Town of Battle Mountain 152
- Austin 153
- Nevada and California Railroad 154
- Proposed Railroads 154
- Salt Lake and Los Angeles 155
- Nevada, Central, and Idaho 155
- NEVADA A LAND OF GREAT POSSIBILITIES 155
-
-
-
-
- The State of Nevada.
-
-
- Boundaries and Area.
-
-Nevada is formed of the region of country formerly known as Western
-Utah. The whole of Utah, prior to its acquisition by the United States,
-was a portion of the Mexican Department of Alta California. All this
-vast region was acquired from Mexico under the treaty of Guadalupe
-Hidalgo, which was consummated in 1848, and which treaty also gave to
-the United States, California, Arizona, New Mexico, and a part of
-Colorado. Nevada was constituted a Territory in March, 1861, and was
-admitted into the Union as a State in October, 1864. The State extends
-from the 35th to the 42d degree of north latitude, and from the 114th to
-the 120th degree west longitude from Greenwich. The State in its
-greatest dimensions is 420 miles long by 360 miles wide. Nevada is
-bounded on the north by Idaho and Oregon, east by Utah and Arizona, and
-south and west by California. Previous to its acquisition by the United
-States, the region now constituting the State of Nevada was wholly
-occupied by tribes of wild Indians. The country was then known only to a
-few white men, trappers and Indian traders, whose business at certain
-seasons led them into what was then almost a _terra incognito_, and
-which was marked upon the maps of that day as the “Great American
-Desert,” or the “Unexplored Region.”
-
-The area of the State is, by the most reliable estimate, 112,190 square
-miles, or 71,801,819 acres. This includes what is known as the “Colorado
-Basin,” in Lincoln County, on the southern boundary of the State, and
-which embraces an area of about 12,000 square miles lying north of the
-Colorado River. This basin region was taken from Arizona and given to
-Nevada by an Act of Congress in 1866. Assuming the water surface of the
-numerous lakes in Nevada to cover an area of 1,690 square miles, or
-1,081,819 acres, there remain 110,500 square miles, or 70,720,000 acres
-as the land area of the State. The vastness of this region is not at
-once grasped by the mind of the reader. It may be more readily realized
-by comparison with some of the well-known Eastern States. The area of
-Nevada is 2,578 square miles greater than the combined areas of Maine,
-New Hampshire, Vermont, Connecticut, Massachusetts, Maryland, Delaware,
-West Virginia, New Jersey, and Rhode Island. Indeed, after giving to
-each of the States named its full measure of acres, there would be left
-enough land to make two additional Rhode Islands. In all this great
-territory, however, there are only about 62,000 souls. Belgium, with an
-area of 11,373 square miles, has a population of 5,253,821, or about 462
-persons to the square mile, and there the rural population is to that of
-the towns as three to one. Were Nevada as densely peopled as Belgium it
-would contain 51,749,780 souls, a number almost equal to the present
-population of the whole United States. It will therefore be seen that
-before becoming as thickly settled as is Belgium, Nevada still has room
-for 51,687,780 persons within her boundaries.
-
-The Sierra Nevada Mountains from the western boundary of Nevada for a
-distance of over 300 miles, constitute a stupendous snow-capped granite
-wall between the State and California. The mean height of this part of
-the Sierra Nevada Range is about 7,000 feet. This towering range has a
-marked effect on the climate of Nevada. But for its intervention the
-climate of the whole State would be much the same as that of California.
-
-
- The Physical Aspect of Nevada.
-
-Though the western edge laps up onto the Sierra Nevada Range, the
-greater part of the State of Nevada lies to the eastward and is embraced
-in that Great Basin region which extends to the western base of the
-Rocky Mountains. This interior region forms an immense plateau which has
-a mean elevation of four thousand feet above the level of the sea. In
-Nevada, however, the average altitude of the plateau may safely be set
-down at five thousand feet. The altitude of White Plains Station, west
-of the sink of the Humboldt, is 3,894 feet, and it is the lowest point
-on the overland railroad between the Sierra Nevada and the Rocky
-Mountains. Owing to this great elevation there is in all parts of Nevada
-an atmosphere pure, dry, and free from even the slightest malarial
-taint. It is such an atmosphere as in many other lands can only be found
-by going to the mountain tops. The average level of the State is higher
-than many of the noted mountain resorts in the Atlantic States. It is
-owing to this altitude that the nights in summer are always cool and
-pleasant, however warm the weather during the hours of daylight. The
-extremes of heat and cold are not great.
-
-Running north and south through the elevated plateau which forms the
-general base or floor of the State are numerous parallel ranges of
-mountains. These interior ranges are quite regular in course and
-recurrence, and rise to a height of from one thousand to seven thousand
-feet above the general level of the country. Among these interior
-mountains are a few peaks that attain an elevation of from 9,000 to
-12,000 feet above the level of the sea. Between these mountain ranges
-lie valleys ranging in width from one mile to thirty miles. As these
-valleys are hidden by the high, rocky ranges, and are not to be seen in
-a general survey of the country, even from an elevated position, the
-aspect of the country is sterile and austere, all being apparently a
-succession of barren, rocky hills.
-
-The majority of the valleys lying between these rugged, parallel ranges
-are susceptible of cultivation, and many are wonderfully productive. The
-bench lands bordering the valleys are also exceedingly fertile and yield
-large crops wherever water for irrigation is led upon them. For all
-uses, those of the horticulturist as well as the agriculturist, these
-bench lands will yet be found the best in the State. The benches possess
-a warm and willing soil.
-
-The interior mountains, rugged and timberless as they are, have their
-uses. From the summits of many of the ranges flow springs and small
-streams that afford a supply of water for the irrigation of the valley
-and bench lands below. They are also conservators of a supply of
-moisture. On the summits of the higher ranges snow falls in winter to a
-great depth, and from the melting of this in spring and summer is
-derived a considerable supply of water for use on the arable lands on
-either side. These reserves of snow are also of great benefit to the
-mountain pastures, causing grass to spring up along the courses of a
-thousand ravines and little valleys, or laps of land, on the slopes and
-tops of the hills. This water supply may be made infinitely more
-valuable than it is at present by the construction of suitable
-reservoirs at proper points in the large canyons for storing it up till
-needed in summer.
-
-The construction of such reservoirs has already been commenced among the
-interior ranges, as well as in places along the main Sierra Nevada
-Range, and year by year more and still more such improvements will be
-made. Already Nevada holds a high place as an agricultural and
-stock-growing State, though for nearly the whole term of her existence
-mining for the precious metals has been the all-absorbing business of
-the majority of her people, and has been the business which has
-attracted the attention of nearly all the wealthy men of the country.
-The State annually produces immense quantities of hay, and the beef
-cattle of Nevada are the finest and fattest to be found on the Pacific
-Coast. A great part of the beef supply of California is obtained from
-Nevada. The horses of Nevada are also very fine and noted for their
-“staying” qualities, as they have much broader chests and larger lungs
-than the animals reared in valley regions near the level of the sea. The
-State is also beginning to make its mark in the business of
-wool-growing, not only on account of the quantity but also the quality
-produced. In price Nevada wool leads the wools of all the new regions of
-the West. Fine wheat and good grain of all kinds will everywhere be
-found in Nevada, and the apples, peaches, pears, plums, and all other
-kinds of fruit have a piquancy of flavor not to be found in that grown
-in the sweltering valleys of California. The same may be said of all
-kinds of kitchen vegetables, strawberries, and other small fruits. In
-the way of potatoes the State produces such as have no superiors in any
-part of the world. This elevated region seems as much the natural home
-of the potato as were those high valleys in the Andes where it was first
-found growing wild, and where it is said the wild tuber is still to be
-seen.
-
-
- The Rivers of Nevada.
-
-Nevada has within her borders no large rivers. In the Middle and Western
-States, her so-called rivers would be rated as large brooks or creeks.
-In England and some other European countries her streams might pass for
-rivers. The largest river we have is but a rill in comparison with the
-rivers of the West and South. Our Nevada rivers, too, are peculiar in
-that they nearly all remain in the State. But one goes outside of our
-boundaries to wander away in search of the great ocean. Most of our
-streams stay at home. Rather than run away to be tossed about and lost
-in the sea, they go down into the ground or up into the air.
-
-
- HUMBOLDT RIVER.
-
-The Humboldt River rises in the northwestern corner of Utah, passes into
-the northeastern corner of Nevada, in Elko County, and thence through
-Eureka, Lander, and Humboldt Counties, to its terminus in its lake and
-sink, just across the line in Churchill County. The total length of the
-river is nearly 350 miles, while its width is only about thirty or forty
-feet, and its average depth less than eighteen inches. The line of the
-Central Pacific Railroad follows the course of the stream a distance of
-about 320 miles, its channel forming a natural depression through the
-country which greatly facilitated the construction of the road. Down its
-course also lay the route followed by the emigrants who flocked across
-the “Plains” to California after the discovery of the gold mines. The
-water of the Humboldt is very bright and sweet toward the head, but near
-the “sink” the stream becomes rather sluggish and is somewhat tainted by
-the alkali absorbed in the lower part of its course. Owing to the
-increased use of water for the irrigation of bordering lands above, the
-quantity flowing into the lake each year grows smaller. The water
-carried out of the river by means of ditches to the valley ranches is
-dissipated by absorption and evaporation and never reaches the terminal
-lake. Thus it is seen as a result that the lake is gradually drying up.
-It will probably eventually become extinct, or survive as a mud marsh.
-In the spring, when the snow is melting about the head-waters of the
-river, Humboldt Lake has a length of about fifteen miles and a width of
-nine or ten miles. In summer and toward fall it becomes much smaller. At
-the south end of this lake is an outlet into a sink, or shallow lake,
-twenty-five or thirty miles long by about fifteen wide. This sink at
-times of high water connects with a similar sink formed by the overflow
-from Carson Lake, the terminal basin of the Carson River. In these sinks
-are found in the alkaline waters myriads of small fish. These attract
-immense flocks of pelicans, gulls, cranes, and other fish-eating water
-fowl. At certain seasons the lakes, sinks, and surrounding tule marshes
-are filled with ducks and geese. Large flocks of swan are also often
-seen out in the middle of the lakes. There is much fine agricultural and
-grazing land along down the Humboldt River, and about the lake and sink.
-
-
- TRUCKEE RIVER.
-
-Truckee River is one of the most beautiful of the streams of Nevada. It
-takes its rise in California and its head is an outlet from Lake Tahoe.
-This outlet is on the northwest side of the lake and is about fifty feet
-in width. It has an average depth of five feet and a velocity of six
-feet a second, which gives a flow of about 123,120,000 cubic feet in
-twenty-four hours. The head of the river is in Placer County,
-California, it runs nearly north into Nevada County, in the same State,
-to the town of Truckee, when it turns and flows northeast till it enters
-the State of Nevada at Verdi, in Washoe County. Its course from Verdi to
-Reno, the county seat of Washoe County, is nearly east, thence it is
-northeast to the town of Wadsworth, on the Central Pacific, when it
-suddenly turns to the north, and, after a course of about twenty-five
-miles, enters Pyramid Lake. From the outlet of Lake Tahoe to Pyramid
-Lake the distance is about 100 miles.
-
-After leaving Tahoe the Truckee receives the waters of many mountain
-streams. Below Verdi it passes through many beautiful and fertile
-valleys and meadows. Pyramid Lake has an elevation of 4,000 feet above
-the level of the sea; Lake Tahoe is 6,247 feet above sea-level,
-therefore between the two points the river has a fall of 2,247 feet, an
-average of a little over twenty-two feet to the mile. Along the river
-from end to end there is almost unlimited water power, there being a
-great volume of water, during several months, and an abundance of fall.
-This water-power is utilized at Reno to some extent, but what has been
-done there is merely a commencement toward what should be done. Large
-areas of land are irrigated by ditches leading out of the Truckee at
-several points. The stream is filled with beautiful trout of two or
-three species, and also contains other smaller fishes of several kinds.
-A kind sometimes seen in its waters at the spawning seasons is a large
-fish of the sucker tribe, which runs up from Pyramid Lake, and is called
-“koo-ee-wa” by the Piutes. It is half head, and in every respect is a
-very ugly fish. It is said that the “koo-ee-wa” is found nowhere else in
-the world. It is a palatable and wholesome fish, but its appearance is
-against it. The Piutes spear and cure (by drying in the sun) great
-quantities of this fish. Several kinds of Eastern fish have been planted
-in the waters of the Truckee and have been found to flourish. Fish
-ladders have been placed at all the dams in the rivers to permit of the
-trout and other fish ascending toward the head-waters to spawn in the
-various tributary creeks.
-
-The Truckee River is named after “Captain Truckee,” a Piute chief who in
-the early days guided a party of emigrants from the Humboldt to the
-beautiful stream and thence through Henness Pass across the Sierras to
-California. Captain Truckee also acted as a guide for Colonel Fremont
-when he passed through the country in 1846. He died in the Como
-Mountains in 1860, from the bite of some poisonous insect, and was there
-buried by members of his tribe, and whites, with much sorrow. A
-description of Pyramid Lake will be given further along, as it deserves
-a separate notice, being the largest lake wholly owned by Nevada, and
-almost as large as the Great Salt Lake, in Utah, which is seventy miles
-in length by about thirty in width.
-
-
- CARSON RIVER.
-
-The Carson River rises in the Sierras and has several tributaries across
-the line in California, in Alpine County. The river is about 220 miles
-in length and ends in Carson Lake. It enters Nevada in Douglas County.
-It has two branches, known as the East Fork and the West Fork. These
-unite near the town of Genoa, the county seat of Douglas County. The
-river then plows through the center of Douglas County into Ormsby,
-passing near Carson City, the capital of the State, thence into Lyon
-County, and finally finds its terminal “sink” in Carson Lake, in
-Churchill County. This lake has an outlet several miles in length into a
-second lake, or sink, which at times of great freshets is united with
-the lower sink of the Humboldt, as has already been mentioned. Carson
-Lake is circular in form and is about twelve miles long and eight or
-nine in width. It has a depth of forty or fifty feet, and its waters are
-quite sweet. The lower sink is about twenty miles long and from four to
-eight miles wide. Its waters, particularly toward the north end, where
-it is very shallow, are strongly alkaline. These lakes are at times
-resorted to by great flocks of all kinds of water fowl. It is a poor
-place for fish. Trout are not plentiful, and the other kinds—suckers and
-chubs—are soft and insipid.
-
-The Carson River affords water for the irrigation of immense tracts of
-land in Douglas County, in Carson Valley, and other valleys below, and
-power for running many large quartz mills that work the ores of the
-Comstock Lode. The first of these mills are at Empire City, and they are
-thence found all along down the river to, and a short distance below,
-the town of Dayton.
-
-Owing to the great quantities of water taken from it for the irrigation
-of ranches above in Carson Valley, the river becomes almost dry in the
-lower part of its course during the latter part of each summer. To
-remedy this evil large storage reservoirs should be constructed in the
-mountains and higher foot-hill regions.
-
-
- WALKER RIVER.
-
-Walker River rises in Mono and Alpine Counties, California, and flows
-through Douglas and Lyon Counties, Nevada. Walker Lake, Esmeralda
-County, forms its terminal sink. The river is about 150 miles in length.
-Its waters are bright and sweet, and are filled with trout and good food
-fishes of other varieties. The river has two large branches, known as
-the East and the West Walker, which unite below Mason’s Valley. The
-waters of Walker River serve to irrigate immense tracts of as fine land
-as is to be found on the Pacific Coast, lying in Antelope, Smith’s, and
-Mason’s Valleys. For the first half of its course the river flows
-northward, then it suddenly turns south and forms Walker Lake. This lake
-is a very bright, beautiful, and picturesque sheet of water. It is very
-irregular in form, being frequently widened and contracted between its
-rocky shores. It is about thirty miles long and has a width of from five
-to eight miles.
-
-
- THE OWYHEE.
-
-The Owyhee is the only Nevada river that finds its way to the ocean. It
-rises in Elko County, in the northwestern corner of the State, and,
-flowing north into Idaho, becomes a tributary of the Snake River.
-Through the Snake its waters find their way north into the Columbia
-River, and thence into the Pacific Ocean. Every spring salmon ascend the
-Owyhee and afford the anglers of Tuscarora and other mining towns and
-camps in that part of the State excellent and profitable sport. The
-Owyhee irrigates many beautiful valleys. In this region prairie-chickens
-and sage-hens are abundant, and a few deer are also found. In the
-vicinity of the river are fine and extensive cattle ranges.
-
-
- REESE RIVER.
-
-Reese River takes its rise in the Toyabee Range of mountains, in Nye
-County, near the center of the State. It runs through Lander County,
-near Austin, and continues its course northward (under-ground and on the
-surface) to near the Humboldt River, where it disappears in the tule
-marsh. Strictly speaking, it “empties” nowhere in particular. It has a
-channel that leads into the Humboldt a short distance below Argenta, but
-in summer its waters fall short of reaching that stream by twenty miles.
-Although Reese River is a narrow and shallow stream, it has a length of
-about 150 miles. There are many fine valleys and much excellent grazing
-land on the bordering benches and hills.
-
-
- OTHER RIVERS.
-
-Other so-called rivers in Nevada are Quin River, a large creek which
-rises in Idaho and runs south in Humboldt County to a small terminal
-“sink” situated at the north end of a great range of mud flats and
-marshes that lie to the northward of Pyramid Lake. There are good stock
-ranges in the Quin River country. The Rio Virgin is a small stream about
-eighty miles in length situated in Lincoln County, in the extreme
-southeastern part of the State. It takes its rise in Utah and empties
-into the Colorado River. It has a tributary of considerable rise called
-Muddy Creek, or the “Big Muddy,” on and about which is much excellent
-land and several deserted Mormon villages. At one time there were 500
-Mormon families settled in this part of Nevada, but they were called
-back to Salt Lake by Brigham Young, and abandoned their comfortable
-homes and fine and fertile farms. The mouth of the Rio Virgin is but 800
-feet above the level of the sea, all this region being in what is known
-as the “Colorado Basin.” The climate is much the same as that of Los
-Angeles, California. Oranges, figs, lemons, almonds, olives,
-pomegranates, and all other semi-tropical fruits grow to perfection;
-also cotton and tobacco. All the grains, vegetables, and fruits of the
-temperate zone flourish finely. This spot is the Eden of the great basin
-region.
-
-The Colorado River forms the southeastern boundary of Nevada. Although
-it is not one of the rivers of the State system, yet it is one to which
-Nevada has some claim. Where it sweeps along the southern border of the
-State the stream is half a mile wide and has a depth of from ten to
-twenty feet. The river is navigable for steamboats from Callville, a
-short distance between the mouth of the Rio Virgin, to Port Isabel, on
-the Gulf of California, a distance of 600 miles. Callville is one of the
-towns (now almost deserted) founded by the Mormons during their
-occupation of that region of the country. The proposed railroad from
-Salt Lake City would cause this region to again become populous and
-prosperous.
-
-
- Mineral Treasures of Nevada.
-
-There are mines of the precious metals in every county in the State.
-There are mines of gold, silver, lead, copper, and other valuable metals
-in all the rugged, parallel ranges of mountains running through the
-great central plateau. Mining and agriculture are thus pursued side by
-side. Lying between the mountain ranges and running in the same
-direction are valleys containing arable land, while on the benches and
-lower hills are excellent grazing lands, on which grow nutritious
-bunch-grass and other valuable native grasses. In all parts of the State
-mining is being profitably pursued, and almost weekly new and valuable
-discoveries of the precious metals are somewhere being made. Although
-the country has been walked and ridden over in various directions for
-the past twenty-five years, there are still hundreds of sections where
-no real prospecting has ever been done. Even in the oldest and
-best-known mining camps, many discoveries yet remain to be made.
-Although explorations were made in the southern half of the State in the
-early days, and thousands of mining locations made, little real mining
-has been done on any of the hundreds of large and promising veins
-discovered. The work done has been mere surface scratching, and the
-majority of the claims have long since been abandoned by their locators.
-Lack of facilities for the transportation of ores and supplies made it
-impracticable to work mines situated at a great distance from lines of
-railroad. The men who prospected and made locations in wild and distant
-regions were men of little means, and when their small stocks of money
-and provisions were exhausted, they were obliged to abandon their claims
-and return to the settlements, as men of capital could not be induced to
-invest their money in mines out in the wilderness far from any means of
-transportation. Thus it happens that there are many sections of the
-country the mines of which are the same as unprospected—mines which will
-produce millions when lines of railroad shall furnish facilities for the
-transportation of ore, machinery, and supplies. In Lincoln, Nye, White
-Pine, Lander, Elko, and Humboldt Counties, there are hundreds of mining
-districts in which this is the case, and in these hundreds of districts
-are lying unworked thousands of quartz veins, all showing more or less
-of the precious metals at the very surface, and even in the croppings
-above the surface.
-
-A thousand years of mining will not exhaust the mineral treasures of the
-mountains of Nevada. Cheaper and cheaper means of mining and reducing
-ores will continue to be found, and presently it will be possible to
-work the mines of common metals which cannot now be touched. Besides
-gold and silver the mountains of Nevada contain veins of copper, lead,
-iron, antimony, nickel, zinc, and many others, as cobalt, graphite, and
-the like. Not only are the mountains of the State rich in all kinds of
-metals, but the lower lands are also filled with valuable mineral
-treasures. In the basins of extinct lakes in all parts of the State, and
-aggregating hundreds of square miles, are inexhaustible deposits of
-borax, soda, salt, gypsum, glaubers, alum, sulphur, and many other
-mineral products of a similar character, which are only now beginning to
-be utilized at points near lines of railway.
-
-
- Agricultural Resources.
-
-In the limited space at command in a small book such as this it is not
-possible to more than give to the agricultural and horticultural
-resources of the State a passing glance, as has been done in the case of
-the mining and mineral products and resources. Although until within a
-very few years past Nevada has never been thought of outside of the
-State as being anything else than a region of mines, of metals, and beds
-of minerals, it is now evident that she has agricultural advantages and
-resources long unsuspected. Nevada is well calculated to become a great
-stock-growing State. Already she has her “cattle kings,” and they are
-not as the roving cattle kings of other lands. They have struck their
-roots deep in the soil and are permanent residents. While the tillage of
-the soil alone will be found as profitable here as elsewhere for the
-small farmer whose ranch is within reach of a ready market, the real and
-great business of the Nevada land owner must be stock-growing. This is
-not a matter of choice or taste, but is a thing demanded by the
-configuration of the country, the climate, and the nature of the soil.
-In order that the natural resources of the country may be properly
-utilized the greater part of the valley regions (nearly all at a
-distance from towns) must be given up to the stock-grower. He must have
-valley lands on which to raise sufficient hay and other feed to tide his
-live-stock through any severe spells of cold weather or big snow-storms
-that may occur during the winter months. In order to utilize the vast
-surrounding grazing ranges the cattle king must have a “center stake”
-driven in some good, productive valley. This is required as a magazine
-of supplies for the winter season. While cattle, horses, and sheep will
-find a living on the ranges during the greater part of the winter, still
-the stock-grower who would not suffer occasional disaster must be
-provided against the accident of possible cold “snaps” and unusually
-heavy snow-falls. A glance over the physical features of the country
-shows that the proportion of arable to grazing land is very well
-balanced. When proper attention shall be given to the storage of water
-for irrigation it will be found that each valley will have sufficient
-capacity to produce hay, grain, and root crops adequate to the
-requirements of the flocks and herds that can find pasturage on the
-surrounding range.
-
-On the ranges are found several valuable native grasses, some of which
-are cut for hay. Those most valuable for hay are the blue-joint,
-red-top, one variety of bunch-grass, and several varieties of clover.
-All these grasses grow in the moist lands of the valleys and natural
-meadows, but some varieties of bunch-grass flourish on the hills and
-elevated benches. Among the native grasses of the country could no doubt
-be found one valuable variety at least that would grow without
-irrigation and that could be greatly improved by cultivation. Such a
-grass is probably that called “sand-grass,” of which large fields are
-frequently seen in dry, sandy, and apparently utterly barren plains. It
-grows to a height of about fifteen inches and has many spreading
-branches on each stalk, which branches are loaded with a large black
-seed, that is very fattening, and of which all kinds of grazing animals
-are very fond. It would be well to sow the seed of this grass, which is
-a species of bunch-grass, on properly plowed and prepared ground in
-order to ascertain its capability of cultivation. There are not fewer
-than forty varieties of native grasses found in Nevada and eight or ten
-kinds of clover. Alfalfa is the forage plant most cultivated for hay,
-and on a suitable soil has no superior. Timothy, red and white clover,
-and other tame grasses, do well. A very valuable native forage plant,
-for the reason that it flourishes in even the most arid and sterile
-localities, is that commonly called “white sage.” It is a plant of a
-whitish-ash color and does not belong to the “artemesia,” or sagebrush,
-family. This hardy plant furnishes good winter feed for cattle. It is
-resinous and bitter until after the heavy frosts of early winter.
-Freezing renders it tender, sweet, and nutritious. Even human beings may
-support life on the white sage. In hard winters, before the whites came
-into the country, at times when no game could be found, the Piutes were
-occasionally obliged to subsist for weeks at a time wholly on white sage
-cooked by boiling it in baskets by means of hot stones.
-
-
- The Comstock Mines.
-
-Having now given the reader some idea of the topography and physical
-aspect of the State, with a hasty general view of its mineral and
-agricultural productions and resources, we shall give a more particular
-account of the Comstock Lode, in which the first discovery of silver was
-made; where the deepest shafts have been sunk, and where mining for the
-precious metals is to be seen on a grander scale than anywhere else in
-the United States, or anywhere in the New World, taking into
-consideration the power of the machinery used and the examples of
-scientific mining engineering to be seen. A description of the mines and
-mining methods of the Comstock will answer for those of all other parts
-of the State, except that in places where the ores are argentiferous
-galena, or otherwise very base, smelting furnaces take the place of the
-ordinary stamp and pan mills.
-
-
- The Discovery of Silver.
-
-The discovery of silver in Nevada in 1859 (then Western Utah), caused an
-immense excitement in California, and indeed throughout the United
-States. The excitement was one such as had not been before seen since
-the discovery of the gold mines of California. Permanency and ultimate
-value being considered, the discovery of silver undoubtedly deserves to
-rank in merit above the discovery of the gold mines of California, as it
-gives value to a much greater area of territory and furnishes employment
-to a much larger number of persons. It has given wealth and population
-to all the vast region lying between the Sierra Nevada and the Rocky
-Mountain Ranges.
-
-
- Placer Mining on Gold Canyon
-
-Gold was first discovered in this region in the spring of 1850. It was
-found in what is now known as Gold Canyon, by a company of Mormon
-emigrants _en route_ to California. Having arrived too early to cross
-the Sierras, they encamped on the Carson River, where the town of Dayton
-now stands, to await the melting away of the snow on the mountains. To
-while away the time some of the men of the party tried prospecting in a
-large canyon that put into the river near their camp. They found gold in
-the first pan of gravel they washed. Looking further they soon found
-that certain bars and gravel banks afforded much richer pay dirt than
-that first tried. They were able to make from $5.00 to $8.00 a day, but
-left as soon as the mountains were passable, as they anticipated taking
-out gold by the pound on reaching California. Other emigrants who
-followed the Mormons did some mining in the canyon while camped on the
-river. All made good wages, and one or two families stopped and went
-regularly to work at mining. However, when the supply of water in the
-canyon gave out toward the end of summer, they “pulled up stakes” and
-crossed the mountains to California.
-
-What was told of the mines on Gold Canyon by these emigrants induced
-parties of miners working in and about Placerville to visit them. During
-the winter and spring months, while there was water, these men were able
-to make from half an ounce to an ounce a day. The camp had no permanent
-population, however, until the winter and spring of 1852-53, when there
-were over 200 men at work on the bars and gravel banks along the canyon,
-with rockers, toms, and sluices.
-
-As the gold found in the canyon came from quartz veins toward its head,
-about Silver City and Gold Hill, these early miners were even then on
-the track of the great Comstock Lode, but without once even suspecting
-the existence of such a large and rich vein. The trading-post, or little
-hamlet near the junction of the canyon and the Carson River, which at
-first served as a base of supplies, was presently left far behind as the
-miners worked their way up the stream from bar to bar, and they founded
-a town of their own, on a plateau near the canyon, called Johntown. This
-town was situated a short distance below where Silver City now stands,
-and was then the “mining metropolis” of Western Utah. One dilapidated
-stone chimney yet stands as a monument to mark the site of this now
-ruined mining town.
-
-Johntown constituted a center from which prospectors occasionally
-scouted forth. These prospectors had no thought of anything except
-placer mines—native gold in gravel deposits. In 1857 some of these
-Johntown miners struck paying gravel in Six-mile Canyon. This canyon is
-about five miles north of Gold Canyon, for the greater part of its
-course, but the heads of the two canyons are only about a mile apart,
-and both are on what is now known as the Comstock Lode. The pay found on
-Six-mile Canyon began only about a mile below the massive croppings that
-tower above the Comstock; still these early miners never once thought of
-going up to the head of the ravine to look for and prospect the quartz
-veins; all they thought of was free gold in deposits of earth and
-gravel.
-
-In January, 1859, James Finney, or Fennimore, better known by his
-popular _soubriquet_ of “Old Virginia” (he being a native of the State
-of Virginia), John Bishop, and a few others of the Johntown miners,
-struck a rich deposit of free gold in placer diggings in a little hill
-at the head of Gold Canyon. From this hill the town of Gold Hill derives
-its name. These mines were so rich that most of the Johntown people
-moved to them. The gold was in a deposit of decomposed quartz mingled
-with soil, and the miners were really delving in a part of the Comstock
-Lode without at first knowing that they were at work on any quartz vein.
-These diggings yielded gold by the pound, at times.
-
-In the spring of 1859 several Johntowners returned to the diggings they
-had discovered on Six-mile Canyon two years before. With these men went
-Peter O’Riley and Patrick McLaughlin, but finding all the paying ground
-already claimed they went to the head of the canyon and began
-prospecting on the slope of the mountain with a rocker, leading in a
-small stream of water from a neighboring spring. They found but poor pay
-in the light top dirt they were working (for there was no washed
-gravel), and they had about concluded to abandon their claim when they
-made the grand discovery of the age. They had sunk a small pit in which
-to collect water for use in their rockers. It was deeper than they had
-yet dug. Seeing in the bottom of this hole material of a different
-appearance from any they had yet worked, they were tempted to try some
-of it in their rocker. When a bucket of this dirt was rocked out, to
-their great delight the two men saw that they had made a “strike.” The
-whole apron of their rocker was covered with a layer of bright and
-glittering gold.
-
-In that little prospect hole, silver mining in America, as now known,
-was born. At that moment the eyes of these two men, standing alone among
-the sagebrush of the rugged mountain slope, rested upon the first of
-many hundreds of millions in the two precious metals that have since
-been taken out of the Comstock Lode; for in the rocker along with the
-gold was a quantity of rich black sulphuret of silver. This “heavy black
-stuff,” which not a little puzzled the two uneducated miners, was almost
-pure silver. They thought it was some worthless base metal, and were
-very sorry to see it, as it clogged their rocker and interfered with the
-washing out of the fine gold-dust.
-
-Henry Comstock.—Henry Thomas Paige Comstock, as he gave his name—has by
-many persons been credited with the discovery of the Comstock, but it is
-an honor to which he was not entitled. The credit of discovering silver
-in Nevada belongs to Peter O’Riley and Patrick McLaughlin. The grand
-discovery had been made several hours before Comstock knew of it. Toward
-evening on the day the “find” was made, Comstock, who had been out
-hunting his mustang, came to where the two men were at work. They were
-taking out gold by the pound and decomposed silver ore by hundreds of
-pounds. Comstock saw the gold and realized that a great strike had been
-made. He instantly determined to have a share. He at once declared that
-he had a claim upon the ground. He said he had located it some time
-before, also the water of the spring. He so blustered about his rights
-and so swaggered about what he could and would do that rather than have
-any trouble the two quiet miners agreed to take him in and give him a
-share of the mine.
-
-No sooner had Comstock been made a partner in the mine than he placed
-himself at the front in everything about it. He constituted himself
-superintendent, did all the talking and none of the working, and was
-always ready to tell strangers about the mine. When visitors came it was
-always _my_ mine and _my_ everything. Thus people came to talk of
-Comstock’s mine and Comstock’s vein; then it was the Comstock vein—as
-persons making locations asserted that they were on the same vein as
-Comstock, _i. e._, the Comstock vein—and in that way the name of
-Comstock became fastened upon the whole lode. As the first claim was
-called the Ophir, that would have been a more fitting name for the whole
-vein than the one it now bears. For a long time Comstock no more
-appreciated the heavy black material that accompanied the gold, and in
-lumps of which much of the gold was embedded, than did O’Riley and
-McLaughlin. It was not until returns had been received from samples of
-it sent to California for assay that anyone in Nevada knew that the
-“heavy black stuff” was almost pure silver.
-
-
- The Grand Rush over the Sierras
-
-With the returns of the assays came a rush from California. The assays
-were made at Nevada City, California, and the result so astonished the
-assayer that he could hardly believe his figures or his eyes. But other
-assays verified those first made, and the immense richness of the ore in
-both gold and silver could no longer be doubted. A few men were let into
-the secret, they let in a few more, and at once the great news spread
-far and wide. Soon miners, speculators, and adventurers of all kinds
-came over the Sierras to the silver mines in swarms. A town of tents,
-brush shanties, and canvas houses began to appear on the side of Mount
-Davidson—then known as “Sunrise Peak,” as it caught the first rays of
-the morning sun. It was about the 1st of June when the silver was first
-struck, and, the weather being warm, many persons camped in the open
-air—cared for neither tent nor brush shanty.
-
-There were about 1,000 persons in Western Utah at the time silver was
-discovered, and all were living under Mormon rule. Most of those in the
-country at that time were engaged in farming and cattle growing, in
-trade with the emigrants, or in gambling and running off stock; only
-about 200 were engaged in mining, and all these were working gold
-placers. A number of ranchers from surrounding valleys took up claims on
-the line of the lode when they heard that it was a silver vein, but
-neither the placer miners, the ranchers, nor any one else that was in
-the country at the time the great discovery was made, ever got more than
-a few hundreds or thousands of dollars out of it.
-
-
- The Fate of the Discoverers.
-
-Although Comstock was not a discoverer, he was one of the original
-locators on the lode. He sold his interest for $10,000. With this he
-opened a store in Carson City for the sale of such goods as the trade of
-the country demanded; also a similar store, but with a smaller stock, at
-Silver City. Knowing nothing of business, having no education, and being
-unable to keep books, he was soon “flat broke.” After losing all the
-property he possessed in Nevada, Comstock struck out into Idaho and
-Montana, where he prospected for some years without success. In
-September, 1870, while encamped near Bozeman, Montana, _en route_ to
-prospect in the Big Horn country, he committed suicide, blowing out his
-brains with his six-shooter.
-
-Patrick McLaughlin sold his interest in the Ophir (the discovery claim)
-for $3,500, which sum he soon lost, and he then worked as a cook at the
-Green mine, in the southern part of California, for a time. He finally
-died while wandering from place to place and working at odd jobs,
-generally as a cook.
-
-Peter O’Riley held his interest until it brought him about $50,000, a
-part of which he received in the shape of dividends. He erected a stone
-hotel on B Street, Virginia City, called the Virginia House. He then
-began dealing in mining stocks and soon lost everything. Under the
-guidance of spirits—he was a Spiritualist—he finally began running a
-tunnel into a bald and barren granite spur of the Sierras, near Genoa,
-in Douglas County, expecting to strike a richer vein than the Comstock.
-However, the spirits talked so much to him about caverns of gold and
-silver that he became insane and was sent to a private asylum at
-Woodbridge, California, where he soon died.
-
-The men who made millions were those who came after the mines had been
-pretty well prospected, as Mackay, Fair, Sharon, Jones, and others.
-
-
- Early Mining and Milling.
-
-Once people became convinced of the richness, extent, and permanency of
-the ore deposits on the Comstock, towns were built up on the lode and at
-points in the valleys as if by enchantment. Machinery was brought over
-the Sierras under all manner of difficulties by teams, and soon mills
-for working the ores were built by scores. In 1859 the Americans, as a
-people, knew nothing about silver mining. At that time there were
-probably not a dozen American miners on the Pacific Coast who had ever
-even seen a sample of silver ore. In the California placer mines,
-however, were quite a number of Mexicans who had worked in silver mines
-in their own country. These men at once deserted their gold placers in
-California and came flocking over to the Sierras when the cry of “Plata!
-mucha plata!” was raised among them. “A gold placer,” said they, “is
-soon worked out, but a silver mine lasts for generations and
-generations.”
-
-At first the word of the Mexicans was law in the new silver mines, both
-as regarded ore and the methods of mining and working it. Every American
-miner endeavored to secure a Mexican partner, or at least a Mexican
-foreman to take charge of his mine. Mexican methods, however, soon
-proved to be too slow for the Americans. Their arastras, patios, and
-little adobe smelting furnaces were the primitive contrivances of a
-non-mechanical people, and of a race of miners working as individuals,
-and on a very small scale at that.
-
-The Americans at once introduced stamp mills for crushing the ore, and
-next introduced pans to hasten the process of amalgamation. The
-operation of amalgamating the crushed ore, which required days by the
-patio process, was reduced to hours by the use of steam-heated iron
-pans.
-
-The Mexican miners were no better underground at working in the vein
-than they were on the surface, at extracting the precious metals after
-the ore was mined. In the Mexican mine, where everything was managed
-according to their own notions—the owner being a Mexican named Gabriel
-Maldanado—they carried the ore out of the mine in rawhide sacks, the
-miners climbing to the surface by means of a series of notched poles.
-Their timbering was also very defective. In ore bodies so large as those
-of the Comstock, they did not know how to support the ground.
-
-Among the miners working in the gold placers of California at the time
-of the discovery of silver on this side of the Sierras, were a few
-Germans who had worked in the silver mines of their “Vaterland,” and
-among these were some half dozen who had been educated in the mining
-academy of Freyberg, and had received regular scientific and practical
-training in the art of mining. The mining and metallurgical knowledge of
-these men was the best then existing in any part of the world, as
-regarded the working of argentiferous ores. The Germans introduced the
-barrel process of amalgamation and the roasting of ores. While the
-barrel process was a great improvement on the patio, it was found not so
-well adapted to the rapid working of the Comstock ores as the newly
-invented pan process. It has also been found that the free milling ores
-of the lode do not require to be roasted.
-
-Philip Deidesheimer, a German who had been appointed superintendent of
-the Ophir Mine, however, invented a method of timbering in “square
-sets,” which is perfect in every respect, and which is still in use in
-all Comstock mines. By this method of building up squares of framed
-timbers an ore vein of any width may be safely worked to any height or
-depth; a vein 300 feet in width may as rapidly be worked as one only 10
-or 20 feet wide.
-
-
- Mining Difficulties and Inventions.
-
-Early in the mining history of the Comstock there began to be heavy
-flows of water with which to contend. This called for pumping machinery
-and apparatus; and as greater and greater depth was attained, larger and
-larger pumps were demanded. The best and heaviest machinery in use in
-Europe was examined, and upon this improvements were from time to time
-made as increased flows of water required increased capacity. All the
-inventive genius of the Pacific Coast was called into play, and the
-result has been the construction of some of the most powerful and
-effective steam and hydraulic pumping apparatus to be found in any part
-of the world.
-
-At first the water with which the Comstock miners had to contend was
-cold, but it was not long before the deeper workings cut into parts of
-the vein where were tapped heavy flows of hot water—water actually hot
-enough to cook an egg, or to scald a man to death almost instantly.
-Several miners have lost their lives by falling into large tanks, or
-sumps, of this water, hot from the vein. The hot water called for fans,
-blowers, and all kinds of ventilating apparatus, as men working in
-heated drifts had to have a supply of cool and fresh air sent in to
-them. Great improvements have also been made in hoisting cages, though
-the first idea of these came from Europe.
-
-In California at the time of the discovery of the Comstock, were many
-men who had worked in the mines of Cornwall, England. These men
-thoroughly understood all manner of under-ground work, and were able to
-successfully carry through many undertakings in the way of sinking
-shafts, inclines, and winzes, and in making raises and running drifts in
-ground where the difficulties at first sight seemed almost
-insurmountable.
-
-
- Various Mining and Milling Appliances.
-
-Compressed air for running power drills, and for driving fans and small
-hoisting engines at depths varying from 1,000 to 3,000 feet below the
-surface, was early adopted in the Comstock mines, as also were the
-several new explosives for blasting. Diamond drills for drilling long
-distances through solid rock were also at one time in general use, but
-have been discarded for prospecting purposes, being found unreliable.
-The existence of ore may be ascertained by means of the diamond drill,
-but the amount found is a matter of uncertainty in all cases.
-
-By the pan processes in the early days there were immense losses in the
-precious metals and in quicksilver. While the pans might be much alike
-in construction almost every millman was making experiments with some
-secret process of his own for the amalgamation of the ore. It now seems
-ridiculous, but some millmen were actually using sagebrush tea in their
-pans, and others a decoction of cedar bark. They tried all manner of
-trash, both mineral and vegetable. It was at that time that untold
-millions in gold, silver, and quicksilver were swept away into the
-Carson River with the tailings; for the ore on which all these
-experiments were tried was almost pure silver. Although scores of
-amalgamating pans of various patterns have been invented and patented,
-there is still room for improvement. The improvements made from time to
-time have resulted in saving a large per cent of the precious metals
-contained in the ores operated upon, and also in a smaller loss of
-quicksilver, yet none of the apparatus in use is perfect. Experiments
-having in view further savings are still constantly being made.
-
-
- The Comstock as a School for Miners.
-
-The Comstock is the mother of silver mining in America. In this lode
-hundreds of men have obtained a thorough practical knowledge of mining
-in all its forms and departments. Men who were graduated on the Comstock
-are now to be found in all parts of the world. They early went to Idaho,
-Montana, Utah, Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona, Alaska, and British
-Columbia. Old Comstock foremen and superintendents are to-day in charge
-of mines in Mexico, Central America, South America, Australia, Africa,
-China, Japan, and all other regions where there is mining for the
-precious metals. Already they are in the gold fields of the Amoor
-River—having pushed their way across from Alaska—and they are ready to
-push their way to the ends of the earth in search of the precious
-metals.
-
-
- Virginia City and its Surroundings.
-
-Virginia City, the county seat of Storey County, is situated on the
-eastern face of Mount Davidson, the culminating peak of a range of rocky
-hills running northeast and southwest, and having a length of about
-thirty-two miles. Mount Davidson rises to a height of 7,775 feet above
-the level of the sea, and is a rocky, treeless peak. On the slope of
-this mountain, about 1,775 feet below its summit, lies Virginia City. It
-may be said that the city occupies a position about midway between the
-base and the apex of the mountain, as the Carson River, which flows
-along near the eastern foot of the range, is 1,700 feet below the town.
-It is literally “a city set on a hill.”
-
-From the tents and brush shanties set up near the Ophir Mine immediately
-after the discovery of silver was made, the growth of the town was
-rapid. The first structure worthy of the name of “house” was erected in
-the summer of 1859, by Lyman Jones, a pioneer miner of Gold Canyon. It
-was of canvass and was 18x40 feet in size. Soon several frame structures
-were removed from Johntown and from Dayton (then called “Chinatown”) to
-the “new diggings” of “Ophir.” Lumber from saw-mills in the foot-hills
-of the Sierras was then procured and a few small houses and offices
-erected. As there was then no wagon road up the mountain to where the
-city now stands it was necessary to carry lumber up to the new diggings
-on horses, half packing and half dragging it from the valley, where it
-was delivered by wagons. Very soon, however, a wagon track was made up
-the mountain, and building then progressed more rapidly.
-
-At first the new mining camp had no fixed or acknowledged name. It was
-variously spoken of as “Ophir,” “Ophir Diggings,” “Pleasant Hill,” and
-“Mount Pleasant Point,” though at that time there could have been
-nothing very “pleasant” about the place, except the sight of the gold
-and silver then being dug out by the pound and by the ton almost at the
-surface of the ground—less than a yard below the roots of the
-sage-brush. Even as late as October, 1859, the place was called Ophir
-Diggings. About that time James Fennimore, known among the miners as
-“Old Virginia,” was in the camp one night, having a “little run with the
-boys,” when he fell and broke his whisky bottle against a rock. Old
-Virginia picked up the bottom part of the bottle, in which still
-remained a small quantity of the precious liquid, and, solemnly pouring
-it upon the ground, said, “I christen this camp Virginia!” He called
-upon those present to bear witness to the fact that he had duly named
-and christened the town in honor of himself and his native State.
-
-Old Virginia was a favorite among the miners, and one and all declared
-that Virginia should be the name of the town. At first the place was
-called “Virginia Town,” but soon the word city was tacked on to
-Virginia, the name by which it was christened, and Virginia City it has
-remained. Old Virginia had some right to name the town. He was one of
-the first to mine on Six-mile Canyon, working at a point now included in
-the eastern suburbs of the city, and he was the first man in the country
-to locate a quartz vein in the vicinity. This vein was a large one lying
-west of the Ophir, and known as the “Virginia Vein,” or “Virginia
-Croppings.” This back lead contained a vast deal of “base metal,” but
-very little paying ore. The location was made February 22, 1858, more
-than a year before the discovery of silver. In July, 1861, “Old
-Virginia” was thrown from a “bucking” mustang, in the town of Dayton,
-and killed. At the time of his death he was possessed of about $3,000 in
-gold coin.
-
-The first buildings were erected pretty much at random in the new town,
-but soon streets were laid out. Those nearest the Ophir Mine were first
-built on—A and B Streets. In the spring of 1860, B Street was the
-principal business street of the town, and there were several places of
-business on A Street, while many new buildings were going up on C
-Street—the principal business street at present.
-
-The first winter (1859-60) many persons lived in holes excavated in the
-side of the mountain and roofed with sagebrush and earth. There were
-then no hotel accommodations worthy of the name. Peter O’Riley’s stone
-hotel, on B Street, was not yet completed, and the International Hotel,
-owned by Bateman & Paul, was a little frame structure, capable of
-accommodating only a small number of persons, and those in the roughest
-style imaginable. In May, 1860, a war broke out with the Piute Indians
-that lasted a month. This trouble caused a grand stampede of the white
-settlers, and gave the new town a temporary backset, but the people soon
-recovered from their fright, and in another month building was as lively
-as before the war broke out.
-
-During the years 1860-61 the town built up very rapidly, and in 1862-63
-brick and stone “fire-proof” buildings were erected in all directions,
-as already fires began to be of frequent occurrence. Year by year the
-city grew in area, population, and wealth. Building went on both summer
-and winter, and at times was pushed almost day and night. As the mines
-were opened and worked their immense richness attracted hundreds and
-thousands of persons from California, and all parts of the Atlantic
-States and Canada. Money was more plentiful and the prices paid for
-skilled and all other kinds of labor were far higher than anywhere else
-on the American continent; all articles of merchandise also brought
-greater prices than could anywhere else be obtained. Gold coin jingled
-in the pockets of all in the city—those of the drones as well as those
-of the workers.
-
-With the honest, industrious, and peaceable came the sharper, the idler,
-and the desperado. Adventurers of every class and every grade of
-wickedness, both male and female, swarmed in the town. There were many
-desperate affrays, robberies, and murders. “Cutting and shooting
-scrapes” were of almost daily and nightly occurrence in the streets and
-in the saloons. At one time the nightly killings were so frequent that
-residents expected each morning to hear that there was “a man for
-breakfast.”
-
-Finally murders, robberies, and incendiary fires became so frequent that
-a “Vigilance Committee,” known as “601,” was organized and became active
-in the spring of 1871. It was the object of the organization to rid the
-town of all manner of evil-doers, and particularly of such desperate
-characters as almost without provocation killed peaceable citizens.
-After there had been two or three hangings by “601,” and after many bad
-characters had received “notices” to leave (which all at once obeyed),
-the city again became quiet and orderly.
-
-
- CITY IMPROVEMENTS.
-
-Owing to the steep slope of the mountain, the site of the town was by no
-means favorable, but, at great cost for grading, many fine, level
-streets were constructed. The principal streets were then filled in to
-the depth of a yard with waste quartz and other hard, flinty rock from
-the mines. This work was so well done that to this day the streets are
-hard, smooth, and dry. The Virginia Gas Company was early organized, and
-the streets and business houses lighted with gas. As early as 1862 a
-water company organized and brought a supply of water from several
-tunnels run into the Virginia Range west of the city. This water was
-conveyed to the town by means of wooden flumes and iron pipes, and
-distributed to customers throughout the place. The supply of water,
-however, at that time was not adequate to the requirements of the town,
-and the quality was poor, being much impaired by the deleterious
-minerals it held in solution. Mention of the present system of water
-works will be made in another place.
-
-Meantime, while the town was building up, good wagon roads had been
-constructed in various directions at great cost. A number of fire
-companies had been organized (provided at first with hand engines, but
-afterwards with steamers), and Virginia City began to take on the
-appearance of a real “city,” not only in the number and substantial
-character of the buildings, and swarms of people it contained, but also
-in the number of conveniences it afforded, its many societies, churches,
-schools, theaters, clubs, orders, and organizations, usually considered
-the necessary adjuncts and requirements of civilized and intelligent
-communities. There were also several daily and weekly newspapers,
-telegraph, express, and all other similar offices required by business
-and mining men, and by the people at large. Indeed, in 1875 the area of
-the city was as great as at present, and much more populous, as at that
-time it was estimated to contain 20,000 people. Hundreds and thousands
-of these, however, were mere birds of passage, being neither business
-men nor owners of property. At and about Gold Hill at that time it was
-estimated that there were about 10,000 souls. The two towns, originally
-a mile apart, were connected by buildings—had grown together. Both towns
-were filled with mills and mining works, that gave employment to many
-thousands of miners, mechanics, and workingmen of all grades and
-classes.
-
-
- The Great Fire.
-
-Everything was thus flourishing and prosperous—the “Big Bonanza” was
-yielding its millions, and several other mines were working great and
-rich bodies of ore—when Virginia City was overwhelmed by a great
-calamity.
-
-On the morning of October 26, 1875, a fire broke out in a frame
-lodging-house on A Street, in the western part of the town, just above
-all the great business blocks, and in a few hours all in an area of half
-a mile square was laid in ashes. Before the fire was subdued no fewer
-than 2,000 buildings—including mills, hoisting works, churches, business
-houses, and structures of all kinds—were swept away. Hundreds of
-families were left homeless and destitute. Owing to the early hour at
-which the fire started (six o’clock), and the fearful rapidity with
-which it spread in all directions, few persons were able to save any of
-their goods or valuables. In all, property to the value of over
-$10,000,000 was destroyed. Many great and destructive fires had before
-swept through and devastated the city, but this was the greatest ever
-experienced in the place. Scores of buildings that had always been rated
-as fire-proof melted away in the fervent heat like frost in the rays of
-the morning sun.
-
-Almost in the start the court-house, the building of the Washoe Club,
-the International Hotel, and several other large buildings, were ignited
-and began vomiting pillars of flame that scattered sparks and cinders
-far and wide. As the fire progressed the millions of feet of lumber and
-timbers and the thousands of cords of wood about the mining works made
-fires that could not be successfully combated, and which nothing could
-withstand. At the Consolidated Virginia Hoisting Works and Mill alone
-there were on fire at the same moment, and in one mass, 1,250,000 feet
-of lumber and timbers, and 800 cords of pine wood, not to speak of the
-two great buildings, and all the stores they contained; also the
-adjoining assay office, and contents. Across the street the freight and
-passenger depots of the Virginia and Truckee Railroad Company were
-sending up immense pillars of flame, while just south Piper’s Opera
-House, an immense frame structure filled with all manner of very
-inflammable material, was a volcano, vomiting destruction on all sides.
-Between and about these large structures a score or more of smaller
-buildings were belching flames. This was the scene at but one spot. A
-few rods to the southward three tall churches (Catholic, Methodist, and
-Episcopal) were sending tongues of flame into the very clouds, amid
-whole acres of smaller buildings that formed a tumultuous sea of fire.
-At the same time to the northward the Ophir works, with fifty smaller
-structures, were wrapped in flame. In the same fierce way the fire was
-raging over half a mile square of the very heart of the town. Although
-there were scores of narrow escapes, only two persons lost their lives
-in the fire, and two or three were afterwards killed by falling walls.
-
-To rebuild the town at once was the universal determination. The
-insurance on the property destroyed amounted to $2,500,000 (the loss at
-the Bonanza Mines alone was $1,461,000), which was something to begin
-with; besides many persons whose property was destroyed had plenty of
-money left with which to rebuild. There was not a moment’s delay. The
-next morning the work of clearing away ruins preparatory to putting up
-new buildings was begun in all parts of the city, water being thrown
-upon the red-hot bricks to so cool them that they could be handled.
-Rebuilding began the morning after the fire, and hardly ceased day or
-night until all the ground of the burnt district had been again covered.
-The big mining companies were especially active. Although engaged in
-rebuilding the mills and works destroyed, the Consolidated Virginia
-Mining Company paid its regular dividends of $10 a share in November and
-December, the two amounting to $2,160,000. In less than thirty days from
-the time of the fire new works replaced those destroyed by fire, and the
-machinery was in place and ore hoisted on Thanksgiving-day. In sixty
-days after the fire the business streets of the city were rebuilt, and
-with larger and finer structures than those that had been destroyed. The
-whole burnt district was so soon covered with new buildings that
-strangers arriving in the city looked about them in surprise and asked,
-“Where was your big fire?” That was a busy time on the Virginia and
-Truckee Railroad, no fewer than forty-five trains a day passing over the
-road during the great building rush. But for the railroad the city and
-mining works could not have been rebuilt that year.
-
-
- Virginia City at Present.
-
-Although Virginia City covers as much ground and contains larger and
-finer buildings than before the great fire, it is not so populous as in
-the old flush times of the “Big Bonanza.” In those days every hotel and
-lodging-house was filled to overflowing; now most of those in the city
-are permanent inhabitants and property owners—those who formerly
-composed the grand army of “sports,” adventurers, and idlers have gone
-to other fields. At present the city contains a population of only about
-9,000 persons, but nearly all those now in the place have permanent
-homes and some legitimate and remunerative employment. As about
-one-fourth of the male population is constantly at work under-ground in
-the lower levels of the various mines, the streets do not present so
-thronged an appearance as those of a non-mining town containing the same
-number of inhabitants. The place, however, presents a very different
-appearance on a holiday when all the mining works are shut down and the
-miners are on the surface.
-
-The first care of the people of the city after rebuilding the place was
-to guard against the recurrence of such a sweeping conflagration. A
-number of huge water tanks were constructed high above the town on the
-side of the mountain, with a proper system of mains and hydrants
-extending through all parts of the city. The pressure is so great at
-these hydrants that the firemen are able to throw a stream over the
-flag-staff of the tallest building in the city through a nozzle of the
-largest size. A few paid firemen now fight all the fires that occur in
-the city. As the hydrants are always ready the firemen have only to get
-to them, attach their hose, and at once they have powerful streams
-steadily playing on the fire. “Promptness of action” is their motto.
-They seldom allow a fire to get out of the building in which it
-originates. Usually they have a fire out before a steam fire-engine
-could get up steam.
-
-The fire mains are distinct from those which supply water for domestic
-purposes, and those again from such as furnish water for use at the
-mills and hoisting works of the mines. There is a system of gates
-whereby the water may be shut off from the hydrants of any block in the
-city and turned to any other block or blocks of buildings. This system
-is so perfect that employes of the water company working in conjunction
-with the firemen are able to at once turn the water to any part of the
-city in which it may be required, at the same time shutting it off from
-all other parts.
-
-All the churches, halls, district court-house, theater, and other public
-buildings are finer than those destroyed in the big fire, and again are
-seen trees and grounds of handsome appearance in various parts of the
-city. In the city are several school-houses that cost from $20,000 to
-$60,000, besides which there are a number of private schools, and the
-fine school of the Sisters of Charity. There is also a hospital—St.
-Mary’s, a commodious brick structure—under the charge of the Sisters, as
-well as a large and well-conducted county hospital. Both are located
-beyond the eastern suburbs in quiet and pleasant places. The halls
-belonging to the many societies and secret orders are elegant and
-costly. The city now has electric lights, two daily newspapers, and one
-weekly.
-
-The mills and hoisting works are a striking and characteristic feature
-of the place. The immense waste dumps, high trestle-work car tracks,
-trains of ore cars on the railroad, clouds of black smoke belched from
-many tall stacks, trains loaded with wood and timber, all tell that
-mining is the great industry of the city; then much of the street talk
-heard is of mines and mining stocks.
-
-The International Hotel is the oldest in the city. It was founded in
-1860, when it was a mere frame shanty fronting on B Street. The hotel
-destroyed by the big fire was a commodious brick structure, but the
-present building is far finer. It now extends from B to C Street, is
-constructed of brick, stone, and iron, and is six stories in height. It
-is capable of accommodating in excellent style a large number of guests.
-
-
- Views from the City and Vicinity.
-
-Though the landscape visible from the city cannot be called beautiful,
-yet it is grand and picturesque. On all sides except the east, the town
-is shut in by near ranges of high, rocky, and barren mountains. To the
-eastward the eye reaches over a vast area composed of tracts of sandy
-desert, valley lands, dark and rocky hills, and rugged and towering
-mountain ranges. The chief of these is the Humboldt Range, seen blue or
-purple in the distance, from 150 to 190 miles away. These mountains and
-their snow-clad peaks stand out against the dark-blue of the sky far
-beyond the green cottonwood groves that follow the meanderings of the
-Carson River, far beyond the Forty-mile Desert and the lake and sink of
-the Carson, and beyond Humboldt Lake and Sink.
-
-To the northeast are seen several sharp and splintered peaks, while to
-the southeast, from twenty to fifty miles away, rise the huge and grand
-peaks of the Como Mountains. From the Divide (the dividing ridge between
-Virginia and Gold Hill) may be obtained a magnificent view of the main
-Sierra Nevada Range and its many mighty snow-capped peaks as they trail
-and circle away from west to south till they are lost to view behind
-lower interior ranges at a point over 150 miles away.
-
-
- The View from the Summit of Mt. Davidson.
-
-From the peak of Mount Davidson may be obtained a grand and extensive
-view of the country in all directions. To the westward is seen Washoe
-Lake and the green meadows and fields by which it is surrounded.
-Although Washoe Valley and its lake seem to be just at the foot of the
-mountain they are from eight to ten miles distant. Beyond and high above
-the valley tower the pine-clad Sierras, with, along their line, several
-giant granite peaks, snow-capped the greater part of the year. Prominent
-among these stands out Bald Mountain, just north of Lake Tahoe, and
-within plain view Mount Lincoln, Job’s Peak, Silver Mountain, and many
-other peaks that have names. Twenty miles to the northward are to be
-seen the green pastures and alfalfa fields of the Truckee Meadows, while
-to the southward we have the Sierra Range and Eagle and Carson Valleys.
-Carson City is hid by intervening low hills. To the eastward are the
-same deserts and mountains that compose the landscape viewed from the
-city, but from the top of the mountain the eye ranges over a vastly
-wider field.
-
-
- The Virginia and Truckee Railroad.
-
-From our elevated position on the peak of Mount Davidson we may trace
-nearly the whole course of the Virginia and Truckee Railroad. This road
-runs from Reno to Virginia City _via_ Carson City, and is fifty-two
-miles in length. Besides being in one part the most crooked railroad in
-the world, its whole course is a great curve. The distance from Virginia
-City to Reno as the crow flies is only about seventeen miles, and but
-twenty-two by wagon road, yet to connect the two points by rail required
-a road fifty-two miles in length.
-
-From Reno, where the road connects with the Central Pacific, its course
-is southward through Truckee, Meadows, and Steamboat, Washoe and Eagle
-Valleys, to Carson City, a distance of thirty-one miles. From Carson
-City the road runs east down the Carson River about nine miles, when it
-leaves the river and, turning to the north, begins to climb the
-mountains to Virginia. From the river to Virginia the distance is
-thirteen miles and the maximum grade is 116 feet. In climbing the
-mountain there are many very short curves. The maximum radius of curves
-is 300 feet. By adding together all these curves it is found that a
-passenger on the road actually travels seventeen times round a circle
-between Virginia and Carson City. On the road are six tunnels, whose
-united length is 2,400 feet, and there are numerous deep cuts in very
-hard rock. The only high bridge is the trestlework on which the road
-crosses Crown Point Ravine, at Gold Hill. This bridge is eighty feet in
-height.
-
-Ground was broken on the road February 19, 1869, and eight months
-thereafter the most difficult part of it was finished and trains were
-running to Carson—twenty-one miles. The construction of this twenty-one
-miles of road cost $1,750,000, the greater part of which sum was
-expended on the first thirteen miles. In round numbers the whole
-fifty-two miles cost $3,000,000. The road does an immense business in
-the transportation of Comstock ores to quartz mills on the Carson River,
-and in carrying back from the valley wood, lumber, and timbers for the
-mines; it also carries from Reno to Virginia great quantities of all
-kinds of goods and merchandise—coal, ice, provisions, fruit, and
-machinery—with mails, express, and many passengers daily. The road
-connects with the Carson and Colorado Road at Mound House, eleven miles
-below Virginia City. The road and its many side-tracks and switches
-constitute a lasting monument to the engineering skill of the late I. E.
-James.
-
-
- The Days of “Bull Teams.”
-
-Before the Virginia and Truckee Railroad was built all freight was
-transported by teams. Ore was hauled to the mills by teams, and teams
-brought to the mines all the wood, lumber, and timber required. Teams
-also hauled over the Sierras all the mining machinery and supplies
-required by the mines and mills, and all the goods and merchandise
-needed by various kinds of stores, shops, and business houses. When the
-Central Pacific was completed this hauling of merchandise was from Reno,
-_via_ the Geiger grade wagon-road. Hundreds of teams of all kinds were
-required to handle the goods and merchandise, other hundreds the ore,
-wood, lumber, and timbers, and still others to do the miscellaneous
-hauling of the country. When the big reduction works of the Ophir Mining
-Company were in operation near Franktown, in Washoe Valley, lines of
-teams from one to three miles in length were to be seen moving along the
-Ophir grade. On all other roads it was much the same. Teams of from ten
-to sixteen horses or mules hauled trains of from two to four loaded
-wagons. At times so many teams thronged Virginia City that blockades
-occurred which could not be broken for hours. Stages, omnibuses,
-delivery wagons, drays, carts, buggies, carriages, and all kinds of
-vehicles were inextricably mingled in a jam that filled the principal
-streets for blocks. With all the cursing of “mule-punchers,” “swampers,”
-and “bull-teamsters,” it would often be two or three hours before the
-wheels of traffic again began to revolve. When these blockades occurred
-about noon, teamsters would often get out their dinner pails, spread
-their meal on their load of wood, brick, or lumber, bring out from the
-nearest saloon a measure of beer, and in a leisurely way partake of the
-midday repast. Then all passengers and all mail and express matter were
-carried by stages, and so great was the rush of travel and business that
-the coaches went out and returned in droves, five and six in a string.
-In 1859, 1860, and 1861, great quantities of goods were transported
-across the Sierras from California on the backs of mules. Some of the
-pack-trains were composed of fifty, eighty, and even as many as one
-hundred mules. They brought over all kinds of freight, even huge casks
-of liquor and large pieces of mill machinery. On the return trip they
-often carried passengers. In those days the “hurricane deck” of a mule
-was not to be despised.
-
-
- THE COMSTOCK SYSTEM OF WATER SUPPLY.
-
-
- The Virginia City and Gold Hill Water Works.
-
-When silver was first discovered on the Comstock, the flow of water from
-natural springs was sufficient to supply all the wants of the small
-communities then constituting the towns of Gold Hill and Virginia City.
-As the population increased, wells were dug in many places (distant from
-springs), and the domestic needs of many families were for a long time
-supplied by water-carts that peddled the water of both wells and
-springs. Presently the water of several tunnels added to the available
-stock, but as mills and hoisting works multiplied, the demand for water
-for use in steam boilers became so great that it was impossible to
-supply it without creating a water famine among the people of the two
-towns, now thousands in number, with hundreds of new arrivals every
-week. In this emergency the Virginia City and Gold Hill Water Company
-was formed. Outside of mining companies it is the oldest incorporation
-on the Comstock Lode. The only available supply of water at that time
-was that flowing from a few tunnels that had been run into the mountain
-above the city for mining purposes. This was collected by means of
-ditches and wooden flumes, and stored in large wooden tanks, whence it
-was distributed about the city through iron pipes. When this supply
-became insufficient, as it soon did, tunnels were run for the express
-purpose of tapping water. As these drained out the hills and failed, new
-ones were run in the range both north and south of the city for a
-distance of several miles.
-
-Finally every device was exhausted, and the hills above the level of the
-city were thoroughly drained. It then became necessary to look to the
-main range of the Sierra Nevada Mountains. In those mountains was an
-inexhaustible supply of the purest and best water to be found in the
-whole world, but between the lakes, creeks, and sparkling fountains of
-the Sierras and the range on which stood Virginia City, lay Washoe
-Valley, an immense trough nearly 2,000 feet in depth. How to get water
-over such a depression was the question. Mr. H. Schussler, an engineer
-of great repute, and who had planned the Spring Valley Water Works of
-San Francisco, was brought to Nevada to view the situation. He said the
-deep valley could be crossed, and in the spring of 1872 surveys were
-made and an order given Eastern manufacturers for the construction of a
-large wrought-iron pipe. The first section of the big pipe was laid June
-11, 1873, and the last on the twenty-fifth day of July of the same year.
-
-
- The Big Water Pipe.
-
-The total length of the pipe is 7 miles and 134 feet. The pipe has an
-interior diameter of 12 inches, and is capable of delivering 2,200,000
-gallons of water in twenty-four hours. The inlet of the pipe is on a
-spur from the main Sierra Nevada Range, and the outlet is on the crest
-of the Virginia Range of mountains. The pipe lies across the valley in
-the form of an inverted siphon. At the lowest point, the perpendicular
-pressure on the pipe is 1,720 feet, or about 800 pounds to the square
-inch. The inlet being 465 feet higher than the outlet, the water is
-forced through the pipe under tremendous pressure. The water is brought
-to the inlet from the sources of supply in two large covered flumes, and
-at the outlet end of the pipe is delivered into two large flumes, which
-carry it to Virginia City, a distance of twelve miles.
-
-This pipe was constructed of sheets of wrought iron riveted together.
-Each section was fastened with three rows of rivets. At the point of
-greatest pressure the iron was five-sixteenths of an inch in thickness,
-but near the ends, upon the sides of the two opposite mountains, it
-tapered down to one-sixteenth of an inch. In the construction of the
-pipe there were used 1,150,000 pounds of rolled iron and 1,000,000
-rivets, while 52,000 pounds of lead were used in securing the joints of
-the sections. At each joint the sections were inserted into cast iron
-sleeves, and it was within these sleeves that the lead was used. The
-total weight of the sleeves was 442,500 pounds.
-
-The first flow of water through this pipe reached Gold Hill and Virginia
-City on the evening of August 1, 1873, amid the greatest rejoicings of
-the people of both towns. Cannons were fired, rockets sent up, and bands
-of music paraded the streets. Never before in any part of the world had
-water been conveyed under a pressure so great; and it still remains the
-greatest. Previous to this, 910 feet was the greatest perpendicular
-pressure under which water had ever been carried through an iron pipe.
-This had been accomplished by Mr. Schussler, at Cherokee Flat,
-California.
-
-
- Additional Great Pipes.
-
-In 1875 the water company laid alongside the first pipe a second having
-an inside diameter of ten inches. This pipe is lap-welded, and, there
-being no friction of rivet heads upon the water, the flow through it is
-equal to that through the twelve-inch pipe,—2,200,000 gallons every
-twenty-four hours.
-
-Before 1875 the supply of water was obtained from creeks on the eastern
-slope of the mountains lying east of Lake Tahoe, but in the year named,
-the water company pushed their main supply flumes through to Marlette
-Lake, which lies inside of the Tahoe basin. To do this it was necessary
-to run a tunnel 3,000 feet in length through the dividing ridge, or rim,
-of the Tahoe basin. The sheet of water known as Marlette Lake is almost
-entirely artificial, and owes its existence to a big dam—is in reality a
-large reservoir. The water covers an area of over 300 acres, and in the
-middle is about 40 feet deep. The reservoir holds 16,000,000,000 gallons
-of water.
-
-The second pipe was laid under the supervision of Capt. J. B. Overton,
-Superintendent of the works of the water company, who also extended the
-flumes, constructed the tunnel through the mountain ridge, and made all
-the other improvements. In 1887 a third iron pipe of twelve inches
-inside diameter was laid across the valley alongside the first two. It
-was also a welded pipe and delivers much more water than either of the
-others. The inlet pressure has been raised on all three pipes, and they
-now deliver a total flow of about 10,000,000 gallons in twenty-four
-hours. In 1887, also, a branch flume was run to the northward (Marlette
-Lake lying to the southward) a distance of nine miles, which taps a
-number of creeks tributary to Lake Tahoe on the east and northeast
-sides. In the same year a reservoir capable of holding 20,000,000
-gallons was constructed on Hobart Creek, on the east side of the
-dividing ridge. In and near the city are reservoirs holding from
-3,000,000 to 10,000,000 gallons, and a number of tanks along the side of
-Mount Davidson of from 60,000 to 80,000 gallons, capacity. The water is
-brought a distance of from twenty-five to thirty-seven miles, and the
-supply (aided by the several storage reservoirs) is ample for all
-present uses. The total cost of the works of the company has been about
-$2,500,000. Each of the three pipes has its separate inlet and outlet,
-from two flumes and into two flumes. Between the outlet and the city the
-water passes through a large storage reservoir.
-
-
- The Sutro Tunnel.
-
-While there was a scarcity of water on the surface at Virginia City,
-there was a superabundance of it, both hot and cold, under-ground in all
-the mines. Levels were flooded so suddenly that oftentimes the miners
-narrowly escaped being drowned by the vast subterranean reservoirs that
-were unexpectedly tapped. Great delays in mining were caused by these
-floods, and to pump out the water that filled the lower levels cost
-immense amounts of money. Several tunnels from 1,000 to 5,000 feet in
-length were run into the mountain, but they were of only temporary
-utility, as the shafts of the mines were soon below their level. In
-order to overcome these water troubles, Adolph Sutro early conceived the
-idea of running an immense drain tunnel under the Comstock Lode from the
-lowest possible point. A survey was made by Mr. H. Schussler, and work
-was commenced on the great drain tunnel (since known as the Sutro
-Tunnel) October 19, 1869. It starts at the edge of the valley of the
-Carson River, at a point nearly east of Virginia City, and has a length
-of 20,145 feet—nearly 4 miles. It taps the central parts of the Comstock
-Lode at a depth of about 1,650 feet. The tunnel is 16 feet wide and 12
-feet high. Drain flumes are sunk in the floor and over these are two
-tracks for horse-cars. It required nearly eight years to construct the
-tunnel, and the total cost was about $4,500,000. Although the leading
-mines had their shafts down nearly 3,000 feet before the tunnel was
-finished, yet it was of great use, as it saved 1,600 feet of pumping.
-
-From the main tunnel branches were run north and south along the east
-side of the vein for a distance of over two miles, with which the
-several companies connected by drain drifts from their mines. The flow
-of water through the tunnel has at times been over 10,000,000 gallons in
-twenty-four hours. Between the mouth of the tunnel and the Carson River
-there are 155 feet of fall, but it has never been utilized for driving
-reduction works. New connections are still being made with the tunnel
-for drainage. Though it never paid anything near what was anticipated by
-Mr. Sutro, the tunnel still brings in a snug sum annually. Last year
-(the fiscal year that ended February 29, 1888) the receipts for
-royalties amounted to $237,258.33. It costs a considerable amount
-annually to keep the main tunnel and branches in repair. This great
-drain at a depth of 1,600 feet below the surface allows of Pelton water
-wheels being set up in the shafts of the several mines and worked under
-immense pressure, there being a free discharge from the wheels. At the C
-and C shaft of the Consolidated California and Virginia, such wheels
-have been put in every 500 feet from the surface down to the Sutro
-Tunnel level. The water used on the first wheel on the surface, in the
-stamp-mill, is caught up, led to the shaft, and used on the second 500
-feet below, and so on down to the tunnel level, the power being brought
-from wheel to wheel to the surface by means of a system of steel wire
-cables. Thus is transmitted to the surface the power developed by the
-whole series of wheels.
-
-
- The Reduction Works of the Early Days.
-
-In the early days the building of quartz-mills kept pace with the
-building up of the towns. As early as October, 1859, Logan & Holmes had
-a four-stamp horse-power mill in operation at Dayton, and Hastings &
-Woodworth had two water-power arastras at work, which reduced six tons
-of ore a day. This ore was not worked as silver ore. It was from the
-surface of the Comstock Lode, at Gold Hill, and was worked for gold
-only. In the spring of 1860 many mills for working silver ore began to
-be erected.
-
-
- The First Silver Mill.
-
-The first silver-mill that went into operation was the “Pioneer,”
-erected by Almarin B. Paul, on Gold Canyon, at the north end of Silver
-City, just below the Devil’s Gate. It was a steam mill and contained
-twenty-four Howland rotary stamps and twenty-four amalgamating pans. The
-work of erecting the mill was commenced May 24, 1860, and it began work
-August 13, the same year. Some others have claimed the honor of starting
-the first quartz-mill in Nevada, but this was undoubtedly the first
-silver-mill. In it were operated the first silver amalgamating pans ever
-seen anywhere. The iron amalgamating pans were the result of experiments
-made by Almarin B. Paul before he began the erection of his mill. He
-thought the German barrel process and Mexican patio too slow, and began
-to make experiments with some small iron pans that had been in use at
-some of the quartz-mills in California for grinding and working the
-sulphurets saved by concentrating machines in working the quartz of the
-gold mines. The best of these was found to be the “Knox Improved Pan,”
-in which was a false bottom that formed beneath the pan a steam-tight
-heating chamber. By the use of this kind of pan, and by treating the
-heated pulp with certain quantities of salt, sulphate of copper, and
-some other chemicals, before adding quicksilver, it was found that a
-charge (whatever amount of crushed silver ore the pan would hold) could
-be amalgamated in about three hours. The results obtained with Knox’s
-Improved Pan were so satisfactory that Mr. Paul placed pans of that
-pattern in his new mill. Soon after a score of pans of different styles
-were invented, and to this day pans of new patterns are still being
-invented and patented.
-
-The Coover & Harris Mill, Gold Hill, was the first mill in the country
-to start up with steam. It blew its steam whistle a day before that of
-Paul’s “Pioneer” was heard, but it could not then be called a
-silver-mill as it was working gold quartz, the same as was worked, in
-October the year before, at Dayton, by Logan & Holmes and Hastings &
-Woodworth. The mill had a fifteen horse-power engine that drove an
-eight-stamp Howland rotary battery and crushed six tons of ore a day. At
-first it was a dry crusher, but soon Paul’s Concentrators and Knox’ pans
-were used. The Harris of the firm was Dr. E. B. Harris, now a resident
-of Virginia City.
-
-
- The Many Mills of the Early Days.
-
-Very soon after these first mills went into operation several others
-started up. By the spring of 1862 no fewer than eighty-one quartz-mills
-were at work, the majority of them on ore from mines situated on the
-Comstock Lode. These mills were located in Virginia City, on Six and
-Seven-mile Canyons, at Gold Hill, Silver City, Dayton, at Empire City,
-and all along the Carson River below that town; two or three near Carson
-City (on Clear Creek and Mill Creek), and a dozen or more about Washoe
-Valley and down toward Steamboat Valley. Many of these mills were of
-small capacity, having only from two to ten stamps, but there were
-already a few first-class reduction works, as regards capacity, though
-their methods and processes were defective. The reduction works of the
-Ophir Company, in Washoe Valley, cost $500,000, contained thirty-six
-stamps, were driven by an engine of 100 horse-power, and was capable of
-working 100 tons of ore a day. The Gould & Curry Mill then building on
-Six-mile Canyon was of still greater capacity, and the Land, Bassett,
-Winfield, Empire State, Central, Marysville, Trench, Swansea, Phœnix,
-Succor, Rock Point, Merrimac, Vivian, and several other mills, contained
-from fifteen to twenty-five stamps each. After the completion of the
-Virginia and Truckee Railroad the majority of the outside mills (mills
-to which it was necessary to transport ore, wood, and other supplies by
-wagon) were pulled down and removed to new mining camps in various parts
-of the State. The greater part of the ores of the Comstock were then
-reduced in steam mills near the mines or in water mills on the Carson
-River on the line of the railroad; and this is still the case.
-
-We now have fewer mills than in the early days, but they are of greater
-average capacity, and are in every respect more effective than were
-those first erected. More ore is crushed to the stamp, and the time
-required for the amalgamation of the pulp has been very materially
-reduced. All the present mills are so constructed that there is very
-little handling of the ores operated upon, and labor-saving apparatus
-has been introduced into nearly every department. Even the old oil lamps
-are being thrown out of the mills and the electric light introduced.
-
-
- REDUCTION WORKS OF THE PRESENT DAY.
-
-
- Description of the Process of Working Comstock Silver Ore.
-
-In speaking of the works at present in use for the reduction of silver
-ore, it will only be necessary to describe the process in use in one
-mill, as all work after the same system. Being the most recently
-erected, and quite perfect in all its arrangements, the new mill of the
-Nevada Mill and Mining Company, commonly called the Chollar Mill (as it
-stands near the Chollar old shaft), shall furnish the illustration
-necessary to an understanding of the method of working Comstock ores now
-generally in use. The mill covers nearly an acre of ground, and the
-machinery is at present (March, 1889) driven in part by a Pelton water
-wheel 11 feet in diameter, and in part by power electrically transmitted
-from the Sutro Tunnel level. The mill building stands in a depression
-near the head of a small ravine. Such a site was selected in order that
-from the time the ore enters the mill its course at each stage necessary
-to its complete reduction, shall be downward—that there shall be no
-lifting or hoisting of ore or pulp.
-
-The mill stands a little over one hundred yards south of the Chollar
-shaft. From the shaft the ore is run in the same cars in which it is
-hoisted from the mine directly into the upper story of the mill. It is
-there dumped through openings in the floor into the ore bins. Over these
-ore bins are placed in a slanting position iron bars three inches apart,
-forming screens called “grizzlies.” Through these screens the fine ore
-falls into the bins, while the large lumps of rock roll down upon a
-floor in front of the rock-breaker, an apparatus that works much on the
-same principle as a lemon-squeezer. Between the jaws of this powerful
-machine the largest and hardest piece of quartz rock is at once chewed
-into fragments sufficiently small to be fed into the batteries, where
-the heavy stamps reduce it to pulp. The ore is delivered into the
-batteries by self-feeders, which are so regulated as to keep constantly
-under the stamps the proper quantity of rock to do well the most work.
-At the Chollar (or Nevada) Mill there are sixty stamps,—twelve batteries
-of five stamps each. Each stamp weighs about eight hundred pounds. On
-the end of each stamp is a heavy head or block of iron or steel called a
-“shoe,” and in the bottom of the mortar (a long iron box in which the
-stamps of each battery work) is a similar block of iron called a “die,”
-upon which the shoe of the stamp strikes when it pulls. It is between
-these two blocks of steel that the quartz is crushed.
-
-A small stream of water flows into each battery, and as the ore is
-reduced to a powder the water floats it out through the fine screens
-that are fitted into the face of each mortar. The pulverized ore and
-water, on passing through the screens, falls into a small trough, or
-sluice, which carries the muddy mixture down to the settling tanks, on a
-floor below, in the amalgamating room. In the tanks the crushed ore
-settles and the water runs off. From the tanks the pulverized ore, which
-resembles thin mortar, is shoveled out upon the floor alongside the
-amalgamating pans, into which it is shoveled whenever they are to
-receive a fresh charge of ore.
-
-The pans are of iron and each holds a “charge” of about 3,000 pounds of
-the mortar-like pulp. In the bottom of each pan are thick plates of
-chilled iron or steel called “dies,” while revolving upon these are
-other heavy pieces of steel, called “shoes” or mullers. In the pans the
-pulverized ore is ground till it is much finer than when it passed
-through the screens of the battery.
-
-When a pan has received its charge of pulverized ore (“pulp”) a small
-amount of water is added to render it sufficiently thin to be readily
-stirred by the mullers. The pans have tight covers and double bottoms.
-The double bottoms are steam chambers by means of which the pulp in the
-pan is kept hot while it is ground and agitated. After a charge has been
-ground about two hours, some 300 pounds of quicksilver are added (for
-3,000 pounds of pulp), also a certain quantity of salt and sulphate of
-copper; and sometimes soda or caustic potash and other chemicals, if
-thought necessary, when the agitation in the pan is continued two hours
-longer. The time of working in the pan varies from three to five hours.
-
-The Chollar Mill has thirty of these pans. On a platform below that on
-which stand the pans are fifteen settlers. These are about twice the
-size of the pans. At the end of three or five hours each settler has
-drawn off into it the contents of two pans. In the settler the pulp,
-quicksilver, and amalgam are kept in motion for about two hours. During
-this time water is let in and the pulp made very thin. The quicksilver
-and amalgam settle to the bottom of the “settler,” and are drawn off
-through a pipe and pass into a strainer—a strong canvas bag. There is an
-iron box around each strainer, and this is kept locked.
-
-It is in the pan that amalgamation takes place. There the sulphuret and
-chloride of silver is changed to the metallic form by the chemical
-action of the sulphate of copper (bluestone) and salt, and when it takes
-the metallic form it at once unites with quicksilver. The gold contained
-in the ore (generally one-third of its whole value) being always in the
-metallic form, is amalgamated as soon as it is ground out of its
-inclosing shell of quartz, or pyrites of iron.
-
-The thinned pulp—mere muddy water in appearance—on leaving the settlers
-passes into large wooden tubs called “agitators,” in which are revolving
-rakes. In these tubs is caught some valuable material—principally
-amalgam and quicksilver. From the “agitators” the pulp flows out of the
-reduction works through a small flume which conducts it to the blanket
-sluices, fifty yards away in the open air. The blanket sluices are
-broad, shallow flumes in the bottom of which are placed strips of coarse
-woolen blanketing. In passing over these blankets the pulp deposits
-pulverized iron pyrites containing gold, some fine particles of amalgam,
-and quicksilver; also such silver sulphurets as escaped being
-amalgamated in the pans. From time to time the blankets are taken out of
-the sluices and rinsed in a large tank, in which operation is saved
-whatever of value they may have caught.
-
-The amalgam collected in the strainers standing below the settlers is
-placed in a press and as much quicksilver as possible pressed out, when
-it is placed in retorts, which are heated till all the mercury is driven
-off. There then remains behind the silver and gold, in a dull,
-rough-looking mass. This “crude bullion” is then broken up and placed in
-the melting pots, to be made into “bricks” and assayed. The bars or
-bricks made weigh about 100 pounds each. From the top and bottom of each
-pot or crucible of molten gold and silver is taken a small quantity of
-the fluid metals from which assays are made to determine the value of
-the bars. About thirty per cent of the value of the Comstock bullion
-bars is in gold, though it has at times run up to fifty per cent in some
-mines, and as low as ten per cent in others.
-
-Though the Nevada Mill is in part driven by water, half the power used
-is electrically transmitted from six forty-inch Pelton water wheels set
-up in a large chamber excavated on the Sutro Tunnel level of the Chollar
-Mine, 1,630 feet below the surface. These small Pelton wheels drive six
-Brush dynamos, which generate the current that passes over the copper
-wires to the electric motors in the mill. The electric apparatus
-transmits to the main driving shaft of the mill about sixty-five per
-cent of the power developed by the Pelton wheels. Each Pelton wheel
-drives a dynamo, and one, two, four or all the dynamos may be run at the
-same time, just as may be required, each Pelton and dynamo being
-independent of the others.
-
-After the water is used on the large-surface Pelton wheel in the mill it
-is caught up and by means of a small flume is conducted to the shaft of
-the Chollar Mine, near at hand, down which two large iron pipes carry it
-to the six small Peltons below. By thus twice using the same water a
-saving of one-half is made. The pressure on the lower Pelton wheels is
-immense. Never before has any water wheel been operated under a vertical
-pressure of 1,630 feet.
-
-The Nevada Mill was built to work the ores of the Hale and Norcross,
-Chollar and Potosi Mines. It is one of the most substantial mills in the
-country, and no mill in the State is better arranged. It is lighted with
-electricity, and the grounds in front are illuminated by means of an arc
-light on a tall mast.
-
-
- The Two California Mills.
-
-The California stamp and pan-mills in Virginia City reduce the ores of
-the Consolidated California and Virginia Mine. The stamp-mill is
-situated immediately east of the C and C shaft of the mine. It contains
-eighty stamps. The ore crushed in this mill is amalgamated in the
-pan-mill, which stands about 1,500 feet further east. The crushed ore is
-conducted from the stamp-mill to the pan-mill through an iron pipe four
-inches in diameter. The process of amalgamation is much the same as at
-the Chollar Mill, except that the pulp goes directly into the
-amalgamating pans instead of being first received in settling tanks. It
-flows from pan to pan—the outflow of the first pan passing into the
-second through a pipe, thence into a third, and so on and from settler
-to settler, being in all about three hours in passing through the
-series. This is called the Boss Continuous Process. It is in use in no
-other mill on the Comstock, as yet. In connection with the Rae
-electrical process of amalgamation (in which a current of electricity is
-passed through the settlers) it is found to work satisfactorily. The
-electric current prevents loss of “floured” quicksilver. Both mills are
-driven by Pelton water wheels. A single Pelton wheel eleven feet in
-diameter, placed on the surface, drives the eighty stamps of the
-battery-mill, and also twelve Boss grinding pans. The water used on the
-surface Pelton is caught up and conducted to the C and C shaft, where it
-is used on a series of Pelton wheels of the same size. These wheels are
-placed in chambers made for their reception 500 feet apart from the top
-of the shaft down to the Sutro Tunnel level (there 1,500 feet), and by
-means of steel wire cables, used as belts, the power of all the lower
-wheels is brought to a main driving shaft on the surface. The whole
-power is then transmitted to the pan-mill (about 1,600 feet) by means of
-steel wire cables passing over pulleys placed on a series of tall wooden
-towers. The cables pass over a considerable depression between the top
-of the C and C shaft and the pan-mill; three high towers are required in
-the middle portion.
-
-
- River and Canyon Mills.
-
-The Mexican Mill, on the Carson River, contains forty-four stamps and a
-corresponding number of pans, settlers, and other amalgamating
-machinery. The Morgan Mill has forty stamps. It works ore from the
-Consolidated California and Virginia Mine. The Brunswick Mill contains
-seventy-six stamps, the Vivian sixteen, Santiago thirty-eight, and
-Eureka sixty. All these mills are about and below Empire City, and all
-work Comstock ores. The Eureka Mill is run on ore from the Consolidated
-California and Virginia. The Rock Point Mill (thirty stamps), at Dayton,
-and the Douglas Mill (ten stamps), in Lower Gold Hill, also work
-Comstock ores.
-
-At and about Silver City are two or three small mills that work the ores
-of mines in that neighborhood, and on the Carson River are the Douglas
-and Woodworth Mills, which work tailings.
-
-On Six-mile Canyon, below Virginia City to the east, are several small
-water mills having an aggregate of about thirty stamps. These work ores
-from the mines on the canyon and in Flowery District. On the canyon are
-also one or two small mills that work tailings and the concentrations
-from blanket sluices.
-
-The Alta Mining Company has a ten-stamp mill, with concentrators,
-immediately adjoining the hoisting works at their mine. The Justice
-Company have a new ten-stamp mill near their mine.
-
-Owing to the fact that many mines are now at the same time producing
-large quantities of ore, a lack of milling facilities is being felt. To
-meet this demand the Nevada Mill has been enlarged one-third, and the
-capacity of other mills will be increased, and perhaps some new mills
-will be erected. Processes by means of which low-grade ores may be
-profitably worked will no doubt yet be invented or discovered, which
-will cause many new works to be erected either on the Carson River or in
-the neighborhood of the mines producing large quantities of such ores.
-
-
- THE COMSTOCK LODE.
-
-
- Hoisting Works, Shafts, and Mining, Past and Present.
-
-The Comstock Lode crops out along the eastern face of Mount Davidson
-about 1,200 feet below the summit, and just above the western suburbs of
-Virginia City. To the northward and southward the vein runs along the
-east side of other and smaller mountains of the same range. The face of
-Mount Davidson slopes to the east at an angle of about twenty-five
-degrees, and the vein dips in the same direction at an average
-inclination of forty-five degrees. It was at first supposed that the
-vein dipped to the west (into Mount Davidson), and the first hoisting
-works were erected on or near the croppings, where shafts were sunk and
-inclines sent down. For the first 400 to 500 feet the vein did pitch to
-the west into the mountain. Mount Davidson was then supposed to be the
-great central magazine, or nucleus, of all the silver found near the
-surface, and claims located on the slope of the mountain below to the
-eastward found but little favor in the eyes of mining men and would-be
-purchasers. Suddenly all this was changed, and there was a general
-“right-about-face.” It was discovered in the Gould & Curry and the Ophir
-Mines that at a certain depth the lode became perpendicular, then turned
-and took a regular dip to the east, of about forty-five degrees,
-following as a footwall the syenite slope of Mount Davidson. It was then
-seen that the false dip above was caused by the top of the vein being
-bent over under the pressure of sliding material on the slope of the
-mountain at and near the surface.
-
-
- THE THREE LINES OF HOISTING WORKS.
-
-However, much ore was mined at the first line of works, particularly at
-the Ophir, Mexican, California, Gould & Curry, Savage, and Hale &
-Norcross Mines. But, as the dip of the vein was away from these first
-works, it presently became necessary to move to the eastward about 1,000
-feet. As very deep shafts would there be required in order to intersect
-the lode, larger and much more powerful hoisting works and pumping
-machinery must be erected. Indeed, the new works required to be
-first-class in every respect, as the shafts would be far deeper than any
-yet put down on the lode, and it was by this time known that there would
-be immense quantities of water to handle.
-
-Accordingly, the second line of fine and powerful first-class works,
-seen at present, and again in active use, was constructed. The shafts of
-the new line of works all cut into the heart of the vein, and in several
-the “bonanzas” found were so large and so rich as to astonish the whole
-mining world and create a much greater and far more widespread
-excitement than was seen when silver was first discovered in the
-croppings of the vein at the Ophir Mine. All the leading mines were soon
-taking out their tens of millions, but when the “big bonanza” was struck
-in the Consolidated Virginia and California the yield of gold and silver
-bullion soon became a matter of scores of millions. It was then that the
-fame of the Comstock spread to every corner of the world, and the rush
-of speculators, fortune-seekers, and adventurers of all ages, sexes, and
-classes was greater than ever before. Though what is called the “Big
-Bonanza” was struck in the Consolidated Virginia in October, 1873, at a
-point on the 1,167-foot level, it was not until October, 1874, that the
-excitement in regard to it reached fever-heat. The main shaft had then
-reached the 1,500-foot level, and the ore disclosed by drifts and
-chambers was of such extraordinary and astonishing richness that experts
-could hardly believe their eyes or assayers their figures.
-
-The Comstock Lode had a width (between the syenite wall on the west and
-the propylite on the east) of from 1,000 to 1,200 feet at the point
-where the “Big Bonanza” was struck. The space between the two walls was
-filled with what is locally termed “vein material” (gangue), and in this
-was found the ore body or “bonanza,” which was in one place over 300
-feet in width. This mass of ore yielded from $100 to $700 per ton, but
-in places were found masses of pure native silver and spots of ore so
-rich in black sulphuret and gold that to make assays of it was much like
-making assays of the pure metals. From the “Bonanza Mines” alone from
-1873 up to 1882 were taken $111,975,761.39; but in 1879 the yield began
-to fall off as the vein was followed downward, and in 1882 the amount of
-bullion taken out was small, not paying expenses.
-
-In the meantime (while the big bonanza of the Consolidated Virginia and
-California companies was being worked out) most of the leading companies
-had exhausted their second bonanzas. Instead of prospecting further in
-their immediate neighborhood, they all determined to go still farther
-east, sink a new line of shafts, and tap the vein at a still greater
-depth. This time they went out about 2,000 feet beyond their second line
-of hoisting works, or 3,000 feet east of the croppings of the lode. As
-it would be necessary to sink shafts to a depth of about 3,000 feet to
-intersect the vein, the hoisting works, hoisting machinery, and all else
-was made much larger, more powerful, and on a grander scale in every
-respect, than the second line. The principal works on this third line
-are those of the Combination shaft, New Yellow Jacket shaft, Osbiston
-and Union shafts, and the Forman shaft. In sinking these several
-companies united, the work was prosecuted with the greatest energy, and
-no expense was spared as regarded machinery and appliances.
-
-
- THE COMBINATION SHAFT.
-
-Of these shafts, that which attained the greatest vertical depth was the
-Combination—the joint shaft of the Chollar, Hale & Norcross, and Savage
-Companies. Before work on it was discontinued it had reached the great
-depth of 3,250 feet. There is but one deeper vertical shaft in the
-world. This is the Adalbert Shaft, in the silver mines of Bohemia, which
-is 3,280 feet deep. There is no record of the time when work on this
-mine in Bohemia was commenced, though its written history extends back
-to 1527. The Combination Shaft was sunk at the rate of three feet a day,
-even in rock as hard as flint. The whole shaft is sunk in very hard rock
-(andesite), every foot of which had to be blasted. It is thirty feet by
-ten feet in size and is divided into four compartments for the
-accommodation of the hoisting and pumping apparatus.
-
-The shaft was sunk to the depth of 2,200 feet before more water was
-encountered than could be hoisted out in the “skips” with the dirt. Down
-to the 2,400 level two Cornish pumps were used, each with columns
-fifteen inches in diameter. A drift run west into the vein tapped more
-water than the Cornish pumps could handle, when the management
-introduced hydraulic pumps. These pumps are run by the pressure of water
-from the surface through a pipe running down from the top of the shaft,
-whereas the Cornish pumps were run by huge steam engines. The shaft is
-connected with the Sutro drain tunnel at the depth of 1,600 feet, and to
-that point it was necessary to pump all the water. At the 3,000 level
-were placed a pair of hydraulic pumps, the deepest in the world. In
-Europe the deepest point at which a hydraulic pump has ever been worked
-is 2,700 feet. This is in the Hartz Mountains, in Germany.
-
-When one stood at the 3,000 level and looked up a compartment of the
-shaft (five feet by six feet in size) the little spot of daylight seen
-at the top appeared to be about four inches square. At this great depth
-even the smallest bit of rock falling from the top whistles like a
-rifle-ball before reaching the bottom, and, striking a man on the head,
-would instantly kill him. Should a man fall that distance little would
-remain on which to hold an inquest—his body would be quite “dissipated.”
-The Cornish and the hydraulic pumps working together had a daily
-capacity of 5,200,000 gallons—a small river! Hydraulic pumps were placed
-at the 2,400-foot level, the 2,600 and the 3,000 levels. Some idea of
-the great size of these engines and pumps may be formed when it is
-stated that the stations excavated for them were eighty-five feet long,
-twenty-eight feet wide, and twelve feet high. All this space was so
-filled with machinery that there was only room left to move about among
-it. Drifts were run to the west to the lode at the 2,400, 2,800 and
-3,000-foot levels. On the 3,000 level the distance from the shaft to the
-east wall of the vein was found to be only 250 feet. The lode at this
-depth (3,000 feet) was found to be of great width and well
-mineralized—indeed the Hale & Norcross folks had a good showing of ore.
-
-
- The Deepest Workings.
-
-Although the Combination Shaft is the deepest vertical opening on the
-lode, it is not the point of deepest mining. The deepest workings are in
-the mine of the Union Consolidated Company, toward the north end of the
-lode. There long drifts were run and much prospecting done at the great
-depth of 3,350 feet. This depth was obtained by running a drift from the
-bottom of the vertical shaft and then sinking a winze from the drift.
-
-The Yellow Jacket (new) shaft has a vertical depth of 3,050 feet, and
-much prospecting was done in the mine at a depth of 3,000 feet; also in
-the Belcher and Crown Point. In the Belcher excellent prospects were
-being obtained when the company were obliged to discontinue work. By
-connecting adjacent shafts by means of drifts and otherwise maintaining
-a proper system of ventilation miners experience no difficulty in
-working at any depth yet attained on the Comstock Lode.
-
-
- A Return to the Second Line of Works.
-
-February 13, 1882, a flow of water was tapped on the 2,700 level of the
-Exchequer Mine, that flooded not only that mine, but also the Alpha,
-Imperial, Yellow Jacket, Kentuck, Crown Point, Belcher, Overman,
-Segregated Belcher, and Caledonia. The water rushed to the Yellow Jacket
-Shaft, where the pumping was done which drained the advanced workings
-(most eastern) of all the mines named. The Yellow Jacket folks pumped
-and bailed an average flow of 110 miners inches a day for seven days.
-Though they were raising 1,320 gallons every minute the water gained on
-them and raised to the level (2,700) on which it was tapped by the
-Exchequer. The water had then filled all the drifts, cross-cuts, and
-winzes of the whole group of mines from the Bullion south to the
-Caledonia. Pumping was still continued, for the purpose of exhausting
-the subterranean reservoir in the Exchequer, till March 28, when the
-water had been so far reduced that there was a depth of only 950 feet
-above the 3,000 level of the Yellow Jacket Shaft. Then, as no combined
-arrangement could be made among the several companies interested to
-continue the work and drain all the mines, the Yellow Jacket Company
-stopped pumping and shut down their works. This stopped all work below
-the level of the Sutro drain tunnel, and the works have never since been
-started up. Had all the companies “stood in” for a time longer all the
-flooded mines would have been thoroughly drained.
-
-The cost of the new works on the advanced line had been so much, and the
-expense incurred in hoisting and pumping from such great depths was so
-heavy, that stockholders in all the mines along the lode now became
-discouraged. They declared that what had happened in the case of the
-Gold Hill group of mines was liable to happen in the other deep
-workings, and began to clamor for a general return to the works at the
-second line of shafts, where it was known that pay ore had been left
-behind in the race after depth. When stockholders found that the deep
-shafts did not at once cut into pay ore, when they tapped the vein, they
-had no patience to wait for much prospecting to be done. They demanded
-that paying deposits be sought for at once in the old levels above the
-Sutro Tunnel, where there could be no trouble from water. Thus it
-happens that along the whole lode all the mining now being done is at
-the works situated over the second line of shafts, and above the level
-of the Sutro Tunnel. These shafts are by no means shallow, as they range
-in depth from 2,000 to 2,900 feet. The return has been fortunate. The
-vein being from 400 to 1,000 and even in places 1,400 feet in width
-between walls, it was very little explored in the neighborhood of the
-works of the second line of shafts. When the bonanzas in sight were
-exhausted, the universal cry was: “Get away to the east! Strike the lode
-at greater depths! Another 1,000 feet of depth will give us a third
-fertile zone—a third line of bonanzas!” Now it is being discovered that
-large and rich deposits of ore had been left behind—that they are
-scattered in all directions in the great breadth of vein material like
-plums in a pudding. Again dividends are the order of the day along the
-famous old lode.
-
-
- The Old First Bonanzas.
-
-Out of the first “bonanzas” great fortunes were taken. The bonanza of
-the Ophir, into which the first discoverers of silver—O’Riley and
-McLaughlin—accidentally dug, yielded about $20,000,000 before it was
-exhausted; the Savage, $16,500,000; Hale & Norcross, $11,000,000;
-Chollar and Potosi, $16,000,000; Gould & Curry, $15,500,000; Yellow
-Jacket, $16,500,000; Crown Point, $22,000,000; Belcher, $26,000,000;
-Overman, $3,250,000; Imperial, $2,750,000, and the Kentuck, Sierra
-Nevada, Justice, and many other mines sums running from hundreds of
-thousands up into millions. In all, the yield of the mines on the
-Comstock Lode from the discovery down to the present time has been
-between $350,000,000 and $400,000,000. Of much of the silver and gold at
-first taken from the lode, both at Gold Hill and Virginia City, there is
-no record; and in many instances since that time much gold and silver
-bullion has been obtained from ores, tailings, slimes, and sulphurets
-that was never fully accounted for.
-
-
- The New Departure.
-
-In the new departure, of which a return to the second line of hoisting
-works was the leading feature, the two bonanza mines—the California and
-the Consolidated Virginia—were consolidated and incorporated as one mine
-under the name of the Consolidated California and Virginia. Work was
-resumed in the old upper levels and soon small streaks of low-grade ore,
-that had formerly been passed by, led to deposits of fair milling ore.
-In working these deposits other bodies were found, and finally many new
-and valuable ore bodies were developed. A fire which had been
-smouldering for about ten years in a section of the old workings was
-extinguished by the use of carbonic acid gas, and this gave access to
-large deposits of milling ore that had not before been available. This
-and the new discoveries soon gave the company large bodies of ore in a
-number of places above the Sutro Tunnel level. Again many miners were
-employed, and the output of ore became sufficient to keep many stamps in
-constant operation.
-
-The total yield of the “Big Bonanza,” in the California and Consolidated
-Virginia, was as follows: Consolidated Virginia, $65,116,822.69:
-California, $46,858,938.70, making a total of $111,975,761.39. Out of
-this the Consolidated Virginia paid dividends amounting to $42,930,000,
-and the California a total of $31,320,000 in dividends.
-
-
- Present Yield of Leading Mines.
-
-Since the consolidation of the two mines, the Consolidated California
-and Virginia has yielded $8,001,856.95, and has paid dividends amounting
-to $2,440,800, up to and including December, 1888. The total yield of
-the great ore deposit known as the “Big Bonanza,” from the time of its
-discovery to the end of December, 1888 (under both incorporations), was
-$119,977,618.34, and the total amount of dividends to the same date was
-$76,690,800. To give an idea of the rate of the present yield of the
-mine the following details are furnished: For the quarter that ended
-March 31, 1888, the mine produced 39,552 tons of ore, yielding
-$921,903.77 in bullion, an average of $23 30 a ton. In April (1888)
-there was worked a total of 13,893 tons of ore, yielding bullion to the
-value of $418,729.43. The average assay value a ton was $36.83, and the
-average yield a ton was $30.13. In May the yield was $411,173.13; in
-June, $405,834.08; July, $206,672.26; August, $352,554.97; September,
-$267,386.18; October, $339,814.45; November, $220,373.74; and in
-December, $260,320.56. The falling off in the month of July and
-thereafter throughout the year was due to the dry season in the summer
-and a phenomenally dry fall and winter. In January, 1889, there was a
-fair milling stage of water in the Carson River the greater part of the
-time, and the yield of bullion rose to $267,847.51.
-
-The mine has kept the Morgan and Eureka Mills going to their full
-capacity whenever there was sufficient water to run them at all. Owing
-to a scarcity of water at the sources of supply in the Sierra Nevada
-Mountains, the Virginia and Gold Hill Water Company have for some months
-been unable to furnish water for the two California Mills in this city;
-to furnish water to the Nevada Mill has been a heavy draft on the
-reservoirs. With proper storage reservoirs in the Sierras the mills on
-the Carson River might be run the year round. At present eighty per cent
-of all the water flows into the “sinks” and is lost.
-
-More mines on the Comstock are at the present time producing paying ore
-than ever before in the history of the lode. The following mines are now
-ore producing: Consolidated California and Virginia, Gould & Curry,
-Occidental, Ophir, Andes, Savage, Hale & Norcross, Chollar, Potosi,
-Confidence, Challenge, Yellow Jacket, Belcher, Crown Point, Alta,
-Justice, Overman, Baltimore, and Kentuck. Several other companies who
-own mines on the lode have quartz that yields promising assays in the
-precious metals, and are liable at any time to find paying deposits.
-
-To show the rate at which some of the mines have been paying during the
-past year, though handicapped by an unusually dry season and a lack of
-milling facilities, I give a few statistics, as follows: During the
-quarter that ended March 31, 1888, the Chollar Company milled 1,415 tons
-of ore that yielded $21,795.70 in bullion; the Confidence 1,722 tons,
-yielding $42,541.72; Hale & Norcross, 7,958 tons, yielding $236,047.32;
-Kentuck, 1,027 tons, yielding $13,055.50; Potosi, 3,050 tons, yielding
-$56,461.16, and the Yellow Jacket, 16,780 tons, yielding $121,027.82.
-
-For the quarter ending June 30, 1888, the Hale & Norcross yielded 18,075
-tons of ore, that produced $451,740 in bullion; the Chollar, 4,750 tons,
-yielding $74,507; Confidence, 17,285 tons, yielding $401,293; Yellow
-Jacket, 7,080 tons, yielding $55,022.
-
-For the quarter that ended September 30, the Hale & Norcross yielded
-6,365 tons of ore, that produced $173,941.80 in bullion; Confidence,
-9,207 tons, yielding $176,064.93; Yellow Jacket, 1,370 tons, yielding
-$9,932.
-
-For the quarter that ended December 30, 1888, the Chollar milled 2,835
-tons that yielded $38,130.81: Challenge, 1,875 tons, yielding
-$31,096.16; Confidence, 6,195 tons, yielding $105,970.59; Yellow Jacket,
-3,388 tons, yielding $25,856; Savage, 5,292 tons, yielding $66,422.75;
-Hale & Norcross, 4,820 tons, yielding $90,015.59, and the Alta, 946
-tons, yielding $23,330.
-
-The Consolidated California and Virginia has steadily paid $108,000
-monthly in dividends. The Confidence and Hale & Norcross also paid
-dividends during 1888 at the rate of from $49,000 to $50,000 a month.
-And during the year the pay rolls of the several companies have
-aggregated from $250,000 to over $300,000 a month.
-
-During 1888, new bodies of ore were found in the Consolidated California
-and Virginia, Hale & Norcross, Confidence, Yellow Jacket, Crown Point,
-Gould & Curry, Savage, Chollar, Potosi, Best & Belcher, and some others.
-Crown Point and Belcher have made connection with the Sutro drain
-tunnel, and are again working below that level. Eventually the leading
-companies will get back into the deep workings now deserted.
-
-
- Vicissitudes of Fortune in Mining.
-
-The vicissitudes of fortune are probably more striking in mining for
-silver than in any other kind of mining. In all silver-producing
-countries we are told of mines being again and again abandoned because
-it was thought their rich “bonanzas” had been exhausted, but they have
-again and again been reopened and new and rich bodies of ore discovered.
-The Valenciana Mine, on the Veta Macbee (mother vein), of Guanaguato,
-Mexico, was reopened in 1760, on a part of the vein where work had been
-done in the sixteenth century, and which had afterwards lain as
-worthless for 200 years, and in 1768 a bonanza was struck at a depth of
-only 240 feet, from which $1,500,000 was extracted annually. And from
-1788 to 1810 the annual average was still $1,383,195. At a depth of
-1,200 feet the ore was considered too poor for extracting, and the mine
-was allowed to fill with water. Afterwards it was again opened and again
-paid immensely by working the almost inexhaustible quantities of
-low-grade ore.
-
-The Veta Grande, at Zacatecas, which from 1548 to 1832 yielded
-$660,000,000, occurs in propalite, as does the Comstock, and has a
-similar structure, the vein branching out toward the surface, and
-dipping at an angle of forty-five degrees. It is, however, much smaller
-than the Comstock. It averages only about thirty-three feet, and eighty
-feet is its greatest width. In the upper part the ore was found
-concentrated in chimneys, but at depth it was found to be distributed
-through nearly the whole width of the vein. At first this low grade
-material could not be made to pay, but since it has been profitably
-worked and the bullion product has reached a high figure. Scores of such
-examples may be found in all silver-producing countries, as chronicled
-by Humboldt, Ward, Von Cotta, and others.
-
-Even when no more large deposits of rich ore are to be found on the
-Comstock, there are immense and almost inexhaustible areas of low-grade
-ore upon which to fall back. In working these small bonanzas are sure to
-be encountered—scattered plums in the pudding—which will assist in
-sending up the average. New processes for working and concentrating ores
-are constantly being discovered, new methods in mining are being
-introduced, and new labor-saving machinery is almost daily being
-invented. Water-power, steam, compressed air, and electricity are fast
-taking the place of muscle. Each year machinery guided by mind is
-lessening the work to be done by mere power of muscle. Already the cost
-of milling has been greatly reduced, as has the cost of transporting
-ores and the cost of wood, lumber, and mining timbers. Present expenses
-will shortly be still further reduced.
-
-
- TOWNS OF WESTERN NEVADA.
-
-
- Virginia City.
-
-Virginia City having been sufficiently well described in connection with
-the Comstock Lode, it now remains to briefly mention the other towns of
-Western Nevada. These all lie near the Sierras within a space of
-territory forty-four miles long and twenty-five miles wide—under the
-“eaves” of the mountains.
-
-
- Gold Hill.
-
-The town of Gold Hill was originally about one mile south of Virginia
-City—a mile south of where silver was first struck in the Ophir Mine.
-Buildings now unite the two towns. The boundary line between the two
-places is on the ridge called the “Divide,” but at that point there is
-no break in the rows of buildings on the streets. Gold Hill is built
-along the deep and narrow gorge that forms the head of Gold Canyon. From
-the north line on the Divide it straggles down the hill and along down
-the canyon for a distance of about two miles—almost down to Silver City
-indeed, the main business street following what was formerly the channel
-of the ravine.
-
-There were houses and settlers in Gold Hill before there were either in
-Virginia City, therefore it is the older town. Here it was that the
-Comstock Lode was first struck—though not the silver ore—by “Old
-Virginia” (John Bishop) and others, who were prospecting for placer
-mines. The town is 6,000 feet above the level of the sea, and, being
-shut in on the east and west sides by hills, it is always two or three
-degrees warmer than Virginia, 1,000 feet above on the mountain-side.
-
-The first miners at Gold Hill were really at work in a “chimney” of the
-Comstock, a little hill sometimes called “Gold Hill proper,” to
-distinguish the hill from the town. Much gold was taken out of the top
-of this chimney, and at depth it yielded many millions in silver.
-Although scores of millions have been taken out of the vein beneath the
-foundations of the town, it is still yielding its millions, and still
-new ore bodies are being developed in the great vein.
-
-Under the town are situated the world-famous Crown Point, Belcher,
-Yellow Jacket, Imperial, Kentuck, Confidence, and other mines, while
-farther down the canyon (under Lower Gold Hill) are the Overman, Alta,
-Benton, Justice, and several other well-known mines. The mining works in
-the town are in every respect first-class and are lighted with electric
-lamps. In the town are many fine buildings, both public and private.
-There is a handsome Catholic Church, and the High School building is one
-of the best buildings of the kind in the State. The Miners’ Union have a
-commodious hall on Main Street, and the other societies and orders have
-fine halls. Conspicuous among the private residences of the town is that
-of U. S. Senator J. P. Jones—the “Jones mansion,” as it is familiarly
-called. The town has an abundant supply of water (from the Virginia and
-Gold Hill Water Company’s works), and is well supplied with fire
-hydrants; it also has electrical lights. In 1878 the population was
-about 8,000, but it is now less than half that number. About the town
-are many handsome private grounds. Shade and ornamental trees begin to
-abound, and to the north, towering hundreds of feet above the town, are
-picturesque castellated piles of bare granite rocks. The Virginia and
-Truckee Railroad passes through the town.
-
-
- Silver City.
-
-Silver City is situated on Gold Canyon, a short distance below Lower
-Gold Hill. The two towns are separated by a rugged ridge of porphyritic
-rock, through which is a pass only three or four rods wide, known as the
-Devil’s Gate. About and below Silver City much gravel mining was done by
-the Johntowners in the early days. It was at Silver City that the first
-silver mill (Paul’s Pioneer) was built. It had a newspaper—the _Washoe
-Times_—before a newspaper was published in Virginia, the _Territorial
-Enterprise_ being then (1860) published in Carson City. At one time it
-had many big silver mills and promised to be the big town of the State;
-but the tide turned and all crowded in about the big mines at Virginia
-City. The town contains at present a population of only about 600. There
-is a fine public-school building, church, Miners’ Union Hall, and many
-handsome and comfortable dwellings, with an adequate supply of saloons,
-stores, and shops.
-
-About the town are an immense number of small veins of gold-bearing
-quartz that pay from the surface down. Nearly every head of a family in
-the town has his own mine, and when he wants money he shoulders his
-pick, goes out to his mine, and digs it, as a farmer in the East digs a
-“mess” of potatoes. Of late some large veins have been opened up in and
-about the town—as the Oest, Hawood, and others—and Silver City bids fair
-soon to become a busy mining center. The people have lived off their
-home mines for thirty years, and constitute the most thoroughly
-independent mining community to be found in Nevada.
-
-
- Dayton.
-
-Dayton, the county seat of Lyon County, lies five miles below Silver
-City, on the Carson River, at the mouth of Gold Canyon. The beginning of
-this town was a log building, erected as a dwelling and trading-post by
-John McMarlin, in the fall of 1849. Being on the overland wagon road
-passing over the Sierras by the Placerville route, there was a good deal
-of trade with incoming immigrants, as well as with the miners, who soon
-began to earn from $8.00 to $12 a day in the gravel bank and bars of
-Gold Canyon. In 1856, about fifty Chinamen came over the mountains and
-began mining on the lower part of the canyon, working over the banks and
-bars left by the white miners. In 1858, nearly 200 Chinamen were at work
-in the canyon from its mouth up toward Johntown. These had their
-shanties about McMarlin’s store, and the place took the name of
-“Chinatown,” by which name it was known at the time of the discovery of
-silver.
-
-In 1861 an attempt was made (many whites having then settled there) to
-give the place the name of “Nevada City.” This did not take, as there
-was already a Nevada City in California, and for a time the town was
-called “Mineral Rapids,” but this finally gave way to the present name
-of Dayton. The place grew apace, it being then expected that nearly all
-the ore of the Comstock would be worked at and near the town in mills
-driven by water-power. This hope was not realized, though several fine
-mills were built near the town. It had in 1878 a population of about
-1,200, and has since held its own very well. Though not a very large
-town, it has always been a very pleasant and flourishing one.
-
-The Carson and Colorado Railroad passes through the town, and from this
-a branch built in 1888 extends down the river to the Rock Point Mill.
-Here (at Dayton) is to be the scene of the operations of the Carson
-River Dredging Company, an Eastern incorporation headed by Dr. J. H.
-Rae. The object is to pump up from the bottom of the Carson River the
-millions in gold and silver, amalgam, and quicksilver, washed into the
-river and lost with the tailings running from the many mills. No doubt
-the “millions” found their way into the river, but whether they can be
-brought out of its bottom by means of a big suction pump remains to be
-seen. It is the universal wish that the dredger may prove a success. All
-will be in readiness to try it this season on a large scale.
-
-Dayton contains good public buildings of all kinds required, both county
-and town, has several mills, and many handsome private residences,
-surrounded with gardens and fruit and shade trees. In summer the place
-is completely embowered.
-
-The acid works of J. M. Douglass & Co. manufacture daily two tons of
-sulphuric acid. The sulphur used is a native product of Nevada, and is
-brought from the mine in Humboldt County at a cost of $40 a ton. Dayton
-is surrounded with a fine agricultural and grazing region. A
-narrow-gauge railroad five miles long runs down the river from the
-Douglass Mill to a large tailings reservoir.
-
-
- Sutro.
-
-Sutro is a town laid off at the mouth of the Sutro Tunnel by Adolph
-Sutro. Mr. Sutro claimed that his town would kill Virginia City, as all
-the reduction works would be located there, and all the miners would
-reside there, passing to and from their work through the tunnel. As
-there would no longer be any need of anyone remaining in Virginia, the
-place would be given up to bats and owls—coyotes would sit upon the peak
-of Mount Davidson and “bay the moon.” Believing Mr. Sutro to have got
-hold of the mantle of some ancient financial prophet, many persons were
-induced to flee the “wrath to come” (bats, owls and coyotes), and settle
-down at the mouth of the tunnel. There was quite a brisk little town
-there for a few years, but when the tunnel was completed and the miners
-discharged Sutro’s “bats and owls” came home to roost—they found no rest
-for the soles of their feet at Virginia. Once the men who had been
-engaged in driving the tunnel went away, there was nothing more to make
-or keep up a town than at any other point along the edge of the valley;
-for the big reduction works promised by Mr. Sutro were never built.
-
-
- Carson City.
-
-Carson City is the county seat of Ormsby County and the capital of
-Nevada. It is situated in Eagle Valley, immediately east of the
-high-timbered hills forming the eastern base of the main range of the
-Sierra Nevada Mountains. Unlike the majority of Nevada towns, it has a
-dry, level plain for its site. The city was laid out in 1858 by Major
-Ormsby and others. The streets conform to the cardinal points of the
-compass. There being no lack of level land, the streets were made
-sixty-six and eighty feet wide. Previous to 1858 there was no town where
-Carson now stands, and only one house, which was at Eagle Ranch, which
-ranch gave its name to the valley in which it was situated. Afterwards
-this ranch became better known as King’s Ranch.
-
-Carson City grew rapidly from the start, for it was not only pleasantly
-situated, but also occupied an advantageous position as a center of
-trade. For several years in its infancy it derived a good deal of
-benefit from its trade with the great immigrant trains that yearly
-rattled in across the “plains;” besides, it was a halting-place for
-people rushing to the silver mines from the California side of the
-mountains. In nearly all directions it is surrounded by excellent
-agricultural and grazing lands. With the regular and scientific opening
-of the mines Carson became the headquarters of an enormous trade in
-wood, lumber, and mining timbers, a business it still retains. The city
-has at present a population of about 4,100.
-
-Carson contains many fine and costly buildings, both public and private.
-The pride of the city is the State Capitol. It is the most striking
-structure in the place. The building is handsome architecturally, being
-well proportioned in all its parts. It also has a very substantial
-appearance, as it is constructed of stone throughout. This stone is a
-beautiful, fine-grained sandstone obtained from a quarry at the State
-prison, about a mile and a half east of the town. The building was
-erected in 1870. The Capitol occupies the center of a square several
-acres in extent. This square is surrounded with a handsome and
-substantial iron fence. The grounds are handsomely laid out and well
-kept. They are well swarded and contain a great variety of shade and
-ornamental trees, shrubbery, and flowering plants. The whole is a credit
-to the State.
-
-The U. S. Branch Mint building is a large, substantial, and imposing
-structure. It is also of stone, from the State Prison quarry. The
-building was completed in July, 1869. It has done and is still doing a
-great deal of work.
-
-The State Orphans’ Home is a large and well-arranged building with a
-small farm in connection therewith. In this institution a great number
-of orphan children from all sections of the State are cared for. The
-home is governed in a paternal way, and the children are well clothed,
-well fed, and well educated both morally and intellectually.
-
-The town contains several churches of leading denominations, excellent
-school-houses, and a number of halls of various societies, orders, and
-lodges. There are half a dozen fine hotels, many large fire-proof stores
-and business houses, with the usual proportion of neat and attractive
-retail shops of all kinds, saloons, and the like.
-
-The buildings of the Virginia and Truckee Railroad Company are a
-noticeable feature of the town. The depot buildings are commodious and
-conveniently arranged, and are always kept neatly painted and in good
-repair. In the town they have an immense car shop. The building is in
-large part constructed of iron. In it are a foundry, machine shop,
-roundhouse, and car manufactory.
-
-Carson has a large box factory and other manufacturing establishments of
-several kinds. The place has both electrical lights and gas. It is well
-supplied with pure mountain water, which is led through all the streets
-under a heavy pressure. The town site has sufficient slope to the
-eastward to afford good drainage. The city supports two daily
-newspapers, the _Appeal_ and _Tribune_, and has a good theater.
-
-A fine large brick building has this year (1889) been erected in the
-town by the United States Government. It will contain several public
-offices. It fills a gap in the center of the town that long stood as a
-staring vacancy—supplies a “long-felt want.”
-
-There are pleasant drives in all directions from Carson, with smooth and
-level roads. A mile west of town are Shaw’s Hot Springs, with every
-convenience for either bathing or swimming. The swimming bath is 60 by
-24 feet, 4½ feet deep at one end and 5½ at the other.
-
-All visitors to the town of a scientific turn of mind will wish to visit
-the State prison and grounds, situated a mile and a half east of the
-place. A portion of the building now occupied as a State prison was
-built for a hotel by Col. Abe Curry (of whom the State purchased the
-property), and was of stone, two stories high, 32 feet wide, and 100
-feet long. Colonel Curry also excavated and walled up the magnificent
-swimming bath now connected with the prison and fed by warm springs.
-
-In the floor of the quarry, beneath from fifteen to twenty feet of
-strata of sandstone, is a stratum of fine-grained stone that is filled
-with the tracks of all manner of animals and birds, and even one set of
-tracks supposed to have been made by some prehistoric giant of the human
-species. There are tracks of elephants, horses, deer, lions, tigers,
-panthers, giant cranes, and all manner of creatures. The tracks supposed
-to be human present the appearance of having been made by a large man
-wearing moccasins of the undressed hide of some animal. All the tracks
-tend toward a common point, which must have been a spring or small lake.
-
-Omnibuses run to the Hot Springs and the State prison, and stages leave
-for Lake Tahoe and Genoa on the arrival of trains.
-
-There are several lumber flumes near Carson that are worthy of
-inspection.
-
-
- Empire City.
-
-This town is situated on the banks of the Carson River, three and a half
-miles east of Carson, and on the line of the Virginia and Truckee
-Railroad. Empire is pre-eminently a milling town. Here are located the
-Mexican, Morgan, Brunswick, and Merrimac Mills, all first-class silver
-reduction works. The town is in Ormsby County, and contains about 700
-inhabitants. Each year thousands of cords of wood floated down the
-Carson River from Alpine County, California, are taken out here.
-Formerly no fewer than 150,000 cords of wood came down to this town in
-the drives of a single season. On account of these wood drives Empire
-was jockularly termed the “seaport” of Nevada. The wood “drives” and the
-landing of them for a time each year gave employment to a great number
-of men and teams.
-
-The town contains a number of handsome residences and a few good public
-buildings.
-
-
- Genoa.
-
-Genoa is the oldest town in Nevada, and is the place where the first
-white settlement was made. These settlers were Mormons, and they
-established a station there as early as 1848. For this reason the place
-was long known as “Mormon Station.” For several years most of the
-settlers in the valley and about the town were Mormons. Genoa is the
-county seat of Douglas County, and is situated in Carson Valley, at a
-point about 13 miles south of Carson City. Although in a beautiful
-valley it lies close in against the Sierras, at an altitude of 4,335
-feet above the level of the sea. To the westward the main timbered
-Sierra Nevada Mountain Range rises to a great height, while above its
-ridge tower many bald, granite peaks. Among these (to the southward)
-Job’s Peak rises to the height of 10,639 feet.
-
-The town contains a fine court-house, and other handsome public
-buildings, as school-houses, churches, and halls. There are in the place
-several good, substantial stores, and business houses and shops. There
-are many neat dwellings and cottages surrounded with fine gardens and
-grounds. In the town is published the Genoa _Courier_, a sprightly
-weekly paper devoted to the interests of the people of the town and
-county. In this town was first published (in 1859) the _Territorial
-Enterprise_, the pioneer newspaper of Nevada. The paper was moved to
-Carson in 1860, and thence in a short time to Virginia City, where it
-was soon made a daily, and where it has ever since been published as
-such.
-
-Fine ranches lie up and down the valley. A mile and a half south of the
-town are Walley’s famous hot springs, of which more particular mention
-will be found in another place. Lake Tahoe forms part of the western
-boundary of Douglas, and both Glenbrook and Cave Rock are in the county.
-The Carson River passes near Genoa and through the heart of the county.
-Genoa contains about 1,000 inhabitants.
-
-
- Reno.
-
-Reno, on the line of the Central Pacific Railroad, and pleasantly
-situated on the banks of the beautiful Truckee River, is the county seat
-of Washoe County. Reno began to be a town in 1868, and under the
-influence of the Central Pacific Railroad, it grew very rapidly. The
-town at once became the shipping-point of all goods, machinery, and
-supplies destined for the Comstock Mines, and for all parts of Storey,
-Lyon, Ormsby, and Douglas Counties; also for Susanville, Honey Lake
-Valley, and a great scope of country to the northward. In the days
-before the completion of the Virginia and Truckee Railroad, Reno was
-filled with teams and stage coaches. The place was a sort of teamsters’
-paradise. This was good for the town, but it could not be expected to
-last forever. The present ambition of the place is to become a railroad
-and manufacturing center. It has the Virginia and Truckee Road leading
-southward, while to the northward the Nevada and California is fast
-advancing to completion.
-
-Reno is the center of one of the finest agricultural and grazing
-sections in the State, and is a point for the shipment to California of
-immense numbers of beef cattle. Although there are in the town large and
-fine reduction works for smelting refractory ores, and two flouring
-mills, it may be said that hardly a commencement has been made toward
-the utilization of the immense water-power afforded by the Truckee River
-at and near the town.
-
-Here is located the Nevada Insane Asylum, the building and grounds of
-which do credit to the town and State. The State University is also now
-located at Reno (having been removed from Elko), and is in a more
-flourishing condition than ever before. The buildings, and grounds, and
-teachers are all that could be desired. This institution has recently
-been made an Agricultural Experiment Station. Here is located Bishop
-Whitakers’ excellent school for young ladies, and also a similar school,
-first-class, in charge of the Sisters of Charity. There are, besides,
-five public schools. The town is well supplied with churches and public
-buildings of all kinds adequate to present requirements.
-
-The town contains many first-class fire-proof business houses, five
-depots and railroad buildings, many attractive retail stores and shops,
-excellent and commodious hotels, “palatial” saloons, and handsome and
-comfortable private residences. It is lighted with electrical lamps, has
-good water works, and almost everything else that its public-spirited
-citizens have thought it necessary to provide. It has two excellent
-daily newspapers, the _Gazette_ and _Journal_, and a first-class
-theater. This spring (1889) there has been in the place a boom in town
-property, and much building is in progress. Not only is the town on the
-highway of the nations of the world leading East and West, but is on the
-highway of the Pacific Coast leading North and South, along the great
-range of the Sierra Nevada Mountains, from Oregon to Arizona. The
-present population is estimated at 5,000 souls.
-
-
- OTHER TOWNS IN WASHOE COUNTY.
-
-It may be worth while for the satisfaction of persons traveling
-southward from Reno on the Virginia and Truckee, to mention some once
-promising towns in Washoe County that now only exist as sleepy hamlets:—
-
-
- Washoe City.
-
-Washoe City.—This place is situated at the North end of Washoe Valley,
-sixteen miles south of Reno. It was formerly the county seat of Washoe
-County, and contained about seven hundred inhabitants. There was in the
-town a substantial brick courthouse, Masonic and Odd Fellows’ Hall,
-Methodist Church, public school building, good hotels, and many stores,
-shops, and saloons.
-
-
- Ophir.
-
-Ophir.—This town, three miles south of Washoe City, on the west side of
-Washoe Lake, at one time contained two or three hundred inhabitants.
-Here was situated a big seventy-stamp mill erected by the Ophir Mining
-Company at a cost of over $500,000. To reach this mill with ores from
-the Ophir Mine a bridge a mile in length was built across the north end
-of Washoe Lake, at a cost of $75,000. The ores were amalgamated by the
-barrel or Freyburg process, and everything was on a grand scale, the
-buildings covering over an acre of ground.
-
-
- Franktown.
-
-Franktown.—This town, one mile south of Ophir, was originally settled by
-Mormons (about the same time of the settlement at Genoa). Mormon
-fashion, it was laid off in four-acre lots, and small streams of water
-ran through all the streets. Here John Dall had a thirty-stamp water
-mill, and there were several other mills on Franktown Creek. The town
-had over two hundred inhabitants in 1869.
-
-At one time there were in operation in Washoe County ten mills (four or
-five near Washoe City), having an aggregate of 281 stamps, but the
-completion of the Virginia and Truckee Railroad to the Carson River was
-sudden death to all the mills, and killed all the towns. All the ore
-went to the river.
-
-
- Wadsworth.
-
-Wadsworth, on the Central Pacific, thirty-four miles east of Reno, is a
-bright and growing little town. It is situated at the “Big Bend” of the
-Truckee River, a place well known to those who toiled across the plains
-in the early days. The place contains about 600 inhabitants. In it are
-the machine shops, round-house, and freight depot of the Central
-Pacific, and many good and substantial buildings, both public and
-private. Before the Carson and Colorado Railroad was built, Wadsworth
-was a shipping-point for many mining towns and camps to the southward.
-It still has a very fair trade.
-
-
- Verdi.
-
-Verdi, eleven miles west of Reno, on the Central Pacific, is a pleasant
-little lumbering town on the Truckee River, at the eastern base of the
-Sierras. It is a town of saw-mills and of manufactories of articles made
-of wood. In the way of mills and machinery Verdi contains a large amount
-of valuable property.
-
-
- LAKE TAHOE.
-
-
- Surrounding Objects of Interest.
-
-All visitors to the Pacific Coast who are lovers of the beautiful and
-picturesque in natural scenery, will endeavor to spend some time at Lake
-Tahoe. Taking into consideration the surroundings, there is nowhere in
-the world a more grandly beautiful mountain lake. The lake lies between
-the eastern and western summit ridges of the main ridge of the Sierra
-Nevada Mountains, at an elevation of 6,247 feet above the level of the
-sea. Its length is a little over twenty-one miles, and its width about
-twelve miles. Roughly it has the form of a parallelogram, lying nearly
-north and south, about one-third in Nevada and the remainder in
-California. It has an area of 204 square miles, as is shown by
-measurements made in four places across its width, and longitudinally
-(north and south) in three places. Its greatest depth is 1,800 feet.
-
-It is shut in and surrounded on all sides by mountains that rise to a
-height of from 2,000 to 5,000 feet above its surface. The lake evidently
-occupies an extinct volcanic crater of great size. Soundings show in the
-bottom a deep channel or crevice which extends nearly the whole length
-of the lake in a north and south direction. In this the depth is
-everywhere from 1,500 to 1,700 feet. The deepest spot (1,800 feet) is
-toward the south end of the lake, in front of Mount Tallac. The water is
-of great purity and crystal clearness, and never freezes.
-
-The lake receives the waters of fifty-one creeks and brooks, the largest
-of which is the Upper Truckee, which falls in at the south end. It also
-receives the aqueous contributions of almost innumerable ravines,
-gorges, and canyons. It drains an area of over 500 square miles,
-composed largely of lofty mountains on which the snow falls to a depth
-of many feet, and by the melting of which the numerous streams are fed.
-There are also many living springs on the sides of the surrounding
-mountains, with a great number (both hot and cold) along the shores of
-the lake, and doubtless a much larger number deep beneath its surface.
-The only outlet of the lake is the Truckee River, at its northwest
-corner. This outlet, which forms the head of the Truckee River, is fifty
-feet in width, has an average depth of five feet, and a velocity of six
-feet a second, making the discharge 123,120,000 cubic feet in
-twenty-four hours, in early spring when the snow in the mountains is
-rapidly melting.
-
-Since it was first seen by white men the lake has been given several
-different names. Tahoe is popularly supposed to be a Washoe Indian word,
-that means “big water.” Some say the word means “deep water,” “clear
-water,” “elevated water,” or “bright water.” The Washoe Indians
-themselves say they know nothing about the word. Fremont saw it in 1844,
-and simply called it “Mountain Lake.” It was once mapped as “Lake
-Bonpland,” and in 1859 was mapped by Dr. Henry De Groot as “Lake De
-Groot.” It was also once known as “Lake Bigler,” being so named by some
-in honor of a Democratic Governor of California, and the name is still
-used by some of the strait-laced among the Democracy. Tahoe, whatever it
-may mean, is a name now so universally acknowledged and so firmly fixed
-that it is not likely that it will ever be supplanted by any other.
-
-Lake Tahoe is surrounded on all sides by mountains that have an
-elevation of from 3,000 to 5,000 feet above its surface. Mount Tallac
-towers to a height of 11,000 feet above the level of the sea; Pyramid
-Peak, 10,000; Monument Peak, 10,000; Rubicon Peaks, fifteen miles west
-of the lake, 9,284; Job’s Peak, 10,637; Sand Mountain, back of
-Rowland’s, 8,747 feet; and Bald Mountain, Mount Pluto, Mount Anderson,
-Old Hat, Mount Ellis, Barker’s Peak, Table Mountain, the Cliffs, the
-Needles, and many other peaks, rise to a height of over 8,000 feet. On
-all sides great old peaks stand about gazing down forever upon their
-reflected images in the lake below. It is a grand convocation of
-mountains, a convention of granite peaks, gray and ancient. In a circle
-about the lake stand pine-clad mountains, snow-clad mountains, and
-unclad mountains that are merely stupendous piles of granite—granite
-cathedrals piled up by nature for the delectation of those of her
-votaries that ever gladly worship at her shrine.
-
-In places towering rocks stand quite near the water, and around the
-shores are so many bays and inlets, so many jutting points and tongues
-of land, that there is a constant change of views—an endless succession
-of either grand or picturesque effects. A single cliff—as Shakespeare
-Rock—seen from different points and distances, takes a dozen different
-shapes, and so of all prominent capes and caves. The distance round the
-shores of the lake is 144 miles, and may be said to represent that many
-miles of landscape panorama of unrivaled beauty and grandeur. Volumes
-have already been written descriptive of the wonders and the beauties of
-Lake Tahoe, and innumerable volumes will still be written as the ages
-pass, yet to comprehend the place it must be seen and _felt_.
-
-It speaks well for Lake Tahoe that its beauties are appreciated and
-prized by persons living near by in California and Nevada, and that it
-is a favorite place of summer resort with the people everywhere on the
-Pacific Coast. In the Bible it is said: “A prophet is not without honor,
-save in his own country and in his own house,” and the same may
-generally be said of celebrated natural objects, but it is different in
-the case of Tahoe—the grand and picturesque scenery of the lake is
-admired and esteemed at home. It is not only looked upon as being a
-great sanitarium of the Pacific Coast, but also as a grand store-house
-of all the delights of mountain scenery. In Tahoe the careworn and
-debilitated find a cure for both mind and body.
-
-The water of the lake is as cold and pure as that of the best living
-springs, and it possesses wonderful charms—almost the transparency of
-the atmosphere. Near the shore, when shallow, it is of an emerald green
-here; in deep water, in the sunshine, it is of an ultramarine tinge, and
-in the shade an indigo blue. Tossing, distant, deep water in certain
-lights assumes tints of purple and violet, with beautiful flashes of
-ruby. Seated in a boat on the lake in a calm, one may see the stones and
-pebbles at the bottom, with trout cruising about, where the sounding
-line shows seventy-five feet of water. The whole dome of the sky, with
-every fleecy cloud, is there perfectly reflected. We are midway between
-the heavens above and the heavens below, gently rocking upon the waving
-veil of blue that separates the two firmaments.
-
-It is difficult to swim in the lake. Some have supposed this to be on
-account of the great elevation and reduced atmospheric pressure on the
-water, rendering the lake less buoyant than bodies of fresh water at sea
-level. This, however, is a mistake. Water is only very slightly
-compressible. The great purity of the water of course renders it less
-dense than that of lakes holding minerals in solution, but it is the
-coldness of the water and the variety of the atmosphere that render
-swimming difficult and laborious.
-
-The bodies of persons drowned in the lake (unless very near shore) are
-never again seen. The bodies of no fewer than ten or twelve white men
-are known to lie at the bottom of the lake; and no doubt among them lie
-the skeletons of not a few Indians. The lake is in some respects
-treacherous and dangerous. It is subject to sudden and heavy squalls.
-Fierce gusts of wind at times rush down the big canyons, and, striking
-the water, cause it to boil like a pot. These squalls are liable to
-capsize a sail-boat. Unless an experienced boatman be of the party, it
-is best to have the sail in hand, that it may be let go in a moment. The
-squalls generally plunge down the canyons and gorges on the west side of
-the lake.
-
-The route of the passenger steamers round the lake is near the shores.
-These are in some places rocky and in others level. In the mountain
-gorges and on the ridges are pines and various other evergreen trees,
-but down near the edge of the water are small groves of quaking asp,
-willow, and other trees of deciduous foliage.
-
-At the Hot Springs is a good hotel, bathing houses, and other
-accommodations. At Tahoe City will also be found good hotels, boats,
-fishing tackle, and all such little sporting supplies as the visitor is
-likely to require. McKinney’s, at Sugar Pine Point, on the west side of
-the lake, is a popular place of resort and possesses many attractions.
-At Glenbrook, on the east side of the lake, are good hotel
-accommodations, and there may also be had boats, fishing tackle, and all
-ordinary supplies. In many charming nooks and valleys around the shores
-are hotels and cottages for the accommodation of visitors.
-
-
- Emerald Bay.
-
-Emerald Bay.—One of the most beautiful spots about Lake Tahoe is Emerald
-Bay. It is the gem of the place. The bay is situated at the south end of
-the lake. It is 2½ miles long and 1¼ wide, nearly as large as Donner
-Lake. The entrance to it is through a channel less than 200 yards in
-width, but containing a depth of water sufficient to float a man-of-war.
-Emerald Bay is surrounded by grand and picturesque mountains, the peaks
-of which are 9,000 feet above the level of the sea, and some of which
-rise precipitously to a height of 4,000 feet above the surface of the
-bay. The water is nearly always of a beautiful emerald green. In the bay
-is a rocky and romantic little island of about three acres, on which is
-a handsome little cottage. On the island is a tomb excavated in the rock
-by an old boatman known as “Captain Dick.” Captain Dick fondly hoped
-that this tomb would be his last resting-place, but his body lies at the
-bottom of the lake. In October, 1873, his boat was capsized in a furious
-squall, and Captain Dick was never seen again.
-
-Emerald Bay, with 519 acres of surrounding land, belongs to the estate
-of the late Dr. P. T. Kirby, of Virginia City, who at the time of his
-death was about to build a fine and commodious hotel. Before his death,
-however, he had built over a dozen neat cottages. Heretofore, owing to
-lack of accommodations there, many tourists have failed to visit this
-bay, the most beautiful nook about the lake, but it will now at once
-become a favorite haunt of all lovers of the grand, picturesque, and
-beautiful. The island is a little gem, and has about it a style that
-gives it almost the appearance of being a toy constructed by a landscape
-gardener. It has been very appropriately named “Coquette Island.” It
-rises to a height of about 200 feet above the surface of the bay. At the
-south end of the bay are the “Lovers’ Falls.” These falls are high up on
-the side of a steep and rocky mountain. They are on a small creek which
-makes many leaps down perpendicular terraces of rock. The falls are
-supposed to have been the favorite tryst of a Digger chief and his
-Washoe lady-love.
-
-
- Fallen Leaf Lake.
-
-Fallen Leaf Lake.—This lake lies one mile south of Lake Tahoe, and about
-three miles south of Emerald Bay. It is a beautiful sheet of water two
-miles in length and a mile in width. It has an outlet into Lake Tahoe.
-
-
- Silver Lake.
-
-Silver Lake.—Silver Lake is a perfect little beauty in its way, but is
-seldom visited; as it lies high on the side of a mountain which is
-covered with chaparral. It is about half as large as Fallen Leaf Lake,
-from which it is distant two miles in a northwest direction.
-
-
- Cornelian Bay.
-
-Cornelian Bay.—This bay lies north of Tahoe City, and has a smooth,
-pebbly beach, where are found agates, cornelians, and jasper of several
-colors. To sail along the shore the distance from Tahoe City is seven
-miles.
-
-
- Agate Bay.
-
-Agate Bay.—Agate Bay is a place similar to that just described. It lies
-a short distance west of the Hot Springs.
-
-
- Crystal Bay.
-
-Crystal Bay.—This beautiful cove forms the extreme north end of Lake
-Tahoe. It lies northeast of Hot Springs.
-
-
- Shakespeare Rock.
-
-Shakespeare Rock.—In sailing round the lake from Tahoe City to Glenbrook
-several picturesque rocky points, studded with stately pines, will be
-seen, also Shakespeare Rock, which is a cliff towering high above the
-level of the lake. On the face of this cliff are seen ridges, fissures,
-and patches of color which at a distance resolve themselves into the
-likeness of the face of the immortal dramatist.
-
-
- Cave Rock.
-
-Cave Rock is passed before reaching Glenbrook. It is about 300 feet in
-height and seen from the deck of the steamer, towers upward like the
-castle of some “Blue Beard” giant of the Sierras. It has in its face a
-yawning cavern some 80 feet in depth. In this dark cave one might
-suppose the giant to live.
-
-
- Glenbrook.
-
-Glenbrook is on the east side of the lake near a large cave. Here are
-several large saw-mills, owned by Yerington, Bliss & Co., which
-manufacture an immense quantity of all kinds of lumber. The mills are
-furnished with electrical lights. The mill company have here a
-narrow-gauge railroad nine miles in length, which carries their lumber
-and timber to the flumes at the top of the mountain (Eastern Summit),
-whence it is floated down to the valley near Carson City.
-
-
- Cascade Mountain.
-
-Cascade Mountain, at the south end of the lake, is 9,500 feet in height.
-Near it are beautiful cascades, and from the top are to be seen a number
-of small lakes, and much wild and grand mountain scenery.
-
-
- Rubicon Springs.
-
-Rubicon Springs, which lie just over the Western Summit of the Sierras,
-are easily reached by a good stage road from McKinneys’. Here, on the
-headwaters of the Rubicon River, is some of the most charming scenery to
-be found anywhere in the mountains. There are innumerable nooks, in
-which the disposition and proportions of water, foliage, and rugged
-granite rocks is such that all would seem to have been arranged for the
-special delectation of the artist and the lover of nature. The water of
-the springs at this place possesses wonderful curative powers. No
-invalid ever left them with a feeling of disappointment, however highly
-they might have been recommended to him.
-
-Besides the places named there are scores of nooks and corners, cliffs,
-streams, fountains, canyons, and gorges that are not even honored with a
-name, which in almost any other part of the world would be lauded to the
-skies, and which would attract swarms of visitors from great distances.
-There is not a spot about the lake that would not astound the dweller in
-the prairies of the West were he placed before it.
-
-
- Routes to Lake Tahoe.
-
-
- THE ROUTE FROM TRUCKEE.
-
-Persons in California, or tourists bound East, who wish to visit Tahoe
-will leave the Central Pacific at Truckee. The distance to the lake is
-but fourteen miles, over a good stage-road, which passes along up the
-Truckee River, amid grand and beautiful scenery. High, rocky, and
-picturesque mountains wall in the gorge through which winds the river
-and the road, and on all sides are groves of stately pines. In places
-where the walls recede from the stream are charming little nooks,
-valleys, and meadows. Indeed, at every turn in road and river new
-beauties are disclosed.
-
-There are fresh surprises on every furlong of the road from Truckee to
-Tahoe City, which town is situated at the outlet of the lake which forms
-the Truckee River. At Tahoe City will be found good hotels and
-accommodations of all kinds. Here, too, will be found in waiting a
-steamer to carry the visitor round the lake to Glenbrook, passing near
-the principal points of interest on the way, or to make the circuit of
-the lake. While to follow every projection and indentation of the
-shore-line would require a sail of 144 miles, a circuit of about 75
-miles carries the visitor sufficiently near for a satisfactory view of
-the more charming and picturesque points.
-
-Below are given the distances from Tahoe City to the principal points
-around the lake on the route usually taken by the steamers:—
-
-
- Distances from Tahoe City.
-
- Miles.
-
- Tahoe City to McKinney’s 7
- Sugar-Pine Point 9
- Emerald Bay 16
- Tallac Mountain and Hotel 20
- Rowlands 24
- Glenbrook _via_ Rowlands 34
- Glenbrook, direct 14
- Cornelian Bay 7½
- Observatory 2½
- Hot Springs 10
- Round the lake 75
-
-On his arrival at Glenbrook, the tourist that came _via_ Truckee will
-find stages in waiting to carry him to Carson City, where he will take
-the Virginia and Truckee Railroad to the Central Pacific at Reno.
-
-
- The Route from Reno.
-
-The traveler from the East who wishes to view the wonders of Tahoe in
-passing across the continent, or to see the Comstock Silver Mines, will
-leave the Central Pacific at Reno, allowing his baggage to go on to his
-point of destination in California. The Virginia and Truckee will then
-take him to Carson City, a distance of thirty-one miles to the
-southward, passing through an interesting region all the way.
-
-At Carson stages for Lake Tahoe will be found in waiting. The distance
-from Carson to Tahoe is fourteen miles. The road is fine, and the
-mountain scenery wild and beautiful. In passing up Clear Creek Canyon,
-the tourist will travel for a considerable distance alongside the big
-lumber flume of the Carson and Tahoe Lumber Company. This flume is in
-the shape of the letter V. It has a length of twenty-one miles. Through
-it runs a small stream of water, and a stick of timber, billet of wood,
-or piece of lumber dropped into the V-shaped trough at the summit at
-once darts away at race-horse speed, and very shortly thereafter is
-dumped at the wood and lumber yard at Carson. In one day may thus be
-sent down the flume 700 cords of wood, or 500,000 feet of mining
-timbers. Hank Monk, the famous stage-driver who for a long time drove
-over this piece of road, and who once “hurled” Horace Greeley from the
-summit of the Sierras down into Placerville, is now dead, and lies
-buried at Carson City.
-
-On arriving at Glenbrook, the traveler will find ready a steamer which
-will take him round Lake Tahoe to Tahoe City, whence he will take a
-stagecoach fourteen miles down the Truckee River to the Central Pacific,
-at the town of Truckee.
-
-
- The Town of Truckee.
-
-Truckee is situated in a heavily-timbered basin, lying between the two
-ridges, or summits, of the Sierras. In this basin is contained an area
-of over 250 square miles of as fine pine forest as is to be found in the
-mountains. The town is the center of a great and flourishing lumbering
-industry, and immense quantities of ice are each winter harvested and
-stored in the immediate vicinity. In 1883 it was estimated that the
-forests of Truckee Basin contained 5,000,000,000 feet of lumber, and
-that 50,000,000 feet might be cut every year for 100 years. The town has
-an elevation of 5,866 feet, or over a mile above the level of the sea,
-yet for eight months of the year the climate is pleasant. Where the town
-now stands was formerly “Coburn’s Station,” on the old Dutch Flat
-wagon-road. The place was named Truckee, and began to build up in 1865,
-with the construction of the Central Pacific Railroad at that point. It
-is a brisk and thriving place, and, besides its lumber and ice
-industries, has a good trade with an extensive farming and grazing
-region. It is wonderful that so large a town exists as is now seen, in
-view of the fact that since 1868 it has seven times been swept by
-terrible fires, and by two or three of these it was, in different years,
-almost wiped out of existence.
-
-
- Donner Lake.
-
-This beautiful little sheet of water is but three miles from the town of
-Truckee, and is reached by a delightful drive over a smooth and level
-road. Donner Lake is about three miles long and from a mile to a mile
-and a half wide. It is about 200 feet in depth in the deepest place, and
-lies at an elevation of 5,938 feet above the level of the sea. It has
-for feeders several sparkling trout-brooks, and has an outlet called
-Donner Creek, which is an affluent of the Truckee River. The lake is
-full of trout of the same species as are found in Lake Tahoe, with
-minnows of several kinds, known as “chubs” and “white fish.” It is a
-safe and beautiful lake on which to row or sail. As regards the matter
-of safety it may be set down as the “family lake” of the mountains—is as
-reliable and devoid of tantrums as the old “family mare.” The lake is
-surrounded with grand old mountains. Lake Ridge, to the southward, rises
-to the height of 8,234 feet, and its lower part is covered with pine and
-other evergreen trees. To the west rise huge, bare granite mountains.
-The track of the Central Pacific Railroad runs along the side of the
-ridge to the southward, and presently disappears in a tunnel under the
-bald mountains in the west. Owing to the track being covered with
-snow-sheds, passengers get only occasional glimpses of the lake.
-
-At the upper and lower ends of the lake are patches of meadow land,
-groves of pine and tamarack, and handsome clumps of willow and quaking
-asp. Donner is a favorite place of resort for camping parties from
-Nevada and California. There are grand views in all directions. Artists
-here find constant use for their sketching tools. A fine picture of the
-lake was painted by Bierstadt in 1872. He chose the month of August for
-his picture.
-
-
- The Donner Disaster.
-
-At the foot of the lake is the scene of the sufferings of the Donner
-party. The spot is marked by a tall wooden cross. At this little
-mountain-begirt lake, in October, 1846, arrived a party of emigrants
-(mostly from Illinois), under the leadership of George Donner. There
-were with the train seventy-six men, women, and children. That winter
-the snow fell a month earlier than usual, and in a single night the
-party found themselves overwhelmed, caught in a _cul-de-sac_. It was
-impossible to attempt the mountains when the snow in the lower ground
-about the lake was so deep that the wagons could not be moved; besides,
-it snowed without ceasing. In one night, when their cattle were
-scattered about, snow fell to such a depth as to completely cover and
-hide them from sight. It was then decided to build cabins and winter on
-the spot. Being short of provisions, they at once killed all the cattle
-they could find, using the hides to roof the cabins. In December all
-provisions were exhausted, and parties were sent out one after another
-to reach California and there make known the condition of those left in
-the camp. Most of those thus sent out perished, but finally one or two
-persons reached Sutter’s Fort, at Sacramento. The first relief parties
-failed, and it was not until February that a party reached the starving
-people of the camp. These, meantime, had been reduced to such extremity
-as to cook and eat the raw hides covering their cabins and the bones
-thrown away earlier in the season. Toward the last there was at least
-one instance of cannibalism. Of the seventy-six persons but forty
-survived, some perishing in the mountains (where the snow was thirty
-feet deep) in trying to get through to California, and others dying in
-the cabins. Those found in the cabins were mere skeletons. A thick
-volume would be required to give a full account of all the sufferings
-and trials of the ill-fated Donner party. It was a disaster that shocked
-all California for years, and which created a profound sensation of
-horror and pity throughout the whole United States. The history of what
-occurred at Donner Lake that winter has never been fully written, and
-never will be, as there were happenings that the survivors were never
-willing to talk about.
-
-
- Surrounding Points of Interest.
-
-Donner Peak, to the west of the lake, a towering pile of granite, rises
-to a height of 8,154 feet above the level of the sea, and Glacial Point,
-in the same direction, is 7,708 feet in height. Fremont’s Peak—sometimes
-called Castle Peak, or Mount Stanford—towers in the northwest to the
-height of 9,237 feet above sea level. It is seen about four miles north
-of Summit Station. At this peak heads Pioneer Creek. From its granite
-pinnacle, on a clear day may be seen the Downieville Buttes, Marysville
-Buttes, the Coast Range, and many mountains and valleys in California;
-and looking eastward, Mount Davidson, the sinks of the Carson and
-Humboldt, are seen, with many other mountains and deserts. Near Summit
-are about a dozen small lakes, some of them charming both in themselves
-and in their surroundings of rocks and trees.
-
-
- Independence Lake.
-
-This beautiful lake is nineteen miles distant from Truckee, and is
-reached by stage or carriage. It is three miles long and three-quarters
-of a mile wide. The lake was named by Lola Montez (when a resident of
-Grass Valley, California) on the occasion of a visit to it on a picnic
-excursion, July 4, 1853. It is held up toward the heavens to a height of
-7,000 feet by a circle of grand old peaks. It is very deep, and in
-places has never been fathomed. Owing to its great depth, the lake is
-supposed to occupy an extinct volcanic crater, whereas Donner Lake was
-formed by a moraine deposited across the valley by a glacier. The lake
-is alive with trout of a peculiar species, a good deal resembling brook
-trout, and for which they are often sold. The surrounding scenery is as
-wildly beautiful as the imagination can picture. From the peak of Mount
-Lola, 4 miles north of the lake and 11,000 feet high, can be seen Mount
-Shasta, distant 180 miles to the northward; Mount Diablo, 140 miles
-distant; all Sacramento Valley, and scores of peaks of note in all
-directions. There is a hotel at the lake and good accommodations of all
-kinds. Bear, deer, and grouse are to be found in the chaparral, mountain
-glades, and pine forests. The lake has an outlet which is the head of
-one of the principal branches of the Little Truckee.
-
-
- Webber Lake.
-
-This lake lies twenty-five miles north of Truckee, and is reached by
-stage over a road bordered with charming scenery. The lake is circular
-in form and about a mile in diameter. It is 6,925 feet above sea-level.
-It is surrounded with mountains of graceful outline, nearly all of which
-are wooded to their tops. The deepest spot to be found measures only 80
-feet. The lake is of glacial origin. It abounds in trout—a very game
-variety, introduced nearly thirty years ago. About the lake are numerous
-attractions. About a mile south from the lake, on a tributary creek, are
-falls over 100 feet in height; a mile north is a little gem of a lake,
-with an area of 50 acres, which is called the Lake of the Woods, and
-which is 7,500 feet (nearly a mile and a half) above the level of the
-sea; near at hand is Prospect Peak, from the top of which, in a clear
-day, mountain peaks distant 300 miles may be made out, while all about
-are other tall peaks and objects of interest. Small mountain game is
-plentiful near the lake. Bear may be found by those anxious to see them
-by taking a tramp in the chaparral thickets of the higher peaks. There
-is a good hotel at the lake, yet it is a great place of resort for
-campers. Where the greatest depth of water is only 80 feet, no one is
-afraid of drowning. The lake has an outlet, which is one of the
-affluents of the Little Truckee.
-
-
- Pyramid Lake.
-
-We have now to speak of a few Nevada lakes not mentioned in connection
-with the rivers of the State. The greatest of these, and the largest
-lake between the Sierra Nevada Range and the Rocky Mountains, except
-Great Salt Lake, Utah, is Pyramid Lake. It is fed by the Truckee, the
-course of which river has already been traced, and the head of which has
-been particularly described as the outlet of Lake Tahoe. Pyramid Lake
-lies in Washoe County, on the west line of Humboldt County. The lake is
-nearly 40 miles long by from 15 to 20 miles in width, and has an
-elevation of 4,000 feet above the level of the sea. It has no outlet. It
-is the most picturesque sheet of water in all the Great Basin region,
-owing to its numerous rocky islands. As it lies off the usual lines of
-travel and traffic it is seldom visited, yet it is well worthy of the
-attention of the tourist. Pyramid Lake lies about 25 miles north of
-Wadsworth, a brisk and thriving town on the Central Pacific Railroad. It
-is at Wadsworth that the traveler by rail from the East first reaches
-the Truckee River, and is where the traveler from California takes his
-leave of the stream. At Wadsworth the river turns abruptly to the north,
-which course it holds to the lake.
-
-A vehicle for a trip to the lake can always be found at Wadsworth. The
-road lies down along the timbered banks of the river, and here and there
-will be seen the cabins of the Indians of the Pyramid Reservation. Most
-of the groves seen are of cottonwood and willow trees. The Truckee River
-has two mouths, one of which empties into Pyramid Lake and the other
-into Winnemucca Lake. The branch which feeds Pyramid Lake is only about
-one mile in length, whereas the more meandering branch, which is the
-feeder of Winnemucca Lake, has a length of six miles.
-
-Pyramid Lake contains several islands. Some of these, near the middle of
-the lake, are pyramidal in shape, and gray in color. They rise to a
-height of several hundred feet above the surface of the water, and it is
-from these natural pyramids that the lake takes its name. Far away
-toward the north end of the lake is seen a tall, slender pyramid that is
-perfectly white. Some of the isolated rocks seen are egg-shaped, and 300
-to 400 feet high. Fremont’s Pyramid is the name borne by one of the
-taller of the pyramidal rocks near the head of the lake. One of the
-largest islands contains large flocks of goats, the progeny of a few
-pairs of the animals turned loose there many years ago. The island has
-an area of about five square miles, and is well covered with vegetation,
-being less precipitous and rocky than the others. The only picturesque
-addition needed to this island is a “Crusoe” and his hut.
-
-One small, rocky island is wholly given up to rattlesnakes. It is the
-home of thousands of the venomous reptiles. They have their dens in the
-rocks, and live upon the eggs and young of water-fowl, and such small
-fish as are cast ashore.
-
-Pyramid Lake is of immense depth. No one knows its depth in the deepest
-part. At the last attempt to sound it, 600 fathoms (3,600 feet) of line
-were run out without finding bottom. Where it enters the lake the water
-of the Truckee River is as pure and sweet as where it leaves Lake Tahoe,
-yet the water of Pyramid Lake is slightly brackish. However, myriads of
-trout are found in Pyramid Lake. The Piute Indians of the Reservation
-every year catch and sell thousands of tons of trout, deriving a snug
-sum from this source. The lake never freezes, and is generally very
-rough. The Indian fishermen, however, navigate its waters at all times
-quite fearlessly, even when seated astride of a bundle of tules.
-
-
- Winnemucca Lake.
-
-This lake lies to the east of, and parallel with, Pyramid Lake, from
-which it is separated by only a single ridge of gray rock and sand. It
-lies principally in Humboldt County, though a part reaches south into
-Churchill County. The lake is now about sixty miles long, with an
-average width of twelve miles. Of late years it has been rapidly
-increasing in size, as more water has been flowing through its feeder
-than formerly. It has on the east side a high rocky ridge, like that
-which separates it from Pyramid, therefore it lies in a trough between
-two ranges of hills. Though so near to each other, the surface of the
-water in Winnemucca Lake is forty feet lower than that in Pyramid. The
-Piutes remember a time when all was one lake. Were the waters of these
-twin lakes now united they would make a lake quite as large as the great
-Salt Lake of Utah. The inlet to Winnemucca Lake contains several old
-rafts of drift-wood, which prevent a free flow of water through it. Some
-years ago a freshet lifted these rafts from the bed of the stream, and
-the water found a channel beneath them. Since that occurred Winnemucca
-Lake has been steadily increasing in size. There are many Indian
-traditions connected with these lakes, one of which is in regard to
-immense animals that once herded in the neighborhood. This seems to be a
-tradition of the elephant or mastodon. All this region was once covered
-by an inland sea of fresh water, over 200 miles in length, and 80 or 90
-miles in width.
-
-
- Washoe Lake.
-
-Washoe Lake is situated in Washoe Valley, and is seen in going by rail
-from Reno to Carson. The lake proper is about four miles long, and from
-a mile to a mile and a half wide. On the west and north extend large
-tule marshes, which at times contain a considerable depth of water. The
-lake is fed by small streams from the Sierras, and it has an outlet into
-Steamboat Creek. The lake is filled with perch and catfish, planted a
-few years ago; also contains swarms of native fish of the “chub”
-species. It is a favorite resort for anglers from Carson and the towns
-of the Comstock. At certain seasons the lake is visited by great numbers
-of ducks, geese, and other water-fowl. It is shallow, and having a muddy
-bottom, it is not a suitable sheet of water for either brook or lake
-trout. Carp, however, would flourish in its muddy depths and tule
-shallows.
-
-
- Thermal and Medicinal Springs.
-
-The hot springs of Nevada are numbered by thousands and tens of
-thousands, and scores of them in all parts of the State possess more or
-less medicinal value. Hot springs are found from the Oregon and Idaho
-lines southward to the Colorado River, and from the eastern base of the
-Sierras across the whole breadth of the State. No one has ever attempted
-to number the many warm and hot springs, and they are literally
-innumerable. Springs which would attract great attention in the Atlantic
-States, and which would be worth fortunes, here pass unknown, unnamed,
-“unhonored and unsung.” All the hot springs possess curative properties
-in the case of rheumatic and various skin diseases. Not one in a
-thousand of the springs on this side of the Sierras has been analyzed,
-for which reason the waters of only a few are used internally.
-
-
- Steamboat Springs.
-
-The most noted hot springs in the western part of Nevada are those known
-as the Steamboat Springs. They were so named by the first white men who
-visited them, on account of the puffing sound some of them then emitted,
-and because of the tall columns of steam they sent up. These springs are
-in Steamboat Valley, ten miles south of Reno. The Virginia and Truckee
-Railroad passes close alongside the springs. They are situated at the
-eastern base of a low range of basaltic hills, and occupy the top of a
-flat ridge that is over a mile in length and has a north and south
-course. This ridge is about half a mile in width and is composed of a
-whitish silicious material evidently deposited by the waters of the many
-springs.
-
-The temperature of the principal springs is 204 degrees, which is as hot
-as water can be made at that altitude (5,000 feet above the level of the
-sea). Some of the springs rise through circular openings from a foot to
-three feet in diameter and are surrounded by conical mounds of silicious
-matters deposited by the waters, whereas others flow from fissures,
-which are evidently rents formed by earthquakes. Out of some of these
-fissures rush great volumes of hot gases that have a strong odor of
-sulphur. These fissures are perfectly dry, and the jets of hot air are
-invisible. From other dry crevices issue great clouds of very hot steam.
-Steam rises in great volumes from all the boiling springs, and of
-mornings when the air is cool and calm from 60 to 80 tall pillars of
-steam may be counted, rising to a height of 100 feet or more above the
-low, bare ridge. The air everywhere about the springs is strongly
-charged with sulphurous vapors in gases. The crevices have the same
-course as the great quartz veins of the country, _i. e._, northeast and
-southwest. Here is no doubt a huge metallic vein in process of
-formation; indeed, various minerals are deposited by the gases, notably
-cinnabar. Some of the fissures may be traced from 1,000 to 3,000 feet,
-and have a width of from 16 inches to 3 feet. In places where nothing is
-seen to issue from these fissures at the surface, indications of
-tremendous subterranean activity are distinctly audible. Far down in
-under-ground regions are heard thunderous surgings and lashings as of
-huge volumes of water dashed to and fro in vast hollow, resounding
-caverns. In other places are heard fearful (dry) thumpings and
-poundings, as though at some flaming forge below a band of sweating
-Cyclops were at work at hammering out thunder-bolts for old Jove.
-
-Small springs in places send jets of hot water into the air to the
-height of two or three feet, with a hissing and sputtering sound, but
-for some years past none of them have thrown water to any great distance
-above the surface. In 1860, and for a few years thereafter, two or three
-of the springs rivaled the geysers of Yellowstone Park, sending columns
-of water a yard in diameter to a height of sixty or eighty feet once in
-from six to eight hours. Some springs sent columns of water from three
-to six inches in diameter to a still greater height. Even now the water
-is seen to rise and fall in some of the fissures in a threatening
-manner. At the springs is a fine and commodious hotel, bathing-houses
-for vapor baths, and every desirable accommodation. The springs are very
-beneficial to persons afflicted with rheumatic complaints, and are also
-useful in some cases of cutaneous diseases.
-
-
- Shaw’s Springs.
-
-These springs are situated about a mile west of Carson City. They are
-also much frequented by persons afflicted with rheumatism and kindred
-complaints, though more well than sick persons use the baths, as
-connected with them is a large swimming pool, 60 by 24 feet and from 4½
-to 5½ feet deep. One of these springs is what is called a “chicken-soup”
-spring. By adding pepper and salt to the water it acquires the taste of
-thin chicken soup.
-
-
- State Prison Warm Springs.
-
-About a mile east of Carson City, at the Nevada State prison, is a warm
-spring of great volume. Here Col. Abe Curry, who owned the property
-before it was acquired by the State, constructed the first swimming bath
-to be found on the Pacific Coast. It is 160 feet long by 38 feet wide,
-and is walled up with stone, and over it is erected a building, also of
-stone, of which there is a fine quarry on the spot. The water in the
-pool is from three to five feet deep, and is of about blood heat. This
-bath is not now open to the “world at large,” but is kept for a little
-world that is “not at large.”
-
-
- Walley’s Springs.
-
-There are in hundreds of places along the eastern base of the Sierras
-groups of hot springs of more or less celebrity, but none of which are
-more highly esteemed for their curative properties, or as a more popular
-place of resort for the afflicted, than Walley’s Springs, a mile and a
-half south of Genoa. Persons who are troubled with rheumatism, or are
-afflicted with scrofula and like disorders, are much benefited by the
-baths at these springs. Here are also excellent mud baths, the hot,
-mineral-impregnated mud being found very efficacious in many cases of
-chronic rheumatic complaints. In the vicinity are many objects of
-interest, and near at hand may be found good hunting and fishing. There
-is a fine hotel, and the best of accommodations of every kind for both
-sound and sick, at the springs. The springs are fourteen and a half
-miles south of Carson and may be reached either by stage or private
-conveyance. The road lies through Carson Valley, and is fine and smooth.
-
-
- Other Springs.
-
-Near Elko are several hot springs, with fine springs of cold water in
-their immediate vicinity. Here, too, is a “chicken-soup” spring. The
-springs are situated to the northwest of the town, and a bathing-house
-has been erected for the accommodation of the rheumatic public.
-
-At Golconda are some very large hot springs, near which are others of
-ordinary temperature. Some of the hot springs are occasionally utilized
-for scalding hogs. In the cool pools connected with the flow from the
-hot springs, carp and some other kinds of fish have been planted. It is
-said that the carp grown in the ponds often venture upon darting through
-places where water almost boiling hot is bubbling up. These springs are
-near the Central Pacific Railroad station. Also half a mile south of the
-track of the Central Pacific road there are, at Hot Springs Station,
-near the sink of the Humboldt, several springs that send up columns of
-steam.
-
-There are only a few of the hot springs that are situated near main
-lines of travel. In Thousand Spring Valley, on the Upper Humboldt, there
-are literally thousands of springs, some of which send out whole brooks
-of water. The majority of these, however, are cold. In Churchill County,
-north of the Sand Springs salt marsh, are hot springs which are 50, 80,
-and even 100 feet in diameter. They are on the edge of a desert at the
-foot of a range of rocky hills burnt to a brick-red by volcanic fires.
-Here, too, are seen thick veins of pure native sulphur. There are hot
-springs and scalding pools and brooks in every county in the State. In
-Nye County there are many hot springs in Hot Creek Valley, in Big Smoky
-Valley, and Lone Valley. There is also in this county the Cabezon Valley
-Hot Spring, which is medicinal. On the Rio Virgin, in Lincoln County, is
-one of the finest purgative springs on the Pacific Coast. With other
-ingredients amounting to 311 grains of solid matter to the gallon, it
-contains 67 grains of sulphate of soda, 54 grains of sulphate of
-magnesia, and 3 grains of sulphate of potassa.
-
-
- Railroads in Nevada.
-
-Although Nevada would appear at a first glance a difficult region in
-which to construct railroads, the fact is that it is quite the contrary.
-Between the parallel ranges of mountains running north and south, there
-are long level valleys, tracts of desert land, requiring very little
-grading. These valleys and deserts are linked together and connected by
-plains from the northern to the southern boundary of the State. As these
-valleys and deserts once formed the beds and connecting channels of
-chains of lakes now extinct, it is evident that in following their
-course a line of railroad might be very cheaply constructed. In many
-places for miles on miles there would be little to do but put down the
-ties and rails. In many places, too, there are remarkable passages
-leading east and west from valley to valley, called “gates.” There are
-clean level east and west cuts through ranges of mountains running north
-and south. The only difficulty to be encountered in railroad building in
-Nevada is in running roads to special points (as to mines) high above
-the general level of the country, as in the case of the Virginia to
-Truckee when it leaves the valley region to climb the Mount Davidson
-Range to the Comstock Lode. The whole plateau through which was upheaved
-the north and south ranges of mountains has a mean elevation of 5,000
-feet above the level of the sea in all central Nevada; to the southward
-it gradually slopes downward, until at the south line of the State, on
-the Colorado River, the altitude above sea-level is only 800 feet.
-
-
- The Central Pacific.
-
-The largest stretch of railroad in Nevada is the Central Pacific. Its
-length within the boundaries of the State, from where it enters, near
-Verdi, to where it passes out, near Tecoma, is a little over 450 miles.
-Though this is an east and west road (the course across the interior
-parallel mountain ranges), yet no great difficulties were encountered in
-crossing the State. The road enters Nevada from California along the
-course of the Truckee River, which stream it follows as far east as
-Wadsworth. Leaving Wadsworth the road traverses a level, sandy plain
-till the Humboldt River is reached. The road then follows the course of
-the Humboldt to Cedar Pass, not far from the Utah line.
-
-
- The Virginia and Truckee.
-
-Having already given a description of this road, it will not be
-necessary in this place to do more than to mention the distance from
-point to point between Reno and Virginia City. Soon after leaving Reno
-the dumps of the flumes that bring wood and lumber down from the pine
-forests of the Sierras will be seen to the right of the road. The first
-of these is four miles from Reno; three miles farther on, near
-Huffaker’s Station, is another, and at Brown’s is a third. Others will
-be seen about Washoe Valley and Franktown. They are from ten to twenty
-miles in length, and of the same V-shape as that at Carson City.
-Steamboat Springs Station is eleven miles from Reno; Washoe, sixteen
-miles; Franktown, twenty-one miles; Carson City, thirty-one miles;
-Carson to Empire, three miles; Mexican Mill, three and one-fourth;
-Morgan Mill, four; Brunswick, five; Merrimac, five and one-half; Vivian,
-six; Santiago Mill, seven miles; Mound House, ten; Silver Switch, twelve
-and three-fourths; Scales, sixteen and one-half; Baltic Switch,
-seventeen and one-half; Crown Point, eighteen; Gold Hill, nineteen;
-Virginia City, twenty-one miles from Carson and fifty-two from Reno.
-
-
- Carson and Colorado.
-
-At Mound House, ten miles from Carson City, the Carson and Colorado
-Narrow Gauge Railroad connects with the Virginia and Truckee. This road
-runs southeasterly through Lyon and Esmeralda Counties, in Nevada, then,
-turning more south, passes through a corner of Mono County, California,
-and enters Inyo County in the same State. It has a total length of 293
-miles, and its present southern terminus is at Keeler, at the south end
-of Owen’s Lake, Inyo County. The road passes through regions of very
-diverse products and industries. Agricultural and grazing sections
-alternate with those in which the ruling pursuit is mining for the
-precious metals, and these with others where are immense salt, soda, and
-borax marshes.
-
-Six miles from Mound House is Dayton, on the Carson River. It is a
-milling town with agricultural surroundings. The road runs eastward near
-the course of the Carson River through a fine agricultural and grazing
-country, then turns southward through Churchill Canyon to the town of
-Wabuska, thirty-eight miles.
-
-
- Wabuska.
-
-Wabuska is a thriving little place at the edge of Mason Valley, one of
-the finest agricultural and grazing regions in the State, the Walker
-River affording excellent facilities for irrigation. After leaving
-Wabuska, Walker Lake is soon reached. The road passes along the eastern
-shore of the lake nearly its whole length, affording many fine and
-picturesque views. It is a beautiful sheet of water, but lacks trees and
-vegetation, hardly a green thing being seen on its shores, except at the
-upper end, at and about the mouth of the Walker River.
-
-
- Hawthorne.
-
-Hawthorne, 100 miles from Mound House, is situated about 3½ miles beyond
-the foot of the lake. Although only a little more than eight years old,
-the town is beginning to present a comfortable appearance. It stands on
-a plain the soil of which at the time the town was laid out seemed to be
-nothing better than pure sand, yet on such a foundation has been
-conjured an oasis of shady groves, blooming grounds, and productive
-gardens. The town has a population of about 600. There are many small
-veins of gold and silver-bearing quartz in the surrounding mountains
-that are rich and easily worked. Here stages leave for Aurora, 26, and
-Bodie, 37 miles to the southward. Much freight is taken by team from
-Hawthorne to the two mining towns named. The Walker Lake _Bulletin_, a
-good local paper, is published weekly in the town.
-
-
- Luning.
-
-Luning, 125 miles from Mound House, is in the midst of a mining region
-the veins of which have about the same characteristics as those about
-Hawthorne. Stages and teams leave the town for Downieville, Grantsville,
-and Belmont.
-
-
- Belleville.
-
-Belleville, 150 miles from Mound House, is a thriving mining and milling
-town.
-
-
- Candelaria.
-
-Candelaria, 158 miles from Mound House, is a brisk mining town of about
-600 inhabitants. It contains several mines of note, and has yielded
-great quantities of bullion. The Mt. Diablo Mine is at the present time
-the leading bullion producer. The town has several mills, some good
-buildings, and a good system of water works. Stages leave the town for
-Columbus, Silver Peak, Montezuma, Alida Valley, and Gold Mountain.
-
-Leaving Candelaria, the road soon passes into California, striking down
-into Independence Valley near the White Mountains, the highest peak of
-which stands 12,000 feet above the level of the sea. The line runs
-through a rich agricultural and grazing region, with high mountain
-ranges on either hand, in which are found many veins rich in the
-precious metals.
-
-
- Benton.
-
-Benton, in Mono County, California, is 193 miles from Mound House. It is
-situated in a rich section of Independence Valley and is a fine
-fruit-growing region. In the neighborhood of the town, which contains
-about 200 inhabitants, are many good farms, orchards, and vineyards.
-
-
- Bishop Creek.
-
-Bishop Creek is a flourishing agricultural settlement, 224 miles from
-Mound House. It is in Inyo County. The lands and surroundings are much
-the same as those of Benton. The hamlet constituting the trading-post at
-the railroad, and the farms in the neighborhood, have a population of
-about 250.
-
-
- Independence.
-
-Independence, 267 miles from Mound House, with the farms in its
-immediate neighborhood, has a population of about 400. The town stands
-in the midst of a fine farming, grazing, and fruit-growing region.
-Bordering the valley are mountains in which are many good mines of the
-precious metals, though these have been but little worked and many have
-not been opened at all, the settlers in the valleys who discovered them
-being devoted to agricultural pursuits. Here is published weekly the
-_Inyo Independent_, an excellent local paper.
-
-
- Keeler.
-
-Keeler, the present terminus of the Carson and Colorado Railroad, is 293
-miles from Mound House. The town is situated on the east side of Owens
-Lake and near its south end. It is a new place and contains only about
-200 inhabitants. Stages leave the town for Cerro Gordo, Darwin, and
-Panamint.
-
-
- Owens Lake.
-
-Owens Lake, which is the “sink” of Owens River, has an area of about 110
-square miles. Its waters are heavily charged with salt and alkaline
-minerals. One United States standard gallon (8⅓ pounds, or 231 cubic
-inches) of the lake water contains 4,422.25 grains of solid matter,
-sodium carbonate and sodium chloride predominating and aggregating
-2,561.83 grains.
-
-The water of the lake contains only a trace of borax. It is evaporated
-on a large scale near Keeler, for the valuable alkaline minerals it
-holds in solution. The water of Owens Lake contains a much greater
-quantity of mineral matter than that of the Dead Sea. In Dead Sea water
-there is only 1,680 grains of solid matter to the United States gallon.
-Dead Sea water is evidently less salt than that of many of the lakes of
-the Great Basin region, as fish are found in it at and near the mouths
-of tributary streams, and in places along its shores shell-fish are to
-be seen.
-
-
- Mono Lake.
-
-Mono Lake, about 100 miles north of Owens Lake, in Mono County, has an
-area of 85 square miles. Its water is almost precisely similar in every
-respect to that of Owens Lake.
-
-Owens River, over 100 miles in length, flows through the valley nearly
-its whole course, and, with its many tributary creeks, affords water
-sufficient to irrigate a great area of land. The whole region is rapidly
-being taken by settlers. The soil is exceedingly fertile and the climate
-very fine. To the west of the chain of valleys the snow-clad Sierras
-tower to a vast height. Above all surrounding peaks Mount Whitney rises
-to a height of 15,000 feet. The Carson and Colorado road will eventually
-be extended southward to a connection with the railroad system of
-Southern California.
-
-
- Eureka and Palisade.
-
-This railroad is ninety miles in length. It is a narrow gauge and
-connects Eureka with the Central Pacific at Palisade. It was constructed
-to transport machinery and supplies to the mines and town of Eureka, and
-to carry out the products of the smelting furnaces.
-
-
- Palisade.
-
-Palisade contains about 250 inhabitants.
-
-
- Eureka.
-
-Eureka is a town of smelting furnaces. It is situated in the midst of a
-region in which very rich smelting ores are mined. The mines at Eureka
-were discovered in 1864, but not much was done with them until, two
-years later, and in 1869 the place began to boom and the yield of the
-mines soon became from one to three millions of dollars annually. Like
-other mining towns, Eureka has its ebbs and flows of fortune. For a year
-or two it was in “barrasca,” but since the beginning of 1888 it has been
-again getting into “bonanza.” It is the county seat of Eureka County,
-and has a population of about 2,500. In 1880 it had a population of
-4,207, but in 1886-87 it lost inhabitants. Now it is once more gaining.
-It is the point from which many interior mining towns and camps receive
-their supplies. There are many fine and substantial public and private
-buildings in the town, and a good system of water works. In the
-_Sentinel_, published weekly, the place has a good local paper. Eureka
-is the Pittsburg of Nevada. In all directions its furnace chimneys vomit
-volumes of black, sulphurous smoke—when Government officials do not
-“pester” the people on account of their cutting scrub timber.
-
-
- Nevada Central.
-
-This road is a narrow gauge, 93 miles in length, and connects Austin
-with the Central Pacific at Battle Mountain. From Battle Mountain the
-road runs nearly south up the valley of the Reese River. There are many
-good farms in Reese River Valley, and good grazing ranges on the higher
-ground.
-
-
- Battle Mountain.
-
-Battle Mountain is a town of about 500 inhabitants, situated very
-pleasantly, and cheaply supplied with water by means of artesian wells
-of trifling depth. Its business is derived from the surrounding farming
-and grazing regions, from the Central Pacific Railroad, and from the
-several mining sections with which it has communication. It contains
-many good public and private buildings, and handsome cottages are
-numerous. _The Central Nevadan_, a sprightly weekly paper, is published
-in the town.
-
-
- Austin.
-
-Austin is the oldest town in Eastern Nevada, and the mother of mining in
-that part of the State. It is the county seat of Lander County. Austin
-was laid out in February, 1863. It is situated nearly upon the summit of
-the Toyabee Range of mountains, about six miles from Reese River, and is
-nearly in the geographical center of the State. It contains many good,
-substantial public and private buildings of brick and stone. Before the
-completion of the Central Pacific the overland stages passed through the
-town, when it had about 5,000 inhabitants, as it was also then the
-center of a rich mining region. The mines at and about Austin have
-produced many millions in gold and silver bullion. Like all other mining
-towns, Austin has had her periods of elevation and depression—her
-“streaks of fat and streaks of lean”—and this year (1889) seems to be
-getting out of a lean streak into a streak that shows a considerable
-amount of “fatty” matter. August 18, 1874, the town was nearly ruined by
-a cloud-burst which tore up the roadway and sidewalks of the main
-street, flooded buildings, and filled them with mud and sand to the
-depth of several feet. The damage done was estimated at $100,000. As the
-people had warning of what was coming, no lives were lost. In this the
-Austinites were more fortunate than were the people of Eureka in the
-month of July, in the same year, as there a cloud-burst not only did
-immense damage to the town, but also drowned fifteen persons. An
-excellent daily paper, the _Reese River Reveille_, is published at
-Austin.
-
-
- Nevada and California.
-
-This narrow-gauge railroad starts at Reno and runs northward into Lassen
-County, California. It has now attained a length of about eighty miles,
-and is still in process of construction. It is penetrating a region of
-country containing vast forests of pine timber, good mines, and many
-fine mountain valleys. Eventually it will be run northward into the
-interior of Oregon. It will presently bring to Reno great quantities of
-lumber and timber to be shipped eastward into the timberless regions of
-the Great Basin country.
-
-
- Proposed Railroads.
-
-A section of railroad of narrow gauge has been constructed through the
-Beckworth Pass westward. It connects with the Nevada and California road
-at Moran, and is called the Sierra Valley and Mohawk Railroad. After
-rails had been laid through the pass and a short distance down the
-western slope of the Sierras, work was discontinued. It is supposed that
-the section of road was laid in the interest of some one of the great
-Eastern roads now heading toward the Pacific Ocean in order to hold the
-pass. The Beckworth Pass is nearly 2,000 feet lower than that through
-which the Central Pacific Railroad is laid.
-
-
- The Salt Lake and Los Angeles.
-
-The Salt Lake and Los Angeles is a proposed railroad on which surveying
-parties have been engaged for nearly a year. It is intended to start at
-Milford, on the Utah Central, pass through Lincoln County, Nevada, and
-connect with the railroad system of Southern California at Barstow. This
-road would tap a rich mining and a fine agricultural and grazing region
-in Southern Nevada. It would give life to an immense region of country
-that has long lain as dead.
-
-
- Nevada, Central, and Idaho
-
-Another proposed road is an extension of the Nevada Central from Battle
-Mountain northward into Idaho.
-
-
- Nevada a Land of Great Possibilities.
-
-Notwithstanding its sterile and forbidding appearance, Nevada is capable
-of supporting an immense population. The soil, which to the eyes of
-strangers appears so poor and barren, is one of the strongest and
-richest in America. It is formed of decomposed lava and various kinds of
-volcanic rocks, and contains large quantities of all the various mineral
-constituents necessary to a strong and healthy growth of every kind of
-farm produce known to the temperate zone. All that is required to
-produce a rank growth of vegetation of every kind is a supply of water;
-all other life-giving agents are contained in the soil. On the mountain
-slopes and the bench-lands, which look so arid and worthless, the soil
-is even stronger and more kindly than in the valleys. With water all the
-mountain-sides may be made veritable hanging gardens. Until within the
-past year agriculture (as regards irrigation) has been left to take care
-of itself. It has been left to individuals, each working after a plan of
-his own. There has been no established system of irrigation, and, save
-in one or two instances, no attempt at storing water in order to
-maintain a large and regular supply. The water used is taken as it flows
-from the mountains, as the snow banks deposited in winter melt away in
-the early spring and first summer months. Then, in average seasons,
-there are for a month or two floods of water pouring down all the
-rivers, creeks, and canyons. This great rush of water passes down into
-the interior lakes and “sinks” without being utilized for any purpose,
-and is lost. Were this water caught up in storage reservoirs ten times
-the area of land at present irrigated could be brought under
-cultivation.
-
-At last a movement has been made toward the systematic reclamation of
-the arid lands of Nevada, and the proper storage and utilization of all
-the available water in the State. In November, 1888, a corps of U. S.
-Engineers began a hydrographic survey on the headwaters of the Truckee,
-Carson and Walker Rivers. This survey—interrupted by the cold weather of
-winter—will be completed this year. Already a survey of 800 square miles
-has been completed. Major Powell says Lake Tahoe constitutes an immense
-natural storage reservoir of almost incalculable value. He estimates
-that in it may be stored sufficient water (with a four-foot dam) to
-irrigate 500,000 acres of land. If this be true, then Donner Lake may be
-made to contain water sufficient to irrigate from 150,000 to 200,000
-acres. On the headwaters of the Carson and Walker Rivers are many lakes
-and basins of extinct lakes that may be turned into vast storage
-reservoirs at small cost.
-
-Among the mountain ranges of the interior of the State many reservoirs
-may be profitably constructed. Also in the interior valleys and basins
-artesian wells will be of great value. Already there are in the State
-110 flowing wells. Though the flow from some of these is strong it is
-trifling to what might be obtained at greater depth, the present wells
-being only from 100 to 300 feet deep. Artesian water has been found to
-exist everywhere in the valleys lying between the mountain ranges of the
-interior.
-
-Last winter the State government for the first time took hold of the
-irrigation question and made a move toward the establishment of a system
-of reservoirs and other works, appropriating $100,000 therefor.
-
-To the southward of the line of the Central Pacific lies a region of
-country large enough to make half a dozen New England States, that is
-almost unoccupied. There tens of thousands of families might find homes.
-Lack of transportation facilities at present prevents settlers from
-going into that portion of the State, but the building of the Salt Lake
-and Los Angeles, or any other of the proposed railroads, would cause a
-rush to its semi-tropical valleys.
-
-A beginning having been made, the time is not distant when Nevada will
-no longer be branded as a land whose soil is only capable of supporting
-the jackrabbit, the lizard, and the horned-toad.
-
-
-
-
- A HISTORY OF THE COMSTOCK SILVER LODE & MINES
- By Dan De Quille
-
-
-At a time when most mining companies and maverick prospectors had fanned
-out from California in pursuit of richer gold claims, three uneducated
-miners accidentally stumbled upon the world’s richest silver deposit in
-Nevada. The year was 1859 and it marked the beginning of the West’s most
-exciting era in mining history. De Quille’s account of this startling
-discovery (on what was subsequently to be called the Comstock Lode) and
-his eyewitness report on Virginia City in the heydays of the 1880’s is
-one of the most fascinating and detailed to be found on the subject.
-
-After describing the events surrounding the initial discovery, the
-author traces the rapid development of the earliest makeshift towns and
-mills that were erected on the site. Most notable during this period are
-the years between 1860 and 1863 when Virginia City emerged and grew
-uncontrollably in wealth and population as thousands of miners from
-California, the Atlantic seaboard and Canada converged on the city to
-labor for the highest wages paid on the American continent. Other key
-events, such as The Great Fire of 1875 which wiped out a large section
-of the city, and its miraculous rebuilding in 60 days are covered as
-well.
-
-The major portion of the book, however, is devoted to the author’s
-first-hand experience in Virginia City during its biggest boom period of
-the 1880’s. The vivid composite he creates of the manners and habits of
-this society is surpassed only by the astounding wealth of facts and
-figures he provides on the mining companies’ record-breaking profits,
-the lengths and depths of the Comstock veins, and the multitude of
-methods utilized for extracting and refining crude silver. Reliable
-information such as this, and in such bulk, was even scarce in its day.
-
-A general description of the major towns of Nevada, the physical
-characteristics of the State and its mineral and agricultural resources
-rounds out the text.
-
-
- ABOUT THE SERIES
-
-No other nation has ever expanded as rapidly as the United States
-between the years 1820 and 1860. Marching onto immense stretches of
-territory belonging to Mexico, the Indians and foreign powers, America’s
-pioneers brought with them a new language, new religions and new
-concepts of society. Within the brief span of 40 years they had spread
-political unity and cultural uniformity over this vast new land.
-
-Few will deny that the pioneers who subdued that last, great West
-between the Rockies and the Pacific braved a more hostile country,
-endured more gruelling hardships and faced greater dangers than did any
-other settlers in the three-century-long conquest of the continent.
-
-_America’s Pioneer Heritage_ is comprised of scarce and long
-out-of-print books that detail our western saga. Among the works
-included in the series are eyewitness accounts, journals, letters and
-other primary source materials which are so crucial to an understanding
-of the American character.
-
-
- PROMONTORY PRESS
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber’s Notes
-
-
-—Silently corrected a few typos.
-
-—Retained publication information from the printed edition: this eBook
- is public-domain in the country of publication.
-
-—In the text versions only, text in italics is delimited by
- _underscores_.
-
-—Collated Table of Contents against chapter headings; added chapter
- headings or TOC entries to correspond.
-
-
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A HISTORY OF THE COMSTOCK SILVER
-LODE & MINES ***
-
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-
-<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of A History of the Comstock Silver Lode & Mines, by Dan De Quille</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
-at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<table style='min-width:0; padding:0; margin-left:0; border-collapse:collapse'>
- <tr><td>Title:</td><td>A History of the Comstock Silver Lode & Mines</td></tr>
- <tr><td></td><td>Nevada and the Great Basin Region; Lake Tahoe and the High Sierras</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Dan De Quille</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: March 05, 2021 [eBook #64699]</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Character set encoding: UTF-8</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: Stephen Hutcheson and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net</div>
-
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A HISTORY OF THE COMSTOCK SILVER LODE & MINES ***</div>
-<div id="cover" class="img">
-<img id="coverpage" src="images/cover.jpg" alt="A History of the Comstock Silver Lode &amp; Mines" width="500" height="742" />
-</div>
-<div class="box">
-<h1><span class="smaller">A HISTORY OF</span>
-<br /><span class="smallest">THE</span>
-<br /><span class="small">COMSTOCK SILVER LODE &amp; MINES</span></h1>
-<p class="center">DAN DE QUILLE
-<br />[WILLIAM WRIGHT]</p>
-<p class="tbcenter"><span class="ss"><span class="larger">PROMONTORY PRESS</span>
-<br />New York &#8226; 1974</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class="verse">
-<p class="t0">Published by Promontory Press, New York, N.Y. 10016</p>
-</div>
-<div class="verse">
-<p class="t0">Library of Congress Catalog Card No.: 73-92646</p>
-<p class="t0">ISBN: 0-88394-024-8</p>
-</div>
-<div class="verse">
-<p class="t0">Printed in the United States of America</p>
-</div>
-<hr />
-<div class="verse">
-<p class="t0"><b>Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data</b></p>
-</div>
-<div class="verse">
-<p class="t0">Wright, William, 1829-1898.</p>
-<p class="t">A history of the Comstock silver lode &amp; mines, Nevada and the great basin region.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="verse">
-<p class="t">Reprint of the 1889 ed.</p>
-<p class="t">1. Comstock Lode, Nev.</p>
-<p class="t">2. Nevada&mdash;Description and travel. I. Title. II. Series.</p>
-<p class="t0">TN413.N25W9 <span class="hst">1973</span> <span class="hst">338.2&prime;74210979356</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class="box">
-<p class="center"><span class="larger">A HISTORY OF</span>
-<br /><span class="smaller">THE</span>
-<br /><span class="xxlarge">COMSTOCK SILVER LODE &amp; MINES</span></p>
-<hr />
-<p class="center"><span class="large">NEVADA AND THE GREAT BASIN REGION;</span></p>
-<hr />
-<p class="center"><span class="larger">LAKE TAHOE AND THE HIGH SIERRAS.</span></p>
-<hr />
-<p class="center"><span class="smaller">THE MOUNTAINS, VALLEYS, LAKES, RIVERS, HOT SPRINGS, DESERTS, AND OTHER WONDERS OF THE &ldquo;EASTERN SLOPE&rdquo; OF THE SIERRAS.</span></p>
-<hr />
-<p class="center"><span class="smallest">THE</span>
-<br /><span class="smaller"><b>MINERAL AND AGRICULTURAL RESOURCES</b></span>
-<br /><span class="smallest">OF</span>
-<br /><span class="larger">&ldquo;SILVERLAND.&rdquo;</span></p>
-<hr />
-<p class="center smaller">TOWNS, SETTLEMENTS, MINING AND REDUCTION WORKS, RAILWAYS, LUMBER FLUMES, PINE FORESTS, SYSTEMS OF WATER SUPPLY, GREAT SHAFTS AND TUNNELS, AND THE MANY IMPROVEMENTS AND INDUSTRIES OF NEVADA.</p>
-<hr />
-<p class="center smaller"><b>BY DAN DE QUILLE,</b>
-<br /><span class="small">author of
-<br />&ldquo;The Big Bonanza,&rdquo;
-<br />The Wealth and Wonders of Washoe,
-<br />The Arid Zone and Irrigation, Etc.</span></p>
-<hr />
-<p class="center small">PUBLISHED BY F. BOEGLE,
-<br /><b>BOOKSELLER &amp; STATIONER,</b>
-<br />VIRGINIA, NEVADA.</p>
-</div>
-<hr />
-<p class="center">Entered According to Act of Congress, in the Year 1889, by
-<br />F. BOEGLE,
-<br />in the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington.</p>
-<hr />
-<p class="center"><i>NEW YORK AND SAN FRANCISCO,
-<br /><span class="sc">Pacific Press Publishing Company,
-<br />Oakland, Cal.,
-<br />Printers, Stationers, and Binders</span>.</i></p>
-<hr />
-<div class="pb" id="Page_iii">iii</div>
-<h2><span class="small">INTRODUCTORY.</span></h2>
-<p>The central idea in the preparation of this little book
-has been to give, as concisely as possible, such information
-in regard to the silver mines of the Comstock
-as the visiting tourist is likely to require. In doing
-this it was thought best to begin by briefly introducing
-the whole State of Nevada. When shown a portion
-of a thing we generally have some curiosity in
-regard to the appearance of the whole. Though
-much more space has been given to the mines, mining
-works, towns, and industries of the Comstock
-Lode than to anything else, yet it has been found
-necessary to the plan of the work to include much of
-surrounding regions, both in Nevada and California.
-However, we have endeavored to keep on the &ldquo;Eastern
-slope&rdquo; of the Sierras&mdash;have poached very little
-on the California side. The Sierra Nevada Mountains
-are a towering, rocky range, which constitutes a
-natural dividing line between the regions of country
-on either side. All on the east side of the Sierras
-partakes more of the general character of Nevada
-<span class="pb" id="Page_iv">iv</span>
-than of California&mdash;is characteristic of the Great
-Basin region. Although Owens River, Independence
-and Owens Valleys, Owens Lake and Mono Lake,
-are within the boundaries of California, yet they are
-essentially parts of that region the whole of which is
-known as the Great Basin.</p>
-<p>In speaking of the Comstock Lode, after giving an
-account of its discovery and something of its early
-history, it has been necessary in noting the progress
-of our towns and the improvements made in mining
-and milling operations and methods to go up into
-the Sierras to trace our water supply to its sources.
-It is also from the great pine forests of the Sierras
-that we derive our supply of lumber and timbers, and
-the Sierras are our natural sanitarium&mdash;it is to the
-lakes, valleys, and wilds of the &ldquo;High Sierras&rdquo; that
-our summer pleasure trips are made. For this reason
-mention has been made of lakes, valleys, mountains,
-and creeks not strictly our own&mdash;though a large slice
-of Lake Tahoe lies within our boundaries.</p>
-<p>In mentioning rivers, lakes, and railroads it has
-also been thought best to say something of all in the
-State. In the case of the railroads it became necessary
-to speak briefly of the towns they connect and
-pass through, with a passing glance at the country
-traversed.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_v">v</div>
-<p>Although the Comstock Lode, and mining and
-milling in Western Nevada, are the principal subjects
-of this book, yet it is not wholly a book on Nevada.
-&ldquo;No pent-up Utica&rdquo; has for a moment been permitted
-to &ldquo;contract our powers.&rdquo; We have been
-guided more by the natural than the political divisions
-of the country, therefore our little book takes in the
-western edge of the Great Basin, climbing up to the
-top of the Sierras, and peeping over in a few places.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_vii">vii</div>
-<h2 id="toc" class="center">CONTENTS.</h2>
-<dl class="toc">
-<dt class="small">PAGE.</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c1"><span class="sc">The State of Nevada</span></a> 11</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c2"><span class="sc">Boundaries and Areas</span></a> 11</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c3"><span class="sc">Physical Aspect of the State</span></a> 13</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c4">THE RIVERS OF NEVADA</a> 17</dt>
-<dd><a href="#c5">Humboldt River</a> 17</dd>
-<dd><a href="#c6">Truckee River</a> 19</dd>
-<dd><a href="#c7">Carson River</a> 21</dd>
-<dd><a href="#c8">Walker River</a> 23</dd>
-<dd><a href="#c9">Owyhee River</a> 23</dd>
-<dd><a href="#c10">Reese River</a> 24</dd>
-<dd><a href="#c11">Other Nevada Rivers</a> 24</dd>
-<dt><a href="#c12"><span class="sc">Mineral Treasures of Nevada</span></a> 26</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c13"><span class="sc">Agricultural Resources</span></a> 28</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c14"><span class="sc">The Comstock Mines</span></a> 31</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c15"><span class="sc">The Discovery of Silver</span></a> 32</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c16"><span class="sc">Placer Mining on Gold Canyon</span></a> 32</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c17"><span class="sc">The Grand Rush over the Sierras</span></a> 38</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c18"><span class="sc">The Discoverers and Their Fate</span></a> 39</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c19"><span class="sc">Early Mining and Milling</span></a> 40</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c20"><span class="sc">Mining Difficulties and Inventions</span></a> 42</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c21"><span class="sc">Various Mining and Milling Appliances</span></a> 44</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c22"><span class="sc">The Comstock as a School for Miners</span></a> 45</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c23">VIRGINIA CITY AND SURROUNDINGS</a> 45</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c24"><span class="sc">City Improvements</span></a> 50</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c25"><span class="sc">The Great Fire</span></a> 52</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c26"><span class="sc">Virginia City at Present</span></a> 55</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c27"><span class="sc">Views from the City and Vicinity</span></a> 58</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c28"><span class="sc">The View from the Summit of Mount Davidson</span></a> 59</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c29"><span class="sc">The Virginia and Truckee Railroad</span></a> 59</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c30"><span class="sc">The Days of Bull Teams</span></a> 61</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c31"><span class="sc">The Comstock System of Water Supply</span></a> 63</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c32"><span class="sc">The Virginia City and Gold Hill Water Works</span></a> 63</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c33"><span class="sc">The Big Water Pipes</span></a> 65</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c34"><span class="sc">Additional Great Pipes</span></a> 66</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c35"><span class="sc">The Sutro Tunnel</span></a> 68</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c36"><span class="sc">The Reduction Works of Early Days</span></a> 70</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c37"><span class="sc">The First Silver Mill</span></a> 70</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c38"><span class="sc">The Many Mills of the Early Days</span></a> 72</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c39"><span class="sc">Reduction Works of the Present Day</span></a> 74</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c40"><span class="sc">Description of the Process of Working Comstock Silver Ores</span></a> 74</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c41"><span class="sc">The Two California Mills</span></a> 80</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c42"><span class="sc">The River and Canyon Mills</span></a> 81</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c43">THE COMSTOCK LODE</a> 82</dt>
-<dd><a href="#c44">Hoisting Works, Shafts and Mining, Past and Present</a> 82</dd>
-<dd><a href="#c45">The Three Lines of Hoisting Works</a> 84</dd>
-<dt><a href="#c46"><span class="sc">The Combination Shaft</span></a> 86</dt>
-<dd><a href="#c47">The Deepest Workings on the Lode</a> 88</dd>
-<dd><a href="#c48">A Return to the Second Line of Works</a> 89</dd>
-<dd><a href="#c49">The Old First Bonanzas</a> 91</dd>
-<dd><a href="#c50">The New Departure</a> 92</dd>
-<dd><a href="#c51">Present Yield of the Comstock Mines</a> 93</dd>
-<dd><a href="#c52">Vicissitudes of Fortune in Mining</a> 96</dd>
-<dt><a href="#c53">TOWNS OF WESTERN NEVADA</a> 98</dt>
-<dd><a href="#c54">Virginia City</a> 98</dd>
-<dd><a href="#c55">Gold Hill</a> 99</dd>
-<dd><a href="#c56">Silver City</a> 101</dd>
-<dd><a href="#c57">Dayton</a> 102</dd>
-<dd><a href="#c58">Sutro</a> 104</dd>
-<dd><a href="#c59">Carson City</a> 105</dd>
-<dd><a href="#c60">Empire City</a> 109</dd>
-<dd><a href="#c61">Genoa</a> 110</dd>
-<dd><a href="#c62">Reno</a> 111</dd>
-<dt><a href="#c63"><span class="sc">Other Towns in Washoe County</span></a> 113</dt>
-<dd><a href="#c64">Washoe City</a> 113</dd>
-<dd><a href="#c65">Ophir</a> 114</dd>
-<dd><a href="#c66">Franktown</a> 114</dd>
-<dd><a href="#c67">Wadsworth</a> 114</dd>
-<dd><a href="#c68">Verdi</a> 115</dd>
-<dt><a href="#c69">LAKE TAHOE AND SURROUNDINGS</a> 115</dt>
-<dd><a href="#c70">Emerald Bay</a> 121</dd>
-<dd><a href="#c71">Fallen Leaf Lake</a> 123</dd>
-<dd><a href="#c72">Silver Lake</a> 123</dd>
-<dd><a href="#c73">Cornelian Bay</a> 123</dd>
-<dd><a href="#c74">Agate Bay</a> 123</dd>
-<dd><a href="#c75">Crystal Bay</a> 123</dd>
-<dd><a href="#c76">Shakespeare Rock</a> 123</dd>
-<dd><a href="#c77">Cave Rock</a> 124</dd>
-<dd><a href="#c78">Glenbrook</a> 124</dd>
-<dd><a href="#c79">Cascade Mountain</a> 124</dd>
-<dd><a href="#c80">Rubicon Springs</a> 124</dd>
-<dt><a href="#c81"><span class="sc">Routes to Lake Tahoe</span></a> 125</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c82"><span class="sc">The Route from Truckee</span></a> 125</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c83"><span class="sc">Distances from Tahoe City to Points on the Lake</span></a> 126</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c84"><span class="sc">The Route from Reno</span></a> 127</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c85">THE TOWN OF TRUCKEE</a> 128</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c86"><span class="sc">Donner Lake</span></a> 129</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c87"><span class="sc">The Donner Disaster</span></a> 130</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c88"><span class="sc">Surrounding Points of Interest</span></a> 131</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c89"><span class="sc">Independence Lake and Surroundings</span></a> 132</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c90"><span class="sc">Webber Lake Wonders</span></a> 133</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c91"><span class="sc">Pyramid Lake</span></a> 134</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c92"><span class="sc">Winnemucca Lake</span></a> 136</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c93"><span class="sc">Washoe Lake</span></a> 138</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c94">THERMAL AND MEDICINAL SPRINGS</a> 138</dt>
-<dd><a href="#c95">Steamboat Springs</a> 139</dd>
-<dd><a href="#c96">Shaw&rsquo;s Springs</a> 141</dd>
-<dd><a href="#c97">State Prison Warm Springs</a> 141</dd>
-<dd><a href="#c98">Walley&rsquo;s Springs</a> 142</dd>
-<dd><a href="#c99">Other Nevada Springs</a> 143</dd>
-<dt><a href="#c100">RAILROADS IN NEVADA</a> 144</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c101"><span class="sc">The Central Pacific</span></a> 145</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c102"><span class="sc">Virginia and Truckee Distances</span></a> 146</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c103"><span class="sc">The Carson and Colorado</span></a> 146</dt>
-<dd><a href="#c104">Wabuska</a> 147</dd>
-<dd><a href="#c105">Hawthorne</a> 148</dd>
-<dd><a href="#c106">Luning</a> 148</dd>
-<dd><a href="#c107">Bellville</a> 148</dd>
-<dd><a href="#c108">Candelaria</a> 148</dd>
-<dd><a href="#c109">Benton</a> 149</dd>
-<dd><a href="#c110">Bishop Creek</a> 149</dd>
-<dd><a href="#c111">Independence</a> 149</dd>
-<dd><a href="#c112">Keeler</a> 150</dd>
-<dt><a href="#c113"><span class="sc">Owens Lake</span></a> 150</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c114"><span class="sc">Mono Lake</span></a> 151</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c115"><span class="sc">Eureka and Palisade Railroad</span></a> 151</dt>
-<dd><a href="#c116">Town of Palisade</a> 151</dd>
-<dd><a href="#c117">Eureka</a> 151</dd>
-<dt><a href="#c118"><span class="sc">Nevada Central Railroad</span></a> 152</dt>
-<dd><a href="#c119">Town of Battle Mountain</a> 152</dd>
-<dd><a href="#c120">Austin</a> 153</dd>
-<dt><a href="#c121"><span class="sc">Nevada and California Railroad</span></a> 154</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c122"><span class="sc">Proposed Railroads</span></a> 154</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c123"><span class="sc">Salt Lake and Los Angeles</span></a> 155</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c124"><span class="sc">Nevada, Central, and Idaho</span></a> 155</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c125">NEVADA A LAND OF GREAT POSSIBILITIES</a> 155</dt>
-<dt class="pb" id="Page_11">11</dt>
-</dl>
-<h2 id="c1"><span class="small"><span class="large">The State of Nevada.</span></span></h2>
-<h3 id="c2">Boundaries and Area.</h3>
-<p>Nevada is formed of the region of country formerly
-known as Western Utah. The whole of Utah, prior
-to its acquisition by the United States, was a portion
-of the Mexican Department of Alta California. All
-this vast region was acquired from Mexico under the
-treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, which was consummated
-in 1848, and which treaty also gave to the
-United States, California, Arizona, New Mexico, and
-a part of Colorado. Nevada was constituted a Territory
-in March, 1861, and was admitted into the Union
-as a State in October, 1864. The State extends from
-the 35th to the 42d degree of north latitude, and
-from the 114th to the 120th degree west longitude
-from Greenwich. The State in its greatest dimensions
-is 420 miles long by 360 miles wide. Nevada is
-bounded on the north by Idaho and Oregon, east
-by Utah and Arizona, and south and west by California.
-Previous to its acquisition by the United
-States, the region now constituting the State of Nevada
-<span class="pb" id="Page_12">12</span>
-was wholly occupied by tribes of wild Indians.
-The country was then known only to a few white
-men, trappers and Indian traders, whose business at
-certain seasons led them into what was then almost a
-<i>terra incognito</i>, and which was marked upon the maps
-of that day as the &ldquo;Great American Desert,&rdquo; or the
-&ldquo;Unexplored Region.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The area of the State is, by the most reliable estimate,
-112,190 square miles, or 71,801,819 acres.
-This includes what is known as the &ldquo;Colorado
-Basin,&rdquo; in Lincoln County, on the southern boundary
-of the State, and which embraces an area of
-about 12,000 square miles lying north of the Colorado
-River. This basin region was taken from Arizona
-and given to Nevada by an Act of Congress in 1866.
-Assuming the water surface of the numerous lakes in
-Nevada to cover an area of 1,690 square miles, or 1,081,819
-acres, there remain 110,500 square miles, or 70,720,000
-acres as the land area of the State. The
-vastness of this region is not at once grasped by the
-mind of the reader. It may be more readily realized
-by comparison with some of the well-known Eastern
-States. The area of Nevada is 2,578 square miles
-greater than the combined areas of Maine, New
-Hampshire, Vermont, Connecticut, Massachusetts,
-Maryland, Delaware, West Virginia, New Jersey, and
-Rhode Island. Indeed, after giving to each of the
-States named its full measure of acres, there would be
-left enough land to make two additional Rhode Islands.
-<span class="pb" id="Page_13">13</span>
-In all this great territory, however, there are
-only about 62,000 souls. Belgium, with an area of
-11,373 square miles, has a population of 5,253,821,
-or about 462 persons to the square mile, and there
-the rural population is to that of the towns as three
-to one. Were Nevada as densely peopled as Belgium
-it would contain 51,749,780 souls, a number
-almost equal to the present population of the whole
-United States. It will therefore be seen that before
-becoming as thickly settled as is Belgium, Nevada
-still has room for 51,687,780 persons within her
-boundaries.</p>
-<p>The Sierra Nevada Mountains from the western
-boundary of Nevada for a distance of over 300 miles,
-constitute a stupendous snow-capped granite wall
-between the State and California. The mean height
-of this part of the Sierra Nevada Range is about 7,000
-feet. This towering range has a marked effect on the
-climate of Nevada. But for its intervention the climate
-of the whole State would be much the same as
-that of California.</p>
-<h3 id="c3">The Physical Aspect of Nevada.</h3>
-<p>Though the western edge laps up onto the Sierra
-Nevada Range, the greater part of the State of Nevada
-lies to the eastward and is embraced in that
-Great Basin region which extends to the western base
-of the Rocky Mountains. This interior region forms
-an immense plateau which has a mean elevation of
-<span class="pb" id="Page_14">14</span>
-four thousand feet above the level of the sea. In
-Nevada, however, the average altitude of the plateau
-may safely be set down at five thousand feet. The
-altitude of White Plains Station, west of the sink of
-the Humboldt, is 3,894 feet, and it is the lowest point
-on the overland railroad between the Sierra Nevada
-and the Rocky Mountains. Owing to this great
-elevation there is in all parts of Nevada an atmosphere
-pure, dry, and free from even the slightest
-malarial taint. It is such an atmosphere as in many
-other lands can only be found by going to the mountain
-tops. The average level of the State is higher
-than many of the noted mountain resorts in the Atlantic
-States. It is owing to this altitude that the
-nights in summer are always cool and pleasant, however
-warm the weather during the hours of daylight.
-The extremes of heat and cold are not great.</p>
-<p>Running north and south through the elevated
-plateau which forms the general base or floor of the
-State are numerous parallel ranges of mountains.
-These interior ranges are quite regular in course and
-recurrence, and rise to a height of from one thousand
-to seven thousand feet above the general level of the
-country. Among these interior mountains are a few
-peaks that attain an elevation of from 9,000 to
-12,000 feet above the level of the sea. Between
-these mountain ranges lie valleys ranging in width
-from one mile to thirty miles. As these valleys are
-hidden by the high, rocky ranges, and are not to be
-<span class="pb" id="Page_15">15</span>
-seen in a general survey of the country, even from
-an elevated position, the aspect of the country is
-sterile and austere, all being apparently a succession
-of barren, rocky hills.</p>
-<p>The majority of the valleys lying between these
-rugged, parallel ranges are susceptible of cultivation,
-and many are wonderfully productive. The bench
-lands bordering the valleys are also exceedingly fertile
-and yield large crops wherever water for irrigation
-is led upon them. For all uses, those of the horticulturist
-as well as the agriculturist, these bench lands
-will yet be found the best in the State. The benches
-possess a warm and willing soil.</p>
-<p>The interior mountains, rugged and timberless as
-they are, have their uses. From the summits of
-many of the ranges flow springs and small streams
-that afford a supply of water for the irrigation of the
-valley and bench lands below. They are also conservators
-of a supply of moisture. On the summits
-of the higher ranges snow falls in winter to a great
-depth, and from the melting of this in spring and
-summer is derived a considerable supply of water for
-use on the arable lands on either side. These reserves
-of snow are also of great benefit to the mountain
-pastures, causing grass to spring up along the
-courses of a thousand ravines and little valleys, or
-laps of land, on the slopes and tops of the hills. This
-water supply may be made infinitely more valuable
-than it is at present by the construction of suitable
-<span class="pb" id="Page_16">16</span>
-reservoirs at proper points in the large canyons for
-storing it up till needed in summer.</p>
-<p>The construction of such reservoirs has already
-been commenced among the interior ranges, as well as
-in places along the main Sierra Nevada Range, and
-year by year more and still more such improvements
-will be made. Already Nevada holds a high place as
-an agricultural and stock-growing State, though for
-nearly the whole term of her existence mining for the
-precious metals has been the all-absorbing business of
-the majority of her people, and has been the business
-which has attracted the attention of nearly all the
-wealthy men of the country. The State annually produces
-immense quantities of hay, and the beef cattle
-of Nevada are the finest and fattest to be found on
-the Pacific Coast. A great part of the beef supply of
-California is obtained from Nevada. The horses of
-Nevada are also very fine and noted for their &ldquo;staying&rdquo;
-qualities, as they have much broader chests and
-larger lungs than the animals reared in valley regions
-near the level of the sea. The State is also beginning
-to make its mark in the business of wool-growing, not
-only on account of the quantity but also the quality
-produced. In price Nevada wool leads the wools of
-all the new regions of the West. Fine wheat and
-good grain of all kinds will everywhere be found in
-Nevada, and the apples, peaches, pears, plums, and
-all other kinds of fruit have a piquancy of flavor not
-to be found in that grown in the sweltering valleys of
-<span class="pb" id="Page_17">17</span>
-California. The same may be said of all kinds of
-kitchen vegetables, strawberries, and other small fruits.
-In the way of potatoes the State produces such as
-have no superiors in any part of the world. This
-elevated region seems as much the natural home of
-the potato as were those high valleys in the Andes
-where it was first found growing wild, and where it
-is said the wild tuber is still to be seen.</p>
-<h3 id="c4">The Rivers of Nevada.</h3>
-<p>Nevada has within her borders no large rivers. In
-the Middle and Western States, her so-called rivers
-would be rated as large brooks or creeks. In England
-and some other European countries her streams
-might pass for rivers. The largest river we have is
-but a rill in comparison with the rivers of the West
-and South. Our Nevada rivers, too, are peculiar in
-that they nearly all remain in the State. But one
-goes outside of our boundaries to wander away in
-search of the great ocean. Most of our streams stay
-at home. Rather than run away to be tossed about
-and lost in the sea, they go down into the ground or
-up into the air.</p>
-<h3 id="c5"><span class="smaller">HUMBOLDT RIVER.</span></h3>
-<p>The Humboldt River rises in the northwestern corner
-of Utah, passes into the northeastern corner of
-Nevada, in Elko County, and thence through Eureka,
-Lander, and Humboldt Counties, to its terminus in its
-lake and sink, just across the line in Churchill County.
-<span class="pb" id="Page_18">18</span>
-The total length of the river is nearly 350 miles, while
-its width is only about thirty or forty feet, and its
-average depth less than eighteen inches. The line
-of the Central Pacific Railroad follows the course of
-the stream a distance of about 320 miles, its channel
-forming a natural depression through the country
-which greatly facilitated the construction of the road.
-Down its course also lay the route followed by the
-emigrants who flocked across the &ldquo;Plains&rdquo; to California
-after the discovery of the gold mines. The water
-of the Humboldt is very bright and sweet toward the
-head, but near the &ldquo;sink&rdquo; the stream becomes rather
-sluggish and is somewhat tainted by the alkali absorbed
-in the lower part of its course. Owing to the increased
-use of water for the irrigation of bordering
-lands above, the quantity flowing into the lake each
-year grows smaller. The water carried out of the
-river by means of ditches to the valley ranches is dissipated
-by absorption and evaporation and never
-reaches the terminal lake. Thus it is seen as a result
-that the lake is gradually drying up. It will probably
-eventually become extinct, or survive as a mud marsh.
-In the spring, when the snow is melting about the
-head-waters of the river, Humboldt Lake has a length
-of about fifteen miles and a width of nine or ten miles.
-In summer and toward fall it becomes much smaller.
-At the south end of this lake is an outlet into a sink,
-or shallow lake, twenty-five or thirty miles long by
-about fifteen wide. This sink at times of high water
-<span class="pb" id="Page_19">19</span>
-connects with a similar sink formed by the overflow
-from Carson Lake, the terminal basin of the Carson
-River. In these sinks are found in the alkaline waters
-myriads of small fish. These attract immense flocks
-of pelicans, gulls, cranes, and other fish-eating water
-fowl. At certain seasons the lakes, sinks, and surrounding
-tule marshes are filled with ducks and geese.
-Large flocks of swan are also often seen out in the
-middle of the lakes. There is much fine agricultural
-and grazing land along down the Humboldt River, and
-about the lake and sink.</p>
-<h3 id="c6"><span class="smaller">TRUCKEE RIVER.</span></h3>
-<p>Truckee River is one of the most beautiful of the
-streams of Nevada. It takes its rise in California
-and its head is an outlet from Lake Tahoe. This
-outlet is on the northwest side of the lake and is
-about fifty feet in width. It has an average depth of
-five feet and a velocity of six feet a second, which
-gives a flow of about 123,120,000 cubic feet in twenty-four
-hours. The head of the river is in Placer
-County, California, it runs nearly north into Nevada
-County, in the same State, to the town of Truckee,
-when it turns and flows northeast till it enters the
-State of Nevada at Verdi, in Washoe County. Its
-course from Verdi to Reno, the county seat of
-Washoe County, is nearly east, thence it is northeast
-to the town of Wadsworth, on the Central Pacific,
-when it suddenly turns to the north, and, after a course
-of about twenty-five miles, enters Pyramid Lake.
-<span class="pb" id="Page_20">20</span>
-From the outlet of Lake Tahoe to Pyramid Lake the
-distance is about 100 miles.</p>
-<p>After leaving Tahoe the Truckee receives the
-waters of many mountain streams. Below Verdi it
-passes through many beautiful and fertile valleys and
-meadows. Pyramid Lake has an elevation of 4,000
-feet above the level of the sea; Lake Tahoe is 6,247
-feet above sea-level, therefore between the two points
-the river has a fall of 2,247 feet, an average of a little
-over twenty-two feet to the mile. Along the river
-from end to end there is almost unlimited water
-power, there being a great volume of water, during
-several months, and an abundance of fall. This
-water-power is utilized at Reno to some extent, but
-what has been done there is merely a commencement
-toward what should be done. Large areas of land
-are irrigated by ditches leading out of the Truckee at
-several points. The stream is filled with beautiful
-trout of two or three species, and also contains other
-smaller fishes of several kinds. A kind sometimes
-seen in its waters at the spawning seasons is a large
-fish of the sucker tribe, which runs up from Pyramid
-Lake, and is called &ldquo;koo-ee-wa&rdquo; by the Piutes. It is
-half head, and in every respect is a very ugly fish. It
-is said that the &ldquo;koo-ee-wa&rdquo; is found nowhere else in
-the world. It is a palatable and wholesome fish, but
-its appearance is against it. The Piutes spear and
-cure (by drying in the sun) great quantities of this
-fish. Several kinds of Eastern fish have been planted
-<span class="pb" id="Page_21">21</span>
-in the waters of the Truckee and have been found to
-flourish. Fish ladders have been placed at all the
-dams in the rivers to permit of the trout and other
-fish ascending toward the head-waters to spawn in the
-various tributary creeks.</p>
-<p>The Truckee River is named after &ldquo;Captain
-Truckee,&rdquo; a Piute chief who in the early days guided
-a party of emigrants from the Humboldt to the beautiful
-stream and thence through Henness Pass across
-the Sierras to California. Captain Truckee also acted
-as a guide for Colonel Fremont when he passed
-through the country in 1846. He died in the Como
-Mountains in 1860, from the bite of some poisonous
-insect, and was there buried by members of his tribe,
-and whites, with much sorrow. A description of
-Pyramid Lake will be given further along, as it deserves
-a separate notice, being the largest lake wholly
-owned by Nevada, and almost as large as the Great
-Salt Lake, in Utah, which is seventy miles in length
-by about thirty in width.</p>
-<h3 id="c7"><span class="smaller">CARSON RIVER.</span></h3>
-<p>The Carson River rises in the Sierras and has several
-tributaries across the line in California, in Alpine
-County. The river is about 220 miles in length and
-ends in Carson Lake. It enters Nevada in Douglas
-County. It has two branches, known as the East
-Fork and the West Fork. These unite near the town
-of Genoa, the county seat of Douglas County. The
-river then plows through the center of Douglas County
-<span class="pb" id="Page_22">22</span>
-into Ormsby, passing near Carson City, the capital of
-the State, thence into Lyon County, and finally finds
-its terminal &ldquo;sink&rdquo; in Carson Lake, in Churchill
-County. This lake has an outlet several miles in
-length into a second lake, or sink, which at times of
-great freshets is united with the lower sink of the
-Humboldt, as has already been mentioned. Carson
-Lake is circular in form and is about twelve miles long
-and eight or nine in width. It has a depth of forty or
-fifty feet, and its waters are quite sweet. The lower
-sink is about twenty miles long and from four to eight
-miles wide. Its waters, particularly toward the north
-end, where it is very shallow, are strongly alkaline.
-These lakes are at times resorted to by great flocks of
-all kinds of water fowl. It is a poor place for fish.
-Trout are not plentiful, and the other kinds&mdash;suckers
-and chubs&mdash;are soft and insipid.</p>
-<p>The Carson River affords water for the irrigation
-of immense tracts of land in Douglas County, in Carson
-Valley, and other valleys below, and power for
-running many large quartz mills that work the ores
-of the Comstock Lode. The first of these mills are
-at Empire City, and they are thence found all along
-down the river to, and a short distance below, the town
-of Dayton.</p>
-<p>Owing to the great quantities of water taken from
-it for the irrigation of ranches above in Carson Valley,
-the river becomes almost dry in the lower part of its
-course during the latter part of each summer. To
-<span class="pb" id="Page_23">23</span>
-remedy this evil large storage reservoirs should be
-constructed in the mountains and higher foot-hill regions.</p>
-<h3 id="c8"><span class="smaller">WALKER RIVER.</span></h3>
-<p>Walker River rises in Mono and Alpine Counties,
-California, and flows through Douglas and Lyon
-Counties, Nevada. Walker Lake, Esmeralda County,
-forms its terminal sink. The river is about 150 miles
-in length. Its waters are bright and sweet, and are
-filled with trout and good food fishes of other varieties.
-The river has two large branches, known as the East
-and the West Walker, which unite below Mason&rsquo;s Valley.
-The waters of Walker River serve to irrigate
-immense tracts of as fine land as is to be found on the
-Pacific Coast, lying in Antelope, Smith&rsquo;s, and Mason&rsquo;s
-Valleys. For the first half of its course the river flows
-northward, then it suddenly turns south and forms
-Walker Lake. This lake is a very bright, beautiful,
-and picturesque sheet of water. It is very irregular in
-form, being frequently widened and contracted between
-its rocky shores. It is about thirty miles long
-and has a width of from five to eight miles.</p>
-<h3 id="c9"><span class="smaller">THE OWYHEE.</span></h3>
-<p>The Owyhee is the only Nevada river that finds its
-way to the ocean. It rises in Elko County, in the
-northwestern corner of the State, and, flowing north
-into Idaho, becomes a tributary of the Snake River.
-Through the Snake its waters find their way north into
-the Columbia River, and thence into the Pacific Ocean.
-<span class="pb" id="Page_24">24</span>
-Every spring salmon ascend the Owyhee and afford
-the anglers of Tuscarora and other mining towns and
-camps in that part of the State excellent and profitable
-sport. The Owyhee irrigates many beautiful valleys.
-In this region prairie-chickens and sage-hens are abundant,
-and a few deer are also found. In the vicinity
-of the river are fine and extensive cattle ranges.</p>
-<h3 id="c10"><span class="smaller">REESE RIVER.</span></h3>
-<p>Reese River takes its rise in the Toyabee Range of
-mountains, in Nye County, near the center of the
-State. It runs through Lander County, near Austin,
-and continues its course northward (under-ground and
-on the surface) to near the Humboldt River, where it
-disappears in the tule marsh. Strictly speaking, it
-&ldquo;empties&rdquo; nowhere in particular. It has a channel
-that leads into the Humboldt a short distance below
-Argenta, but in summer its waters fall short of reaching
-that stream by twenty miles. Although Reese
-River is a narrow and shallow stream, it has a length
-of about 150 miles. There are many fine valleys and
-much excellent grazing land on the bordering benches
-and hills.</p>
-<h3 id="c11"><span class="smaller">OTHER RIVERS.</span></h3>
-<p>Other so-called rivers in Nevada are Quin River,
-a large creek which rises in Idaho and runs south in
-Humboldt County to a small terminal &ldquo;sink&rdquo; situated
-at the north end of a great range of mud flats and
-marshes that lie to the northward of Pyramid Lake.
-There are good stock ranges in the Quin River
-<span class="pb" id="Page_25">25</span>
-country. The Rio Virgin is a small stream about
-eighty miles in length situated in Lincoln County, in
-the extreme southeastern part of the State. It takes
-its rise in Utah and empties into the Colorado River.
-It has a tributary of considerable rise called Muddy
-Creek, or the &ldquo;Big Muddy,&rdquo; on and about which is
-much excellent land and several deserted Mormon
-villages. At one time there were 500 Mormon families
-settled in this part of Nevada, but they were called
-back to Salt Lake by Brigham Young, and abandoned
-their comfortable homes and fine and fertile farms.
-The mouth of the Rio Virgin is but 800 feet above
-the level of the sea, all this region being in what is
-known as the &ldquo;Colorado Basin.&rdquo; The climate is
-much the same as that of Los Angeles, California.
-Oranges, figs, lemons, almonds, olives, pomegranates,
-and all other semi-tropical fruits grow to perfection;
-also cotton and tobacco. All the grains, vegetables,
-and fruits of the temperate zone flourish finely. This
-spot is the Eden of the great basin region.</p>
-<p>The Colorado River forms the southeastern boundary
-of Nevada. Although it is not one of the rivers of
-the State system, yet it is one to which Nevada has
-some claim. Where it sweeps along the southern
-border of the State the stream is half a mile wide and
-has a depth of from ten to twenty feet. The river is
-navigable for steamboats from Callville, a short distance
-between the mouth of the Rio Virgin, to Port
-Isabel, on the Gulf of California, a distance of 600
-<span class="pb" id="Page_26">26</span>
-miles. Callville is one of the towns (now almost
-deserted) founded by the Mormons during their occupation
-of that region of the country. The proposed
-railroad from Salt Lake City would cause this region
-to again become populous and prosperous.</p>
-<h3 id="c12">Mineral Treasures of Nevada.</h3>
-<p>There are mines of the precious metals in every
-county in the State. There are mines of gold, silver,
-lead, copper, and other valuable metals in all the
-rugged, parallel ranges of mountains running through
-the great central plateau. Mining and agriculture are
-thus pursued side by side. Lying between the mountain
-ranges and running in the same direction are
-valleys containing arable land, while on the benches
-and lower hills are excellent grazing lands, on which
-grow nutritious bunch-grass and other valuable native
-grasses. In all parts of the State mining is being
-profitably pursued, and almost weekly new and valuable
-discoveries of the precious metals are somewhere
-being made. Although the country has been
-walked and ridden over in various directions for the
-past twenty-five years, there are still hundreds of sections
-where no real prospecting has ever been done.
-Even in the oldest and best-known mining camps,
-many discoveries yet remain to be made. Although
-explorations were made in the southern half of the
-State in the early days, and thousands of mining locations
-made, little real mining has been done on any
-of the hundreds of large and promising veins discovered.
-<span class="pb" id="Page_27">27</span>
-The work done has been mere surface
-scratching, and the majority of the claims have long
-since been abandoned by their locators. Lack of
-facilities for the transportation of ores and supplies
-made it impracticable to work mines situated at a
-great distance from lines of railroad. The men who
-prospected and made locations in wild and distant regions
-were men of little means, and when their small
-stocks of money and provisions were exhausted, they
-were obliged to abandon their claims and return to
-the settlements, as men of capital could not be induced
-to invest their money in mines out in the wilderness
-far from any means of transportation. Thus
-it happens that there are many sections of the country
-the mines of which are the same as unprospected&mdash;mines
-which will produce millions when lines of
-railroad shall furnish facilities for the transportation of
-ore, machinery, and supplies. In Lincoln, Nye,
-White Pine, Lander, Elko, and Humboldt Counties,
-there are hundreds of mining districts in which this is
-the case, and in these hundreds of districts are lying
-unworked thousands of quartz veins, all showing
-more or less of the precious metals at the very surface,
-and even in the croppings above the surface.</p>
-<p>A thousand years of mining will not exhaust the
-mineral treasures of the mountains of Nevada.
-Cheaper and cheaper means of mining and reducing
-ores will continue to be found, and presently it will
-be possible to work the mines of common metals
-<span class="pb" id="Page_28">28</span>
-which cannot now be touched. Besides gold and
-silver the mountains of Nevada contain veins of copper,
-lead, iron, antimony, nickel, zinc, and many others,
-as cobalt, graphite, and the like. Not only are
-the mountains of the State rich in all kinds of metals,
-but the lower lands are also filled with valuable mineral
-treasures. In the basins of extinct lakes in all
-parts of the State, and aggregating hundreds of square
-miles, are inexhaustible deposits of borax, soda, salt,
-gypsum, glaubers, alum, sulphur, and many other
-mineral products of a similar character, which are only
-now beginning to be utilized at points near lines of
-railway.</p>
-<h3 id="c13">Agricultural Resources.</h3>
-<p>In the limited space at command in a small book
-such as this it is not possible to more than give to
-the agricultural and horticultural resources of the
-State a passing glance, as has been done in the case
-of the mining and mineral products and resources.
-Although until within a very few years past Nevada
-has never been thought of outside of the State as
-being anything else than a region of mines, of metals,
-and beds of minerals, it is now evident that she has
-agricultural advantages and resources long unsuspected.
-Nevada is well calculated to become a great
-stock-growing State. Already she has her &ldquo;cattle
-kings,&rdquo; and they are not as the roving cattle kings of
-other lands. They have struck their roots deep in
-the soil and are permanent residents. While the
-<span class="pb" id="Page_29">29</span>
-tillage of the soil alone will be found as profitable
-here as elsewhere for the small farmer whose ranch is
-within reach of a ready market, the real and great
-business of the Nevada land owner must be stock-growing.
-This is not a matter of choice or taste, but
-is a thing demanded by the configuration of the
-country, the climate, and the nature of the soil. In
-order that the natural resources of the country may
-be properly utilized the greater part of the valley
-regions (nearly all at a distance from towns) must be
-given up to the stock-grower. He must have valley
-lands on which to raise sufficient hay and other feed
-to tide his live-stock through any severe spells of
-cold weather or big snow-storms that may occur during
-the winter months. In order to utilize the vast
-surrounding grazing ranges the cattle king must have
-a &ldquo;center stake&rdquo; driven in some good, productive
-valley. This is required as a magazine of supplies
-for the winter season. While cattle, horses, and
-sheep will find a living on the ranges during the
-greater part of the winter, still the stock-grower who
-would not suffer occasional disaster must be provided
-against the accident of possible cold &ldquo;snaps&rdquo; and
-unusually heavy snow-falls. A glance over the physical
-features of the country shows that the proportion
-of arable to grazing land is very well balanced. When
-proper attention shall be given to the storage of water
-for irrigation it will be found that each valley will
-have sufficient capacity to produce hay, grain, and
-<span class="pb" id="Page_30">30</span>
-root crops adequate to the requirements of the flocks
-and herds that can find pasturage on the surrounding
-range.</p>
-<p>On the ranges are found several valuable native
-grasses, some of which are cut for hay. Those most
-valuable for hay are the blue-joint, red-top, one variety
-of bunch-grass, and several varieties of clover.
-All these grasses grow in the moist lands of the valleys
-and natural meadows, but some varieties of
-bunch-grass flourish on the hills and elevated benches.
-Among the native grasses of the country could no
-doubt be found one valuable variety at least that
-would grow without irrigation and that could be
-greatly improved by cultivation. Such a grass is probably
-that called &ldquo;sand-grass,&rdquo; of which large fields are
-frequently seen in dry, sandy, and apparently utterly
-barren plains. It grows to a height of about fifteen
-inches and has many spreading branches on each
-stalk, which branches are loaded with a large black
-seed, that is very fattening, and of which all kinds of
-grazing animals are very fond. It would be well to
-sow the seed of this grass, which is a species of
-bunch-grass, on properly plowed and prepared ground
-in order to ascertain its capability of cultivation.
-There are not fewer than forty varieties of native
-grasses found in Nevada and eight or ten kinds of
-clover. Alfalfa is the forage plant most cultivated for
-hay, and on a suitable soil has no superior. Timothy,
-red and white clover, and other tame grasses, do well.
-<span class="pb" id="Page_31">31</span>
-A very valuable native forage plant, for the reason
-that it flourishes in even the most arid and sterile
-localities, is that commonly called &ldquo;white sage.&rdquo; It
-is a plant of a whitish-ash color and does not belong
-to the &ldquo;artemesia,&rdquo; or sagebrush, family. This hardy
-plant furnishes good winter feed for cattle. It is
-resinous and bitter until after the heavy frosts of early
-winter. Freezing renders it tender, sweet, and nutritious.
-Even human beings may support life on the
-white sage. In hard winters, before the whites came
-into the country, at times when no game could be
-found, the Piutes were occasionally obliged to subsist
-for weeks at a time wholly on white sage cooked
-by boiling it in baskets by means of hot stones.</p>
-<h3 id="c14">The Comstock Mines.</h3>
-<p>Having now given the reader some idea of the topography
-and physical aspect of the State, with a hasty
-general view of its mineral and agricultural productions
-and resources, we shall give a more particular
-account of the Comstock Lode, in which the first
-discovery of silver was made; where the deepest
-shafts have been sunk, and where mining for the
-precious metals is to be seen on a grander scale than
-anywhere else in the United States, or anywhere in
-the New World, taking into consideration the power
-of the machinery used and the examples of scientific
-mining engineering to be seen. A description of the
-mines and mining methods of the Comstock will
-answer for those of all other parts of the State, except
-<span class="pb" id="Page_32">32</span>
-that in places where the ores are argentiferous galena,
-or otherwise very base, smelting furnaces take the
-place of the ordinary stamp and pan mills.</p>
-<h3 id="c15">The Discovery of Silver.</h3>
-<p>The discovery of silver in Nevada in 1859 (then
-Western Utah), caused an immense excitement in
-California, and indeed throughout the United States.
-The excitement was one such as had not been before
-seen since the discovery of the gold mines of California.
-Permanency and ultimate value being considered,
-the discovery of silver undoubtedly deserves to
-rank in merit above the discovery of the gold mines of
-California, as it gives value to a much greater area of
-territory and furnishes employment to a much larger
-number of persons. It has given wealth and population
-to all the vast region lying between the Sierra
-Nevada and the Rocky Mountain Ranges.</p>
-<h3 id="c16">Placer Mining on Gold Canyon</h3>
-<p>Gold was first discovered in this region in the
-spring of 1850. It was found in what is now known
-as Gold Canyon, by a company of Mormon emigrants
-<i>en route</i> to California. Having arrived too early to
-cross the Sierras, they encamped on the Carson River,
-where the town of Dayton now stands, to await the
-melting away of the snow on the mountains. To
-while away the time some of the men of the party tried
-prospecting in a large canyon that put into the river
-near their camp. They found gold in the first pan of
-gravel they washed. Looking further they soon found
-that certain bars and gravel banks afforded much
-<span class="pb" id="Page_33">33</span>
-richer pay dirt than that first tried. They were able
-to make from $5.00 to $8.00 a day, but left as soon as the
-mountains were passable, as they anticipated taking
-out gold by the pound on reaching California. Other
-emigrants who followed the Mormons did some mining
-in the canyon while camped on the river. All
-made good wages, and one or two families stopped
-and went regularly to work at mining. However, when
-the supply of water in the canyon gave out toward the
-end of summer, they &ldquo;pulled up stakes&rdquo; and crossed
-the mountains to California.</p>
-<p>What was told of the mines on Gold Canyon by
-these emigrants induced parties of miners working in
-and about Placerville to visit them. During the winter
-and spring months, while there was water, these
-men were able to make from half an ounce to an
-ounce a day. The camp had no permanent population,
-however, until the winter and spring of 1852-53,
-when there were over 200 men at work on the bars
-and gravel banks along the canyon, with rockers, toms,
-and sluices.</p>
-<p>As the gold found in the canyon came from quartz
-veins toward its head, about Silver City and Gold
-Hill, these early miners were even then on the track
-of the great Comstock Lode, but without once even
-suspecting the existence of such a large and rich vein.
-The trading-post, or little hamlet near the junction of
-the canyon and the Carson River, which at first served
-as a base of supplies, was presently left far behind as
-<span class="pb" id="Page_34">34</span>
-the miners worked their way up the stream from bar
-to bar, and they founded a town of their own, on a
-plateau near the canyon, called Johntown. This town
-was situated a short distance below where Silver City
-now stands, and was then the &ldquo;mining metropolis&rdquo;
-of Western Utah. One dilapidated stone chimney
-yet stands as a monument to mark the site of this
-now ruined mining town.</p>
-<p>Johntown constituted a center from which prospectors
-occasionally scouted forth. These prospectors
-had no thought of anything except placer mines&mdash;native
-gold in gravel deposits. In 1857 some of these
-Johntown miners struck paying gravel in Six-mile
-Canyon. This canyon is about five miles north of
-Gold Canyon, for the greater part of its course, but
-the heads of the two canyons are only about a mile
-apart, and both are on what is now known as the
-Comstock Lode. The pay found on Six-mile Canyon
-began only about a mile below the massive croppings
-that tower above the Comstock; still these early miners
-never once thought of going up to the head of the
-ravine to look for and prospect the quartz veins; all
-they thought of was free gold in deposits of earth and
-gravel.</p>
-<p>In January, 1859, James Finney, or Fennimore,
-better known by his popular <i>soubriquet</i> of &ldquo;Old Virginia&rdquo;
-(he being a native of the State of Virginia),
-John Bishop, and a few others of the Johntown miners,
-struck a rich deposit of free gold in placer diggings
-<span class="pb" id="Page_35">35</span>
-in a little hill at the head of Gold Canyon.
-From this hill the town of Gold Hill derives its name.
-These mines were so rich that most of the Johntown
-people moved to them. The gold was in a deposit of
-decomposed quartz mingled with soil, and the miners
-were really delving in a part of the Comstock Lode
-without at first knowing that they were at work on any
-quartz vein. These diggings yielded gold by the
-pound, at times.</p>
-<p>In the spring of 1859 several Johntowners returned
-to the diggings they had discovered on Six-mile Canyon
-two years before. With these men went Peter
-O&rsquo;Riley and Patrick McLaughlin, but finding all the
-paying ground already claimed they went to the head
-of the canyon and began prospecting on the slope of
-the mountain with a rocker, leading in a small stream
-of water from a neighboring spring. They found but
-poor pay in the light top dirt they were working (for
-there was no washed gravel), and they had about concluded
-to abandon their claim when they made the
-grand discovery of the age. They had sunk a small
-pit in which to collect water for use in their rockers.
-It was deeper than they had yet dug. Seeing in the
-bottom of this hole material of a different appearance
-from any they had yet worked, they were tempted to
-try some of it in their rocker. When a bucket of this
-dirt was rocked out, to their great delight the two men
-saw that they had made a &ldquo;strike.&rdquo; The whole
-apron of their rocker was covered with a layer of
-bright and glittering gold.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_36">36</div>
-<p>In that little prospect hole, silver mining in America,
-as now known, was born. At that moment the
-eyes of these two men, standing alone among the sagebrush
-of the rugged mountain slope, rested upon the
-first of many hundreds of millions in the two precious
-metals that have since been taken out of the
-Comstock Lode; for in the rocker along with the gold
-was a quantity of rich black sulphuret of silver. This
-&ldquo;heavy black stuff,&rdquo; which not a little puzzled the two
-uneducated miners, was almost pure silver. They
-thought it was some worthless base metal, and were
-very sorry to see it, as it clogged their rocker and interfered
-with the washing out of the fine gold-dust.</p>
-<p><span class="sc">Henry Comstock.</span>&mdash;Henry Thomas Paige Comstock,
-as he gave his name&mdash;has by many persons
-been credited with the discovery of the Comstock,
-but it is an honor to which he was not entitled. The
-credit of discovering silver in Nevada belongs to Peter
-O&rsquo;Riley and Patrick McLaughlin. The grand discovery
-had been made several hours before Comstock
-knew of it. Toward evening on the day the &ldquo;find&rdquo;
-was made, Comstock, who had been out hunting his
-mustang, came to where the two men were at work.
-They were taking out gold by the pound and decomposed
-silver ore by hundreds of pounds. Comstock
-saw the gold and realized that a great strike had been
-made. He instantly determined to have a share.
-He at once declared that he had a claim upon the
-ground. He said he had located it some time before,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_37">37</span>
-also the water of the spring. He so blustered about
-his rights and so swaggered about what he could and
-would do that rather than have any trouble the two
-quiet miners agreed to take him in and give him a
-share of the mine.</p>
-<p>No sooner had Comstock been made a partner in
-the mine than he placed himself at the front in everything
-about it. He constituted himself superintendent,
-did all the talking and none of the working, and
-was always ready to tell strangers about the mine.
-When visitors came it was always <i>my</i> mine and <i>my</i>
-everything. Thus people came to talk of Comstock&rsquo;s
-mine and Comstock&rsquo;s vein; then it was the Comstock
-vein&mdash;as persons making locations asserted
-that they were on the same vein as Comstock, <i>i. e.</i>,
-the Comstock vein&mdash;and in that way the name of
-Comstock became fastened upon the whole lode. As
-the first claim was called the Ophir, that would have
-been a more fitting name for the whole vein than the
-one it now bears. For a long time Comstock no
-more appreciated the heavy black material that accompanied
-the gold, and in lumps of which much of
-the gold was embedded, than did O&rsquo;Riley and McLaughlin.
-It was not until returns had been received
-from samples of it sent to California for assay
-that anyone in Nevada knew that the &ldquo;heavy black
-stuff&rdquo; was almost pure silver.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_38">38</div>
-<h3 id="c17">The Grand Rush over the Sierras</h3>
-<p>With the returns of
-the assays came a rush from California. The assays
-were made at Nevada City, California, and the result
-so astonished the assayer that he could hardly believe
-his figures or his eyes. But other assays verified those
-first made, and the immense richness of the ore in
-both gold and silver could no longer be doubted. A
-few men were let into the secret, they let in a few
-more, and at once the great news spread far and wide.
-Soon miners, speculators, and adventurers of all kinds
-came over the Sierras to the silver mines in swarms.
-A town of tents, brush shanties, and canvas houses began
-to appear on the side of Mount Davidson&mdash;then
-known as &ldquo;Sunrise Peak,&rdquo; as it caught the first rays of
-the morning sun. It was about the 1st of June when
-the silver was first struck, and, the weather being warm,
-many persons camped in the open air&mdash;cared for
-neither tent nor brush shanty.</p>
-<p>There were about 1,000 persons in Western Utah
-at the time silver was discovered, and all were living
-under Mormon rule. Most of those in the country at
-that time were engaged in farming and cattle growing,
-in trade with the emigrants, or in gambling and running
-off stock; only about 200 were engaged in mining,
-and all these were working gold placers. A number
-of ranchers from surrounding valleys took up
-claims on the line of the lode when they heard that
-it was a silver vein, but neither the placer miners, the
-ranchers, nor any one else that was in the country at the
-time the great discovery was made, ever got more than
-a few hundreds or thousands of dollars out of it.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_39">39</div>
-<h3 id="c18">The Fate of the Discoverers.</h3>
-<p>Although Comstock was not a discoverer, he was one
-of the original locators on the lode. He sold his interest
-for $10,000. With this he opened a store in
-Carson City for the sale of such goods as the trade of
-the country demanded; also a similar store, but with
-a smaller stock, at Silver City. Knowing nothing of
-business, having no education, and being unable to
-keep books, he was soon &ldquo;flat broke.&rdquo; After losing
-all the property he possessed in Nevada, Comstock
-struck out into Idaho and Montana, where he prospected
-for some years without success. In September,
-1870, while encamped near Bozeman, Montana, <i>en
-route</i> to prospect in the Big Horn country, he committed
-suicide, blowing out his brains with his six-shooter.</p>
-<p><span class="sc">Patrick McLaughlin</span> sold his interest in the
-Ophir (the discovery claim) for $3,500, which sum he
-soon lost, and he then worked as a cook at the Green
-mine, in the southern part of California, for a time. He
-finally died while wandering from place to place and
-working at odd jobs, generally as a cook.</p>
-<p><span class="sc">Peter O&rsquo;Riley</span> held his interest until it brought
-him about $50,000, a part of which he received in the
-shape of dividends. He erected a stone hotel on B
-Street, Virginia City, called the Virginia House. He
-then began dealing in mining stocks and soon lost
-everything. Under the guidance of spirits&mdash;he was a
-<span class="pb" id="Page_40">40</span>
-Spiritualist&mdash;he finally began running a tunnel into a
-bald and barren granite spur of the Sierras, near Genoa,
-in Douglas County, expecting to strike a richer vein
-than the Comstock. However, the spirits talked so
-much to him about caverns of gold and silver that he
-became insane and was sent to a private asylum at
-Woodbridge, California, where he soon died.</p>
-<p>The men who made millions were those who came
-after the mines had been pretty well prospected, as
-Mackay, Fair, Sharon, Jones, and others.</p>
-<h3 id="c19">Early Mining and Milling.</h3>
-<p>Once people became convinced of the richness,
-extent, and permanency of the ore deposits on the
-Comstock, towns were built up on the lode and at
-points in the valleys as if by enchantment. Machinery
-was brought over the Sierras under all manner
-of difficulties by teams, and soon mills for working
-the ores were built by scores. In 1859 the Americans,
-as a people, knew nothing about silver mining.
-At that time there were probably not a dozen American
-miners on the Pacific Coast who had ever even seen a
-sample of silver ore. In the California placer mines,
-however, were quite a number of Mexicans who had
-worked in silver mines in their own country. These
-men at once deserted their gold placers in California
-and came flocking over to the Sierras when the cry of
-&ldquo;Plata! mucha plata!&rdquo; was raised among them. &ldquo;A
-gold placer,&rdquo; said they, &ldquo;is soon worked out, but a
-silver mine lasts for generations and generations.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_41">41</div>
-<p>At first the word of the Mexicans was law in the
-new silver mines, both as regarded ore and the methods
-of mining and working it. Every American miner
-endeavored to secure a Mexican partner, or at least
-a Mexican foreman to take charge of his mine. Mexican
-methods, however, soon proved to be too slow
-for the Americans. Their arastras, patios, and little
-adobe smelting furnaces were the primitive contrivances
-of a non-mechanical people, and of a race of
-miners working as individuals, and on a very small
-scale at that.</p>
-<p>The Americans at once introduced stamp mills for
-crushing the ore, and next introduced pans to hasten
-the process of amalgamation. The operation of amalgamating
-the crushed ore, which required days by the
-patio process, was reduced to hours by the use of
-steam-heated iron pans.</p>
-<p>The Mexican miners were no better underground at
-working in the vein than they were on the surface, at
-extracting the precious metals after the ore was mined.
-In the Mexican mine, where everything was managed
-according to their own notions&mdash;the owner being a
-Mexican named Gabriel Maldanado&mdash;they carried the
-ore out of the mine in rawhide sacks, the miners
-climbing to the surface by means of a series of notched
-poles. Their timbering was also very defective. In
-ore bodies so large as those of the Comstock, they
-did not know how to support the ground.</p>
-<p>Among the miners working in the gold placers of
-<span class="pb" id="Page_42">42</span>
-California at the time of the discovery of silver on
-this side of the Sierras, were a few Germans who had
-worked in the silver mines of their &ldquo;Vaterland,&rdquo; and
-among these were some half dozen who had been educated
-in the mining academy of Freyberg, and had
-received regular scientific and practical training in the
-art of mining. The mining and metallurgical knowledge
-of these men was the best then existing in any
-part of the world, as regarded the working of argentiferous
-ores. The Germans introduced the barrel
-process of amalgamation and the roasting of ores.
-While the barrel process was a great improvement on
-the patio, it was found not so well adapted to the
-rapid working of the Comstock ores as the newly invented
-pan process. It has also been found that the
-free milling ores of the lode do not require to be
-roasted.</p>
-<p>Philip Deidesheimer, a German who had been appointed
-superintendent of the Ophir Mine, however,
-invented a method of timbering in &ldquo;square sets,&rdquo;
-which is perfect in every respect, and which is still in
-use in all Comstock mines. By this method of building
-up squares of framed timbers an ore vein of any
-width may be safely worked to any height or depth; a
-vein 300 feet in width may as rapidly be worked as
-one only 10 or 20 feet wide.</p>
-<h3 id="c20">Mining Difficulties and Inventions.</h3>
-<p>Early in the mining history of the Comstock there
-began to be heavy flows of water with which to contend.
-<span class="pb" id="Page_43">43</span>
-This called for pumping machinery and apparatus;
-and as greater and greater depth was attained,
-larger and larger pumps were demanded. The best
-and heaviest machinery in use in Europe was examined,
-and upon this improvements were from time to
-time made as increased flows of water required increased
-capacity. All the inventive genius of the Pacific
-Coast was called into play, and the result has
-been the construction of some of the most powerful
-and effective steam and hydraulic pumping apparatus
-to be found in any part of the world.</p>
-<p>At first the water with which the Comstock miners
-had to contend was cold, but it was not long before
-the deeper workings cut into parts of the vein where
-were tapped heavy flows of hot water&mdash;water actually
-hot enough to cook an egg, or to scald a man to
-death almost instantly. Several miners have lost their
-lives by falling into large tanks, or sumps, of this water,
-hot from the vein. The hot water called for fans,
-blowers, and all kinds of ventilating apparatus, as men
-working in heated drifts had to have a supply of cool
-and fresh air sent in to them. Great improvements
-have also been made in hoisting cages, though the first
-idea of these came from Europe.</p>
-<p>In California at the time of the discovery of the
-Comstock, were many men who had worked in the
-mines of Cornwall, England. These men thoroughly
-understood all manner of under-ground work, and were
-able to successfully carry through many undertakings in
-<span class="pb" id="Page_44">44</span>
-the way of sinking shafts, inclines, and winzes, and in
-making raises and running drifts in ground where the
-difficulties at first sight seemed almost insurmountable.</p>
-<h3 id="c21">Various Mining and Milling Appliances.</h3>
-<p>Compressed air for running power drills, and for
-driving fans and small hoisting engines at depths varying
-from 1,000 to 3,000 feet below the surface, was
-early adopted in the Comstock mines, as also were
-the several new explosives for blasting. Diamond
-drills for drilling long distances through solid rock
-were also at one time in general use, but have been
-discarded for prospecting purposes, being found unreliable.
-The existence of ore may be ascertained by
-means of the diamond drill, but the amount found is
-a matter of uncertainty in all cases.</p>
-<p>By the pan processes in the early days there were
-immense losses in the precious metals and in quicksilver.
-While the pans might be much alike in construction
-almost every millman was making experiments
-with some secret process of his own for the
-amalgamation of the ore. It now seems ridiculous,
-but some millmen were actually using sagebrush tea
-in their pans, and others a decoction of cedar bark.
-They tried all manner of trash, both mineral and vegetable.
-It was at that time that untold millions in
-gold, silver, and quicksilver were swept away into the
-Carson River with the tailings; for the ore on which
-all these experiments were tried was almost pure silver.
-<span class="pb" id="Page_45">45</span>
-Although scores of amalgamating pans of various
-patterns have been invented and patented, there
-is still room for improvement. The improvements
-made from time to time have resulted in saving a large
-per cent of the precious metals contained in the ores
-operated upon, and also in a smaller loss of quicksilver,
-yet none of the apparatus in use is perfect. Experiments
-having in view further savings are still constantly
-being made.</p>
-<h3 id="c22">The Comstock as a School for Miners.</h3>
-<p>The Comstock is the mother of silver mining in
-America. In this lode hundreds of men have obtained
-a thorough practical knowledge of mining in all its
-forms and departments. Men who were graduated on
-the Comstock are now to be found in all parts of the
-world. They early went to Idaho, Montana, Utah,
-Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona, Alaska, and British
-Columbia. Old Comstock foremen and superintendents
-are to-day in charge of mines in Mexico, Central
-America, South America, Australia, Africa, China,
-Japan, and all other regions where there is mining for
-the precious metals. Already they are in the gold
-fields of the Amoor River&mdash;having pushed their way
-across from Alaska&mdash;and they are ready to push their
-way to the ends of the earth in search of the precious
-metals.</p>
-<h3 id="c23">Virginia City and its Surroundings.</h3>
-<p>Virginia City, the county seat of Storey County, is
-situated on the eastern face of Mount Davidson, the
-<span class="pb" id="Page_46">46</span>
-culminating peak of a range of rocky hills running
-northeast and southwest, and having a length of about
-thirty-two miles. Mount Davidson rises to a height of
-7,775 feet above the level of the sea, and is a rocky,
-treeless peak. On the slope of this mountain, about
-1,775 feet below its summit, lies Virginia City. It
-may be said that the city occupies a position about
-midway between the base and the apex of the mountain,
-as the Carson River, which flows along near the
-eastern foot of the range, is 1,700 feet below the town.
-It is literally &ldquo;a city set on a hill.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>From the tents and brush shanties set up near the
-Ophir Mine immediately after the discovery of silver
-was made, the growth of the town was rapid. The
-first structure worthy of the name of &ldquo;house&rdquo; was
-erected in the summer of 1859, by Lyman Jones, a
-pioneer miner of Gold Canyon. It was of canvass
-and was 18x40 feet in size. Soon several frame structures
-were removed from Johntown and from Dayton
-(then called &ldquo;Chinatown&rdquo;) to the &ldquo;new diggings&rdquo; of
-&ldquo;Ophir.&rdquo; Lumber from saw-mills in the foot-hills of
-the Sierras was then procured and a few small houses
-and offices erected. As there was then no wagon
-road up the mountain to where the city now stands it
-was necessary to carry lumber up to the new diggings
-on horses, half packing and half dragging it from the
-valley, where it was delivered by wagons. Very soon,
-however, a wagon track was made up the mountain,
-and building then progressed more rapidly.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_47">47</div>
-<p>At first the new mining camp had no fixed or acknowledged
-name. It was variously spoken of as
-&ldquo;Ophir,&rdquo; &ldquo;Ophir Diggings,&rdquo; &ldquo;Pleasant Hill,&rdquo; and
-&ldquo;Mount Pleasant Point,&rdquo; though at that time there
-could have been nothing very &ldquo;pleasant&rdquo; about the
-place, except the sight of the gold and silver then being
-dug out by the pound and by the ton almost at
-the surface of the ground&mdash;less than a yard below the
-roots of the sage-brush. Even as late as October,
-1859, the place was called Ophir Diggings. About
-that time James Fennimore, known among the miners
-as &ldquo;Old Virginia,&rdquo; was in the camp one night, having
-a &ldquo;little run with the boys,&rdquo; when he fell and broke
-his whisky bottle against a rock. Old Virginia picked
-up the bottom part of the bottle, in which still remained
-a small quantity of the precious liquid, and,
-solemnly pouring it upon the ground, said, &ldquo;I christen
-this camp Virginia!&rdquo; He called upon those present
-to bear witness to the fact that he had duly named
-and christened the town in honor of himself and his
-native State.</p>
-<p>Old Virginia was a favorite among the miners, and
-one and all declared that Virginia should be the name
-of the town. At first the place was called &ldquo;Virginia
-Town,&rdquo; but soon the word city was tacked on to Virginia,
-the name by which it was christened, and
-Virginia City it has remained. Old Virginia had some
-right to name the town. He was one of the first to
-mine on Six-mile Canyon, working at a point now included
-<span class="pb" id="Page_48">48</span>
-in the eastern suburbs of the city, and he was
-the first man in the country to locate a quartz vein in
-the vicinity. This vein was a large one lying west of
-the Ophir, and known as the &ldquo;Virginia Vein,&rdquo; or
-&ldquo;Virginia Croppings.&rdquo; This back lead contained a
-vast deal of &ldquo;base metal,&rdquo; but very little paying ore.
-The location was made February 22, 1858, more than
-a year before the discovery of silver. In July, 1861,
-&ldquo;Old Virginia&rdquo; was thrown from a &ldquo;bucking&rdquo; mustang,
-in the town of Dayton, and killed. At the time
-of his death he was possessed of about $3,000 in gold
-coin.</p>
-<p>The first buildings were erected pretty much at
-random in the new town, but soon streets were laid
-out. Those nearest the Ophir Mine were first built
-on&mdash;A and B Streets. In the spring of 1860, B Street
-was the principal business street of the town, and
-there were several places of business on A Street,
-while many new buildings were going up on C Street&mdash;the
-principal business street at present.</p>
-<p>The first winter (1859-60) many persons lived in
-holes excavated in the side of the mountain and
-roofed with sagebrush and earth. There were then
-no hotel accommodations worthy of the name. Peter
-O&rsquo;Riley&rsquo;s stone hotel, on B Street, was not yet completed,
-and the International Hotel, owned by Bateman
-&amp; Paul, was a little frame structure, capable of
-accommodating only a small number of persons, and
-those in the roughest style imaginable. In May, 1860,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_49">49</span>
-a war broke out with the Piute Indians that lasted a
-month. This trouble caused a grand stampede of
-the white settlers, and gave the new town a temporary
-backset, but the people soon recovered from their
-fright, and in another month building was as lively as
-before the war broke out.</p>
-<p>During the years 1860-61 the town built up very
-rapidly, and in 1862-63 brick and stone &ldquo;fire-proof&rdquo;
-buildings were erected in all directions, as already
-fires began to be of frequent occurrence. Year by
-year the city grew in area, population, and wealth.
-Building went on both summer and winter, and at
-times was pushed almost day and night. As the
-mines were opened and worked their immense richness
-attracted hundreds and thousands of persons
-from California, and all parts of the Atlantic States
-and Canada. Money was more plentiful and the
-prices paid for skilled and all other kinds of labor
-were far higher than anywhere else on the American
-continent; all articles of merchandise also brought
-greater prices than could anywhere else be obtained.
-Gold coin jingled in the pockets of all in the city&mdash;those
-of the drones as well as those of the workers.</p>
-<p>With the honest, industrious, and peaceable came
-the sharper, the idler, and the desperado. Adventurers
-of every class and every grade of wickedness,
-both male and female, swarmed in the town. There
-were many desperate affrays, robberies, and murders.
-&ldquo;Cutting and shooting scrapes&rdquo; were of almost daily
-<span class="pb" id="Page_50">50</span>
-and nightly occurrence in the streets and in the saloons.
-At one time the nightly killings were so frequent
-that residents expected each morning to hear
-that there was &ldquo;a man for breakfast.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Finally murders, robberies, and incendiary fires became
-so frequent that a &ldquo;Vigilance Committee,&rdquo;
-known as &ldquo;601,&rdquo; was organized and became active in
-the spring of 1871. It was the object of the organization
-to rid the town of all manner of evil-doers, and
-particularly of such desperate characters as almost without
-provocation killed peaceable citizens. After there
-had been two or three hangings by &ldquo;601,&rdquo; and after
-many bad characters had received &ldquo;notices&rdquo; to leave
-(which all at once obeyed), the city again became
-quiet and orderly.</p>
-<h3 id="c24"><span class="smaller">CITY IMPROVEMENTS.</span></h3>
-<p>Owing to the steep slope of the mountain, the site
-of the town was by no means favorable, but, at great
-cost for grading, many fine, level streets were constructed.
-The principal streets were then filled in to
-the depth of a yard with waste quartz and other hard,
-flinty rock from the mines. This work was so well
-done that to this day the streets are hard, smooth, and
-dry. The Virginia Gas Company was early organized,
-and the streets and business houses lighted with gas.
-As early as 1862 a water company organized and
-brought a supply of water from several tunnels run
-into the Virginia Range west of the city. This
-water was conveyed to the town by means of wooden
-<span class="pb" id="Page_51">51</span>
-flumes and iron pipes, and distributed to customers
-throughout the place. The supply of water, however,
-at that time was not adequate to the requirements of
-the town, and the quality was poor, being much impaired
-by the deleterious minerals it held in solution.
-Mention of the present system of water works will be
-made in another place.</p>
-<p>Meantime, while the town was building up, good
-wagon roads had been constructed in various directions
-at great cost. A number of fire companies had
-been organized (provided at first with hand engines,
-but afterwards with steamers), and Virginia City began
-to take on the appearance of a real &ldquo;city,&rdquo; not only
-in the number and substantial character of the buildings,
-and swarms of people it contained, but also in
-the number of conveniences it afforded, its many societies,
-churches, schools, theaters, clubs, orders, and
-organizations, usually considered the necessary adjuncts
-and requirements of civilized and intelligent
-communities. There were also several daily and
-weekly newspapers, telegraph, express, and all other
-similar offices required by business and mining men,
-and by the people at large. Indeed, in 1875 the area
-of the city was as great as at present, and much more
-populous, as at that time it was estimated to contain
-20,000 people. Hundreds and thousands of these,
-however, were mere birds of passage, being neither
-business men nor owners of property. At and about
-Gold Hill at that time it was estimated that there
-<span class="pb" id="Page_52">52</span>
-were about 10,000 souls. The two towns, originally
-a mile apart, were connected by buildings&mdash;had grown
-together. Both towns were filled with mills and mining
-works, that gave employment to many thousands
-of miners, mechanics, and workingmen of all grades
-and classes.</p>
-<h3 id="c25">The Great Fire.</h3>
-<p>Everything was thus flourishing and prosperous&mdash;the
-&ldquo;Big Bonanza&rdquo; was yielding its millions, and several
-other mines were working great and rich bodies
-of ore&mdash;when Virginia City was overwhelmed by a
-great calamity.</p>
-<p>On the morning of October 26, 1875, a fire broke
-out in a frame lodging-house on A Street, in the
-western part of the town, just above all the great business
-blocks, and in a few hours all in an area of half
-a mile square was laid in ashes. Before the fire was
-subdued no fewer than 2,000 buildings&mdash;including
-mills, hoisting works, churches, business houses, and
-structures of all kinds&mdash;were swept away. Hundreds
-of families were left homeless and destitute. Owing
-to the early hour at which the fire started (six o&rsquo;clock),
-and the fearful rapidity with which it spread in all
-directions, few persons were able to save any of their
-goods or valuables. In all, property to the value of over
-$10,000,000 was destroyed. Many great and destructive
-fires had before swept through and devastated the
-city, but this was the greatest ever experienced in the
-place. Scores of buildings that had always been
-<span class="pb" id="Page_53">53</span>
-rated as fire-proof melted away in the fervent heat
-like frost in the rays of the morning sun.</p>
-<p>Almost in the start the court-house, the building
-of the Washoe Club, the International Hotel, and several
-other large buildings, were ignited and began vomiting
-pillars of flame that scattered sparks and cinders
-far and wide. As the fire progressed the millions of
-feet of lumber and timbers and the thousands of cords
-of wood about the mining works made fires that could
-not be successfully combated, and which nothing
-could withstand. At the Consolidated Virginia Hoisting
-Works and Mill alone there were on fire at the
-same moment, and in one mass, 1,250,000 feet of lumber
-and timbers, and 800 cords of pine wood, not to
-speak of the two great buildings, and all the stores
-they contained; also the adjoining assay office, and
-contents. Across the street the freight and passenger
-depots of the Virginia and Truckee Railroad Company
-were sending up immense pillars of flame, while
-just south Piper&rsquo;s Opera House, an immense frame
-structure filled with all manner of very inflammable
-material, was a volcano, vomiting destruction on all
-sides. Between and about these large structures a
-score or more of smaller buildings were belching
-flames. This was the scene at but one spot. A few
-rods to the southward three tall churches (Catholic,
-Methodist, and Episcopal) were sending tongues of
-flame into the very clouds, amid whole acres of smaller
-buildings that formed a tumultuous sea of fire. At
-<span class="pb" id="Page_54">54</span>
-the same time to the northward the Ophir works, with
-fifty smaller structures, were wrapped in flame. In the
-same fierce way the fire was raging over half a
-mile square of the very heart of the town. Although
-there were scores of narrow escapes, only two persons
-lost their lives in the fire, and two or three were afterwards
-killed by falling walls.</p>
-<p>To rebuild the town at once was the universal
-determination. The insurance on the property destroyed
-amounted to $2,500,000 (the loss at the
-Bonanza Mines alone was $1,461,000), which was
-something to begin with; besides many persons whose
-property was destroyed had plenty of money left with
-which to rebuild. There was not a moment&rsquo;s delay.
-The next morning the work of clearing away ruins
-preparatory to putting up new buildings was begun in
-all parts of the city, water being thrown upon the
-red-hot bricks to so cool them that they could be
-handled. Rebuilding began the morning after the
-fire, and hardly ceased day or night until all the
-ground of the burnt district had been again covered.
-The big mining companies were especially active.
-Although engaged in rebuilding the mills and works
-destroyed, the Consolidated Virginia Mining Company
-paid its regular dividends of $10 a share in
-November and December, the two amounting to
-$2,160,000. In less than thirty days from the time
-of the fire new works replaced those destroyed by
-fire, and the machinery was in place and ore hoisted
-<span class="pb" id="Page_55">55</span>
-on Thanksgiving-day. In sixty days after the fire
-the business streets of the city were rebuilt, and with
-larger and finer structures than those that had been
-destroyed. The whole burnt district was so soon
-covered with new buildings that strangers arriving in
-the city looked about them in surprise and asked,
-&ldquo;Where was your big fire?&rdquo; That was a busy time
-on the Virginia and Truckee Railroad, no fewer than
-forty-five trains a day passing over the road during
-the great building rush. But for the railroad the city
-and mining works could not have been rebuilt that
-year.</p>
-<h3 id="c26">Virginia City at Present.</h3>
-<p>Although Virginia City covers as much ground and
-contains larger and finer buildings than before the
-great fire, it is not so populous as in the old flush
-times of the &ldquo;Big Bonanza.&rdquo; In those days every
-hotel and lodging-house was filled to overflowing;
-now most of those in the city are permanent inhabitants
-and property owners&mdash;those who formerly composed
-the grand army of &ldquo;sports,&rdquo; adventurers, and
-idlers have gone to other fields. At present the city
-contains a population of only about 9,000 persons,
-but nearly all those now in the place have permanent
-homes and some legitimate and remunerative employment.
-As about one-fourth of the male population
-is constantly at work under-ground in the lower levels
-of the various mines, the streets do not present so
-<span class="pb" id="Page_56">56</span>
-thronged an appearance as those of a non-mining
-town containing the same number of inhabitants.
-The place, however, presents a very different appearance
-on a holiday when all the mining works are shut
-down and the miners are on the surface.</p>
-<p>The first care of the people of the city after rebuilding
-the place was to guard against the recurrence of
-such a sweeping conflagration. A number of huge
-water tanks were constructed high above the town on
-the side of the mountain, with a proper system of
-mains and hydrants extending through all parts of the
-city. The pressure is so great at these hydrants that
-the firemen are able to throw a stream over the flag-staff
-of the tallest building in the city through a nozzle
-of the largest size. A few paid firemen now fight
-all the fires that occur in the city. As the hydrants
-are always ready the firemen have only to get to them,
-attach their hose, and at once they have powerful
-streams steadily playing on the fire. &ldquo;Promptness of
-action&rdquo; is their motto. They seldom allow a fire to
-get out of the building in which it originates. Usually
-they have a fire out before a steam fire-engine could
-get up steam.</p>
-<p>The fire mains are distinct from those which supply
-water for domestic purposes, and those again from
-such as furnish water for use at the mills and hoisting
-works of the mines. There is a system of gates
-whereby the water may be shut off from the hydrants
-of any block in the city and turned to any other block
-<span class="pb" id="Page_57">57</span>
-or blocks of buildings. This system is so perfect that
-employes of the water company working in conjunction
-with the firemen are able to at once turn the water
-to any part of the city in which it may be required,
-at the same time shutting it off from all other parts.</p>
-<p>All the churches, halls, district court-house, theater,
-and other public buildings are finer than those destroyed
-in the big fire, and again are seen trees and
-grounds of handsome appearance in various parts of
-the city. In the city are several school-houses that
-cost from $20,000 to $60,000, besides which there are
-a number of private schools, and the fine school of
-the Sisters of Charity. There is also a hospital&mdash;St.
-Mary&rsquo;s, a commodious brick structure&mdash;under the
-charge of the Sisters, as well as a large and well-conducted
-county hospital. Both are located beyond
-the eastern suburbs in quiet and pleasant places. The
-halls belonging to the many societies and secret orders
-are elegant and costly. The city now has electric
-lights, two daily newspapers, and one weekly.</p>
-<p>The mills and hoisting works are a striking and
-characteristic feature of the place. The immense
-waste dumps, high trestle-work car tracks, trains of
-ore cars on the railroad, clouds of black smoke belched
-from many tall stacks, trains loaded with wood and
-timber, all tell that mining is the great industry of the
-city; then much of the street talk heard is of mines
-and mining stocks.</p>
-<p>The International Hotel is the oldest in the city.
-<span class="pb" id="Page_58">58</span>
-It was founded in 1860, when it was a mere frame
-shanty fronting on B Street. The hotel destroyed by
-the big fire was a commodious brick structure, but the
-present building is far finer. It now extends from B
-to C Street, is constructed of brick, stone, and iron,
-and is six stories in height. It is capable of accommodating
-in excellent style a large number of guests.</p>
-<h3 id="c27">Views from the City and Vicinity.</h3>
-<p>Though the landscape visible from the city cannot
-be called beautiful, yet it is grand and picturesque.
-On all sides except the east, the town is shut in by
-near ranges of high, rocky, and barren mountains.
-To the eastward the eye reaches over a vast area composed
-of tracts of sandy desert, valley lands, dark and
-rocky hills, and rugged and towering mountain ranges.
-The chief of these is the Humboldt Range, seen blue
-or purple in the distance, from 150 to 190 miles away.
-These mountains and their snow-clad peaks stand out
-against the dark-blue of the sky far beyond the green
-cottonwood groves that follow the meanderings of the
-Carson River, far beyond the Forty-mile Desert and
-the lake and sink of the Carson, and beyond Humboldt
-Lake and Sink.</p>
-<p>To the northeast are seen several sharp and splintered
-peaks, while to the southeast, from twenty to
-fifty miles away, rise the huge and grand peaks of the
-Como Mountains. From the Divide (the dividing
-ridge between Virginia and Gold Hill) may be obtained
-a magnificent view of the main Sierra Nevada
-<span class="pb" id="Page_59">59</span>
-Range and its many mighty snow-capped peaks as
-they trail and circle away from west to south till they
-are lost to view behind lower interior ranges at a point
-over 150 miles away.</p>
-<h3 id="c28">The View from the Summit of Mt. Davidson.</h3>
-<p>From the peak of Mount Davidson may be obtained
-a grand and extensive view of the country in
-all directions. To the westward is seen Washoe Lake
-and the green meadows and fields by which it is surrounded.
-Although Washoe Valley and its lake seem
-to be just at the foot of the mountain they are from
-eight to ten miles distant. Beyond and high above
-the valley tower the pine-clad Sierras, with, along their
-line, several giant granite peaks, snow-capped the
-greater part of the year. Prominent among these
-stands out Bald Mountain, just north of Lake Tahoe,
-and within plain view Mount Lincoln, Job&rsquo;s Peak,
-Silver Mountain, and many other peaks that have
-names. Twenty miles to the northward are to be seen
-the green pastures and alfalfa fields of the Truckee
-Meadows, while to the southward we have the Sierra
-Range and Eagle and Carson Valleys. Carson City
-is hid by intervening low hills. To the eastward are
-the same deserts and mountains that compose the landscape
-viewed from the city, but from the top of the
-mountain the eye ranges over a vastly wider field.</p>
-<h3 id="c29">The Virginia and Truckee Railroad.</h3>
-<p>From our elevated position on the peak of Mount
-<span class="pb" id="Page_60">60</span>
-Davidson we may trace nearly the whole course of
-the Virginia and Truckee Railroad. This road runs
-from Reno to Virginia City <i>via</i> Carson City, and is
-fifty-two miles in length. Besides being in one part
-the most crooked railroad in the world, its whole
-course is a great curve. The distance from Virginia
-City to Reno as the crow flies is only about seventeen
-miles, and but twenty-two by wagon road, yet to connect
-the two points by rail required a road fifty-two
-miles in length.</p>
-<p>From Reno, where the road connects with the
-Central Pacific, its course is southward through
-Truckee, Meadows, and Steamboat, Washoe and
-Eagle Valleys, to Carson City, a distance of thirty-one
-miles. From Carson City the road runs east
-down the Carson River about nine miles, when it
-leaves the river and, turning to the north, begins to
-climb the mountains to Virginia. From the river to
-Virginia the distance is thirteen miles and the maximum
-grade is 116 feet. In climbing the mountain
-there are many very short curves. The maximum
-radius of curves is 300 feet. By adding together all
-these curves it is found that a passenger on the road
-actually travels seventeen times round a circle between
-Virginia and Carson City. On the road are
-six tunnels, whose united length is 2,400 feet, and
-there are numerous deep cuts in very hard rock.
-The only high bridge is the trestlework on which the
-road crosses Crown Point Ravine, at Gold Hill.
-This bridge is eighty feet in height.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_61">61</div>
-<p>Ground was broken on the road February 19, 1869,
-and eight months thereafter the most difficult part of
-it was finished and trains were running to Carson&mdash;twenty-one
-miles. The construction of this twenty-one
-miles of road cost $1,750,000, the greater part of
-which sum was expended on the first thirteen miles.
-In round numbers the whole fifty-two miles cost
-$3,000,000. The road does an immense business in
-the transportation of Comstock ores to quartz mills
-on the Carson River, and in carrying back from the
-valley wood, lumber, and timbers for the mines; it
-also carries from Reno to Virginia great quantities of
-all kinds of goods and merchandise&mdash;coal, ice, provisions,
-fruit, and machinery&mdash;with mails, express, and
-many passengers daily. The road connects with the
-Carson and Colorado Road at Mound House, eleven
-miles below Virginia City. The road and its many
-side-tracks and switches constitute a lasting monument
-to the engineering skill of the late I. E. James.</p>
-<h3 id="c30">The Days of &ldquo;Bull Teams.&rdquo;</h3>
-<p>Before the Virginia and Truckee Railroad was
-built all freight was transported by teams. Ore was
-hauled to the mills by teams, and teams brought to
-the mines all the wood, lumber, and timber required.
-Teams also hauled over the Sierras all the mining
-machinery and supplies required by the mines and
-mills, and all the goods and merchandise needed by
-various kinds of stores, shops, and business houses.
-<span class="pb" id="Page_62">62</span>
-When the Central Pacific was completed this hauling
-of merchandise was from Reno, <i>via</i> the Geiger grade
-wagon-road. Hundreds of teams of all kinds were
-required to handle the goods and merchandise, other
-hundreds the ore, wood, lumber, and timbers, and
-still others to do the miscellaneous hauling of the
-country. When the big reduction works of the Ophir
-Mining Company were in operation near Franktown,
-in Washoe Valley, lines of teams from one to three
-miles in length were to be seen moving along the
-Ophir grade. On all other roads it was much the
-same. Teams of from ten to sixteen horses or mules
-hauled trains of from two to four loaded wagons.
-At times so many teams thronged Virginia City that
-blockades occurred which could not be broken for
-hours. Stages, omnibuses, delivery wagons, drays,
-carts, buggies, carriages, and all kinds of vehicles were
-inextricably mingled in a jam that filled the principal
-streets for blocks. With all the cursing of &ldquo;mule-punchers,&rdquo;
-&ldquo;swampers,&rdquo; and &ldquo;bull-teamsters,&rdquo; it
-would often be two or three hours before the wheels
-of traffic again began to revolve. When these blockades
-occurred about noon, teamsters would often get
-out their dinner pails, spread their meal on their
-load of wood, brick, or lumber, bring out from the
-nearest saloon a measure of beer, and in a leisurely
-way partake of the midday repast. Then all passengers
-and all mail and express matter were carried by
-stages, and so great was the rush of travel and business
-<span class="pb" id="Page_63">63</span>
-that the coaches went out and returned in droves,
-five and six in a string. In 1859, 1860, and 1861,
-great quantities of goods were transported across the
-Sierras from California on the backs of mules. Some
-of the pack-trains were composed of fifty, eighty, and
-even as many as one hundred mules. They brought
-over all kinds of freight, even huge casks of liquor
-and large pieces of mill machinery. On the return
-trip they often carried passengers. In those days the
-&ldquo;hurricane deck&rdquo; of a mule was not to be despised.</p>
-<h3 id="c31">THE COMSTOCK SYSTEM OF WATER SUPPLY.</h3>
-<h3 id="c32">The Virginia City and Gold Hill Water Works.</h3>
-<p>When silver was first discovered on the Comstock,
-the flow of water from natural springs was sufficient
-to supply all the wants of the small communities then
-constituting the towns of Gold Hill and Virginia City.
-As the population increased, wells were dug in many
-places (distant from springs), and the domestic needs
-of many families were for a long time supplied by
-water-carts that peddled the water of both wells and
-springs. Presently the water of several tunnels added
-to the available stock, but as mills and hoisting works
-multiplied, the demand for water for use in steam boilers
-became so great that it was impossible to supply it without
-creating a water famine among the people of the
-two towns, now thousands in number, with hundreds
-<span class="pb" id="Page_64">64</span>
-of new arrivals every week. In this emergency the
-Virginia City and Gold Hill Water Company was
-formed. Outside of mining companies it is the oldest
-incorporation on the Comstock Lode. The only
-available supply of water at that time was that flowing
-from a few tunnels that had been run into the mountain
-above the city for mining purposes. This was
-collected by means of ditches and wooden flumes, and
-stored in large wooden tanks, whence it was distributed
-about the city through iron pipes. When this
-supply became insufficient, as it soon did, tunnels
-were run for the express purpose of tapping water.
-As these drained out the hills and failed, new ones
-were run in the range both north and south of the
-city for a distance of several miles.</p>
-<p>Finally every device was exhausted, and the hills
-above the level of the city were thoroughly drained.
-It then became necessary to look to the main range
-of the Sierra Nevada Mountains. In those mountains
-was an inexhaustible supply of the purest and best
-water to be found in the whole world, but between
-the lakes, creeks, and sparkling fountains of the Sierras
-and the range on which stood Virginia City, lay
-Washoe Valley, an immense trough nearly 2,000 feet
-in depth. How to get water over such a depression
-was the question. Mr. H. Schussler, an engineer of
-great repute, and who had planned the Spring Valley
-Water Works of San Francisco, was brought to Nevada
-to view the situation. He said the deep valley
-<span class="pb" id="Page_65">65</span>
-could be crossed, and in the spring of 1872 surveys
-were made and an order given Eastern manufacturers
-for the construction of a large wrought-iron pipe.
-The first section of the big pipe was laid June 11,
-1873, and the last on the twenty-fifth day of July of
-the same year.</p>
-<h3 id="c33">The Big Water Pipe.</h3>
-<p>The total length of the pipe is 7 miles and 134
-feet. The pipe has an interior diameter of 12
-inches, and is capable of delivering 2,200,000 gallons
-of water in twenty-four hours. The inlet of the pipe
-is on a spur from the main Sierra Nevada Range, and
-the outlet is on the crest of the Virginia Range of
-mountains. The pipe lies across the valley in the
-form of an inverted siphon. At the lowest point, the
-perpendicular pressure on the pipe is 1,720 feet, or
-about 800 pounds to the square inch. The inlet being
-465 feet higher than the outlet, the water is forced
-through the pipe under tremendous pressure. The
-water is brought to the inlet from the sources of supply
-in two large covered flumes, and at the outlet end
-of the pipe is delivered into two large flumes, which
-carry it to Virginia City, a distance of twelve miles.</p>
-<p>This pipe was constructed of sheets of wrought
-iron riveted together. Each section was fastened with
-three rows of rivets. At the point of greatest pressure
-the iron was five-sixteenths of an inch in thickness,
-but near the ends, upon the sides of the two opposite
-<span class="pb" id="Page_66">66</span>
-mountains, it tapered down to one-sixteenth of an
-inch. In the construction of the pipe there were
-used 1,150,000 pounds of rolled iron and 1,000,000
-rivets, while 52,000 pounds of lead were used in securing
-the joints of the sections. At each joint the
-sections were inserted into cast iron sleeves, and it
-was within these sleeves that the lead was used. The
-total weight of the sleeves was 442,500 pounds.</p>
-<p>The first flow of water through this pipe reached
-Gold Hill and Virginia City on the evening of August
-1, 1873, amid the greatest rejoicings of the people
-of both towns. Cannons were fired, rockets sent
-up, and bands of music paraded the streets. Never
-before in any part of the world had water been conveyed
-under a pressure so great; and it still remains
-the greatest. Previous to this, 910 feet was the greatest
-perpendicular pressure under which water had
-ever been carried through an iron pipe. This had
-been accomplished by Mr. Schussler, at Cherokee
-Flat, California.</p>
-<h3 id="c34">Additional Great Pipes.</h3>
-<p>In 1875 the water company laid alongside the
-first pipe a second having an inside diameter of ten
-inches. This pipe is lap-welded, and, there being no
-friction of rivet heads upon the water, the flow through
-it is equal to that through the twelve-inch pipe,&mdash;2,200,000
-gallons every twenty-four hours.</p>
-<p>Before 1875 the supply of water was obtained from
-creeks on the eastern slope of the mountains lying
-<span class="pb" id="Page_67">67</span>
-east of Lake Tahoe, but in the year named, the water
-company pushed their main supply flumes through to
-Marlette Lake, which lies inside of the Tahoe basin.
-To do this it was necessary to run a tunnel 3,000 feet
-in length through the dividing ridge, or rim, of the
-Tahoe basin. The sheet of water known as Marlette
-Lake is almost entirely artificial, and owes its existence
-to a big dam&mdash;is in reality a large reservoir. The
-water covers an area of over 300 acres, and in the
-middle is about 40 feet deep. The reservoir holds
-16,000,000,000 gallons of water.</p>
-<p>The second pipe was laid under the supervision of
-Capt. J. B. Overton, Superintendent of the works
-of the water company, who also extended the flumes,
-constructed the tunnel through the mountain ridge,
-and made all the other improvements. In 1887 a
-third iron pipe of twelve inches inside diameter was
-laid across the valley alongside the first two. It was
-also a welded pipe and delivers much more water than
-either of the others. The inlet pressure has been
-raised on all three pipes, and they now deliver a total
-flow of about 10,000,000 gallons in twenty-four hours.
-In 1887, also, a branch flume was run to the northward
-(Marlette Lake lying to the southward) a distance
-of nine miles, which taps a number of creeks tributary
-to Lake Tahoe on the east and northeast sides.
-In the same year a reservoir capable of holding 20,000,000
-gallons was constructed on Hobart Creek, on
-the east side of the dividing ridge. In and near the
-<span class="pb" id="Page_68">68</span>
-city are reservoirs holding from 3,000,000 to 10,000,000
-gallons, and a number of tanks along the side of
-Mount Davidson of from 60,000 to 80,000 gallons,
-capacity. The water is brought a distance of from
-twenty-five to thirty-seven miles, and the supply
-(aided by the several storage reservoirs) is ample for
-all present uses. The total cost of the works of the
-company has been about $2,500,000. Each of the
-three pipes has its separate inlet and outlet, from two
-flumes and into two flumes. Between the outlet and
-the city the water passes through a large storage reservoir.</p>
-<h3 id="c35">The Sutro Tunnel.</h3>
-<p>While there was a scarcity of water on the surface
-at Virginia City, there was a superabundance of it,
-both hot and cold, under-ground in all the mines.
-Levels were flooded so suddenly that oftentimes the
-miners narrowly escaped being drowned by the vast
-subterranean reservoirs that were unexpectedly tapped.
-Great delays in mining were caused by these floods,
-and to pump out the water that filled the lower levels
-cost immense amounts of money. Several tunnels from
-1,000 to 5,000 feet in length were run into the mountain,
-but they were of only temporary utility, as the
-shafts of the mines were soon below their level. In
-order to overcome these water troubles, Adolph
-Sutro early conceived the idea of running an immense
-drain tunnel under the Comstock Lode from the lowest
-possible point. A survey was made by Mr. H.
-<span class="pb" id="Page_69">69</span>
-Schussler, and work was commenced on the great
-drain tunnel (since known as the Sutro Tunnel) October
-19, 1869. It starts at the edge of the valley of
-the Carson River, at a point nearly east of Virginia
-City, and has a length of 20,145 feet&mdash;nearly 4 miles.
-It taps the central parts of the Comstock Lode at a
-depth of about 1,650 feet. The tunnel is 16 feet
-wide and 12 feet high. Drain flumes are sunk in
-the floor and over these are two tracks for horse-cars.
-It required nearly eight years to construct the tunnel,
-and the total cost was about $4,500,000. Although
-the leading mines had their shafts down nearly 3,000
-feet before the tunnel was finished, yet it was of great
-use, as it saved 1,600 feet of pumping.</p>
-<p>From the main tunnel branches were run north and
-south along the east side of the vein for a distance of
-over two miles, with which the several companies connected
-by drain drifts from their mines. The flow of
-water through the tunnel has at times been over 10,000,000
-gallons in twenty-four hours. Between the
-mouth of the tunnel and the Carson River there are
-155 feet of fall, but it has never been utilized for
-driving reduction works. New connections are still
-being made with the tunnel for drainage. Though it
-never paid anything near what was anticipated by
-Mr. Sutro, the tunnel still brings in a snug sum annually.
-Last year (the fiscal year that ended February
-29, 1888) the receipts for royalties amounted to
-$237,258.33. It costs a considerable amount annually
-<span class="pb" id="Page_70">70</span>
-to keep the main tunnel and branches in repair.
-This great drain at a depth of 1,600 feet below
-the surface allows of Pelton water wheels being
-set up in the shafts of the several mines and worked
-under immense pressure, there being a free discharge
-from the wheels. At the C and C shaft of the Consolidated
-California and Virginia, such wheels have
-been put in every 500 feet from the surface down to
-the Sutro Tunnel level. The water used on the first
-wheel on the surface, in the stamp-mill, is caught up,
-led to the shaft, and used on the second 500 feet below,
-and so on down to the tunnel level, the power
-being brought from wheel to wheel to the surface by
-means of a system of steel wire cables. Thus is
-transmitted to the surface the power developed by the
-whole series of wheels.</p>
-<h3 id="c36">The Reduction Works of the Early Days.</h3>
-<p>In the early days the building of quartz-mills kept
-pace with the building up of the towns. As early as
-October, 1859, Logan &amp; Holmes had a four-stamp
-horse-power mill in operation at Dayton, and Hastings
-&amp; Woodworth had two water-power arastras at
-work, which reduced six tons of ore a day. This ore
-was not worked as silver ore. It was from the surface
-of the Comstock Lode, at Gold Hill, and was
-worked for gold only. In the spring of 1860 many
-mills for working silver ore began to be erected.</p>
-<h3 id="c37">The First Silver Mill.</h3>
-<p>The first silver-mill that went into operation was
-<span class="pb" id="Page_71">71</span>
-the &ldquo;Pioneer,&rdquo; erected by Almarin B. Paul, on Gold
-Canyon, at the north end of Silver City, just below
-the Devil&rsquo;s Gate. It was a steam mill and contained
-twenty-four Howland rotary stamps and twenty-four
-amalgamating pans. The work of erecting the mill
-was commenced May 24, 1860, and it began work
-August 13, the same year. Some others have claimed
-the honor of starting the first quartz-mill in Nevada,
-but this was undoubtedly the first silver-mill. In it
-were operated the first silver amalgamating pans ever
-seen anywhere. The iron amalgamating pans were
-the result of experiments made by Almarin B. Paul
-before he began the erection of his mill. He thought
-the German barrel process and Mexican patio too
-slow, and began to make experiments with some small
-iron pans that had been in use at some of the quartz-mills
-in California for grinding and working the sulphurets
-saved by concentrating machines in working
-the quartz of the gold mines. The best of these was
-found to be the &ldquo;Knox Improved Pan,&rdquo; in which was
-a false bottom that formed beneath the pan a steam-tight
-heating chamber. By the use of this kind of
-pan, and by treating the heated pulp with certain
-quantities of salt, sulphate of copper, and some other
-chemicals, before adding quicksilver, it was found that
-a charge (whatever amount of crushed silver ore the
-pan would hold) could be amalgamated in about three
-hours. The results obtained with Knox&rsquo;s Improved
-Pan were so satisfactory that Mr. Paul placed pans of
-<span class="pb" id="Page_72">72</span>
-that pattern in his new mill. Soon after a score of
-pans of different styles were invented, and to this day
-pans of new patterns are still being invented and patented.</p>
-<p>The Coover &amp; Harris Mill, Gold Hill, was the first
-mill in the country to start up with steam. It blew
-its steam whistle a day before that of Paul&rsquo;s &ldquo;Pioneer&rdquo;
-was heard, but it could not then be called a silver-mill
-as it was working gold quartz, the same as was
-worked, in October the year before, at Dayton, by
-Logan &amp; Holmes and Hastings &amp; Woodworth. The
-mill had a fifteen horse-power engine that drove an
-eight-stamp Howland rotary battery and crushed six
-tons of ore a day. At first it was a dry crusher, but
-soon Paul&rsquo;s Concentrators and Knox&rsquo; pans were used.
-The Harris of the firm was Dr. E. B. Harris, now a
-resident of Virginia City.</p>
-<h3 id="c38">The Many Mills of the Early Days.</h3>
-<p>Very soon after these first mills went into operation
-several others started up. By the spring of 1862 no
-fewer than eighty-one quartz-mills were at work, the
-majority of them on ore from mines situated on the
-Comstock Lode. These mills were located in Virginia
-City, on Six and Seven-mile Canyons, at Gold
-Hill, Silver City, Dayton, at Empire City, and all
-along the Carson River below that town; two or three
-near Carson City (on Clear Creek and Mill Creek),
-and a dozen or more about Washoe Valley and down
-toward Steamboat Valley. Many of these mills were
-<span class="pb" id="Page_73">73</span>
-of small capacity, having only from two to ten stamps,
-but there were already a few first-class reduction works,
-as regards capacity, though their methods and processes
-were defective. The reduction works of the
-Ophir Company, in Washoe Valley, cost $500,000,
-contained thirty-six stamps, were driven by an engine of
-100 horse-power, and was capable of working 100
-tons of ore a day. The Gould &amp; Curry Mill then
-building on Six-mile Canyon was of still greater capacity,
-and the Land, Bassett, Winfield, Empire State,
-Central, Marysville, Trench, Swansea, Ph&oelig;nix, Succor,
-Rock Point, Merrimac, Vivian, and several other
-mills, contained from fifteen to twenty-five stamps
-each. After the completion of the Virginia and
-Truckee Railroad the majority of the outside mills
-(mills to which it was necessary to transport ore, wood,
-and other supplies by wagon) were pulled down and
-removed to new mining camps in various parts of the
-State. The greater part of the ores of the Comstock
-were then reduced in steam mills near the mines or
-in water mills on the Carson River on the line of the
-railroad; and this is still the case.</p>
-<p>We now have fewer mills than in the early days,
-but they are of greater average capacity, and are in every
-respect more effective than were those first erected.
-More ore is crushed to the stamp, and the time
-required for the amalgamation of the pulp has been
-very materially reduced. All the present mills are so
-constructed that there is very little handling of the
-<span class="pb" id="Page_74">74</span>
-ores operated upon, and labor-saving apparatus has
-been introduced into nearly every department. Even
-the old oil lamps are being thrown out of the mills and
-the electric light introduced.</p>
-<h3 id="c39">REDUCTION WORKS OF THE PRESENT DAY.</h3>
-<h3 id="c40">Description of the Process of Working Comstock Silver Ore.</h3>
-<p>In speaking of the works at present in use for the
-reduction of silver ore, it will only be necessary to
-describe the process in use in one mill, as all work
-after the same system. Being the most recently
-erected, and quite perfect in all its arrangements, the
-new mill of the Nevada Mill and Mining Company,
-commonly called the Chollar Mill (as it stands near
-the Chollar old shaft), shall furnish the illustration
-necessary to an understanding of the method of working
-Comstock ores now generally in use. The mill
-covers nearly an acre of ground, and the machinery is
-at present (March, 1889) driven in part by a Pelton
-water wheel 11 feet in diameter, and in part by power
-electrically transmitted from the Sutro Tunnel level.
-The mill building stands in a depression near the
-head of a small ravine. Such a site was selected in
-order that from the time the ore enters the mill its
-course at each stage necessary to its complete reduction,
-shall be downward&mdash;that there shall be no lifting
-or hoisting of ore or pulp.</p>
-<p>The mill stands a little over one hundred yards
-<span class="pb" id="Page_75">75</span>
-south of the Chollar shaft. From the shaft the ore is
-run in the same cars in which it is hoisted from the
-mine directly into the upper story of the mill. It is
-there dumped through openings in the floor into the
-ore bins. Over these ore bins are placed in a slanting
-position iron bars three inches apart, forming
-screens called &ldquo;grizzlies.&rdquo; Through these screens
-the fine ore falls into the bins, while the large lumps
-of rock roll down upon a floor in front of the rock-breaker,
-an apparatus that works much on the same
-principle as a lemon-squeezer. Between the jaws of
-this powerful machine the largest and hardest piece
-of quartz rock is at once chewed into fragments sufficiently
-small to be fed into the batteries, where
-the heavy stamps reduce it to pulp. The ore is delivered
-into the batteries by self-feeders, which are so
-regulated as to keep constantly under the stamps the
-proper quantity of rock to do well the most work.
-At the Chollar (or Nevada) Mill there are sixty stamps,&mdash;twelve
-batteries of five stamps each. Each stamp
-weighs about eight hundred pounds. On the end of
-each stamp is a heavy head or block of iron or steel
-called a &ldquo;shoe,&rdquo; and in the bottom of the mortar (a
-long iron box in which the stamps of each battery
-work) is a similar block of iron called a &ldquo;die,&rdquo; upon
-which the shoe of the stamp strikes when it pulls. It
-is between these two blocks of steel that the quartz is
-crushed.</p>
-<p>A small stream of water flows into each battery, and
-<span class="pb" id="Page_76">76</span>
-as the ore is reduced to a powder the water floats it
-out through the fine screens that are fitted into the
-face of each mortar. The pulverized ore and water,
-on passing through the screens, falls into a small
-trough, or sluice, which carries the muddy mixture
-down to the settling tanks, on a floor below, in the
-amalgamating room. In the tanks the crushed ore
-settles and the water runs off. From the tanks the
-pulverized ore, which resembles thin mortar, is shoveled
-out upon the floor alongside the amalgamating
-pans, into which it is shoveled whenever they are to
-receive a fresh charge of ore.</p>
-<p>The pans are of iron and each holds a &ldquo;charge&rdquo; of
-about 3,000 pounds of the mortar-like pulp. In the
-bottom of each pan are thick plates of chilled iron or
-steel called &ldquo;dies,&rdquo; while revolving upon these are
-other heavy pieces of steel, called &ldquo;shoes&rdquo; or mullers.
-In the pans the pulverized ore is ground till it is
-much finer than when it passed through the screens
-of the battery.</p>
-<p>When a pan has received its charge of pulverized
-ore (&ldquo;pulp&rdquo;) a small amount of water is added to
-render it sufficiently thin to be readily stirred by the
-mullers. The pans have tight covers and double bottoms.
-The double bottoms are steam chambers by
-means of which the pulp in the pan is kept hot
-while it is ground and agitated. After a charge has
-been ground about two hours, some 300 pounds of
-quicksilver are added (for 3,000 pounds of pulp),
-<span class="pb" id="Page_77">77</span>
-also a certain quantity of salt and sulphate of copper;
-and sometimes soda or caustic potash and other
-chemicals, if thought necessary, when the agitation in
-the pan is continued two hours longer. The time of
-working in the pan varies from three to five hours.</p>
-<p>The Chollar Mill has thirty of these pans. On a
-platform below that on which stand the pans are fifteen
-settlers. These are about twice the size of the
-pans. At the end of three or five hours each settler
-has drawn off into it the contents of two pans. In
-the settler the pulp, quicksilver, and amalgam are kept
-in motion for about two hours. During this time
-water is let in and the pulp made very thin. The
-quicksilver and amalgam settle to the bottom of the
-&ldquo;settler,&rdquo; and are drawn off through a pipe and pass
-into a strainer&mdash;a strong canvas bag. There is an
-iron box around each strainer, and this is kept locked.</p>
-<p>It is in the pan that amalgamation takes place.
-There the sulphuret and chloride of silver is changed
-to the metallic form by the chemical action of the sulphate
-of copper (bluestone) and salt, and when it takes
-the metallic form it at once unites with quicksilver.
-The gold contained in the ore (generally one-third of
-its whole value) being always in the metallic form, is
-amalgamated as soon as it is ground out of its inclosing
-shell of quartz, or pyrites of iron.</p>
-<p>The thinned pulp&mdash;mere muddy water in appearance&mdash;on
-leaving the settlers passes into large wooden
-tubs called &ldquo;agitators,&rdquo; in which are revolving rakes.
-<span class="pb" id="Page_78">78</span>
-In these tubs is caught some valuable material&mdash;principally
-amalgam and quicksilver. From the &ldquo;agitators&rdquo;
-the pulp flows out of the reduction works
-through a small flume which conducts it to the blanket
-sluices, fifty yards away in the open air. The blanket
-sluices are broad, shallow flumes in the bottom of
-which are placed strips of coarse woolen blanketing.
-In passing over these blankets the pulp deposits pulverized
-iron pyrites containing gold, some fine particles
-of amalgam, and quicksilver; also such silver
-sulphurets as escaped being amalgamated in the pans.
-From time to time the blankets are taken out of the
-sluices and rinsed in a large tank, in which operation is
-saved whatever of value they may have caught.</p>
-<p>The amalgam collected in the strainers standing
-below the settlers is placed in a press and as much
-quicksilver as possible pressed out, when it is placed
-in retorts, which are heated till all the mercury is
-driven off. There then remains behind the silver and
-gold, in a dull, rough-looking mass. This &ldquo;crude
-bullion&rdquo; is then broken up and placed in the melting
-pots, to be made into &ldquo;bricks&rdquo; and assayed. The
-bars or bricks made weigh about 100 pounds each.
-From the top and bottom of each pot or crucible of
-molten gold and silver is taken a small quantity of
-the fluid metals from which assays are made to determine
-the value of the bars. About thirty per cent
-of the value of the Comstock bullion bars is in gold,
-though it has at times run up to fifty per cent in some
-mines, and as low as ten per cent in others.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_79">79</div>
-<p>Though the Nevada Mill is in part driven by water,
-half the power used is electrically transmitted from
-six forty-inch Pelton water wheels set up in a large
-chamber excavated on the Sutro Tunnel level of the
-Chollar Mine, 1,630 feet below the surface. These
-small Pelton wheels drive six Brush dynamos, which
-generate the current that passes over the copper wires
-to the electric motors in the mill. The electric apparatus
-transmits to the main driving shaft of the mill
-about sixty-five per cent of the power developed by
-the Pelton wheels. Each Pelton wheel drives a dynamo,
-and one, two, four or all the dynamos may be
-run at the same time, just as may be required, each
-Pelton and dynamo being independent of the others.</p>
-<p>After the water is used on the large-surface Pelton
-wheel in the mill it is caught up and by means of a
-small flume is conducted to the shaft of the Chollar
-Mine, near at hand, down which two large iron pipes
-carry it to the six small Peltons below. By thus
-twice using the same water a saving of one-half is
-made. The pressure on the lower Pelton wheels is
-immense. Never before has any water wheel been
-operated under a vertical pressure of 1,630 feet.</p>
-<p>The Nevada Mill was built to work the ores of the
-Hale and Norcross, Chollar and Potosi Mines. It is
-one of the most substantial mills in the country, and
-no mill in the State is better arranged. It is lighted
-with electricity, and the grounds in front are illuminated
-by means of an arc light on a tall mast.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_80">80</div>
-<h3 id="c41">The Two California Mills.</h3>
-<p>The California stamp and pan-mills in Virginia City
-reduce the ores of the Consolidated California and
-Virginia Mine. The stamp-mill is situated immediately
-east of the C and C shaft of the mine. It contains
-eighty stamps. The ore crushed in this mill
-is amalgamated in the pan-mill, which stands about
-1,500 feet further east. The crushed ore is conducted
-from the stamp-mill to the pan-mill through an
-iron pipe four inches in diameter. The process of
-amalgamation is much the same as at the Chollar
-Mill, except that the pulp goes directly into the amalgamating
-pans instead of being first received in settling
-tanks. It flows from pan to pan&mdash;the outflow of the
-first pan passing into the second through a pipe, thence
-into a third, and so on and from settler to settler,
-being in all about three hours in passing through the
-series. This is called the Boss Continuous Process.
-It is in use in no other mill on the Comstock, as yet.
-In connection with the Rae electrical process of
-amalgamation (in which a current of electricity is
-passed through the settlers) it is found to work satisfactorily.
-The electric current prevents loss of
-&ldquo;floured&rdquo; quicksilver. Both mills are driven by Pelton
-water wheels. A single Pelton wheel eleven feet
-in diameter, placed on the surface, drives the eighty
-stamps of the battery-mill, and also twelve Boss grinding
-pans. The water used on the surface Pelton is
-caught up and conducted to the C and C shaft, where
-<span class="pb" id="Page_81">81</span>
-it is used on a series of Pelton wheels of the same
-size. These wheels are placed in chambers made for
-their reception 500 feet apart from the top of the shaft
-down to the Sutro Tunnel level (there 1,500 feet), and
-by means of steel wire cables, used as belts, the power
-of all the lower wheels is brought to a main driving
-shaft on the surface. The whole power is then transmitted
-to the pan-mill (about 1,600 feet) by means of
-steel wire cables passing over pulleys placed on a
-series of tall wooden towers. The cables pass over a
-considerable depression between the top of the C and
-C shaft and the pan-mill; three high towers are required
-in the middle portion.</p>
-<h3 id="c42">River and Canyon Mills.</h3>
-<p>The Mexican Mill, on the Carson River, contains
-forty-four stamps and a corresponding number of pans,
-settlers, and other amalgamating machinery. The
-Morgan Mill has forty stamps. It works ore from the
-Consolidated California and Virginia Mine. The
-Brunswick Mill contains seventy-six stamps, the Vivian
-sixteen, Santiago thirty-eight, and Eureka sixty.
-All these mills are about and below Empire City, and
-all work Comstock ores. The Eureka Mill is run on
-ore from the Consolidated California and Virginia.
-The Rock Point Mill (thirty stamps), at Dayton, and
-the Douglas Mill (ten stamps), in Lower Gold Hill,
-also work Comstock ores.</p>
-<p>At and about Silver City are two or three small
-<span class="pb" id="Page_82">82</span>
-mills that work the ores of mines in that neighborhood,
-and on the Carson River are the Douglas and Woodworth
-Mills, which work tailings.</p>
-<p>On Six-mile Canyon, below Virginia City to the east,
-are several small water mills having an aggregate of
-about thirty stamps. These work ores from the mines
-on the canyon and in Flowery District. On the canyon
-are also one or two small mills that work tailings
-and the concentrations from blanket sluices.</p>
-<p>The Alta Mining Company has a ten-stamp mill,
-with concentrators, immediately adjoining the hoisting
-works at their mine. The Justice Company have a
-new ten-stamp mill near their mine.</p>
-<p>Owing to the fact that many mines are now at the
-same time producing large quantities of ore, a lack of
-milling facilities is being felt. To meet this demand
-the Nevada Mill has been enlarged one-third, and the
-capacity of other mills will be increased, and perhaps
-some new mills will be erected. Processes by means
-of which low-grade ores may be profitably worked will
-no doubt yet be invented or discovered, which will
-cause many new works to be erected either on the
-Carson River or in the neighborhood of the mines
-producing large quantities of such ores.</p>
-<h3 id="c43">THE COMSTOCK LODE.</h3>
-<h3 id="c44">Hoisting Works, Shafts, and Mining, Past and Present.</h3>
-<p>The Comstock Lode crops out along the eastern
-<span class="pb" id="Page_83">83</span>
-face of Mount Davidson about 1,200 feet below the
-summit, and just above the western suburbs of Virginia
-City. To the northward and southward the
-vein runs along the east side of other and smaller
-mountains of the same range. The face of Mount
-Davidson slopes to the east at an angle of about
-twenty-five degrees, and the vein dips in the same direction
-at an average inclination of forty-five degrees.
-It was at first supposed that the vein dipped to the
-west (into Mount Davidson), and the first hoisting
-works were erected on or near the croppings, where
-shafts were sunk and inclines sent down. For the
-first 400 to 500 feet the vein did pitch to the west into
-the mountain. Mount Davidson was then supposed
-to be the great central magazine, or nucleus, of all the
-silver found near the surface, and claims located on
-the slope of the mountain below to the eastward found
-but little favor in the eyes of mining men and would-be
-purchasers. Suddenly all this was changed, and
-there was a general &ldquo;right-about-face.&rdquo; It was discovered
-in the Gould &amp; Curry and the Ophir Mines
-that at a certain depth the lode became perpendicular,
-then turned and took a regular dip to the east, of
-about forty-five degrees, following as a footwall the
-syenite slope of Mount Davidson. It was then seen
-that the false dip above was caused by the top of the
-vein being bent over under the pressure of sliding material
-on the slope of the mountain at and near the
-surface.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_84">84</div>
-<h3 id="c45"><span class="smaller">THE THREE LINES OF HOISTING WORKS.</span></h3>
-<p>However, much ore was mined at the first line of
-works, particularly at the Ophir, Mexican, California,
-Gould &amp; Curry, Savage, and Hale &amp; Norcross Mines.
-But, as the dip of the vein was away from these first
-works, it presently became necessary to move to the
-eastward about 1,000 feet. As very deep shafts
-would there be required in order to intersect the lode,
-larger and much more powerful hoisting works and
-pumping machinery must be erected. Indeed, the
-new works required to be first-class in every respect,
-as the shafts would be far deeper than any yet put
-down on the lode, and it was by this time known
-that there would be immense quantities of water to
-handle.</p>
-<p>Accordingly, the second line of fine and powerful
-first-class works, seen at present, and again in active
-use, was constructed. The shafts of the new line of
-works all cut into the heart of the vein, and in several
-the &ldquo;bonanzas&rdquo; found were so large and so rich as
-to astonish the whole mining world and create a
-much greater and far more widespread excitement
-than was seen when silver was first discovered in the
-croppings of the vein at the Ophir Mine. All the
-leading mines were soon taking out their tens of millions,
-but when the &ldquo;big bonanza&rdquo; was struck in the
-Consolidated Virginia and California the yield of gold
-and silver bullion soon became a matter of scores of
-millions. It was then that the fame of the Comstock
-<span class="pb" id="Page_85">85</span>
-spread to every corner of the world, and the rush of
-speculators, fortune-seekers, and adventurers of all
-ages, sexes, and classes was greater than ever before.
-Though what is called the &ldquo;Big Bonanza&rdquo; was struck
-in the Consolidated Virginia in October, 1873, at a
-point on the 1,167-foot level, it was not until October,
-1874, that the excitement in regard to it reached
-fever-heat. The main shaft had then reached the
-1,500-foot level, and the ore disclosed by drifts and
-chambers was of such extraordinary and astonishing
-richness that experts could hardly believe their eyes
-or assayers their figures.</p>
-<p>The Comstock Lode had a width (between the
-syenite wall on the west and the propylite on the east)
-of from 1,000 to 1,200 feet at the point where the
-&ldquo;Big Bonanza&rdquo; was struck. The space between the
-two walls was filled with what is locally termed &ldquo;vein
-material&rdquo; (gangue), and in this was found the ore
-body or &ldquo;bonanza,&rdquo; which was in one place over 300
-feet in width. This mass of ore yielded from $100
-to $700 per ton, but in places were found masses of
-pure native silver and spots of ore so rich in black
-sulphuret and gold that to make assays of it was much
-like making assays of the pure metals. From the
-&ldquo;Bonanza Mines&rdquo; alone from 1873 up to 1882 were
-taken $111,975,761.39; but in 1879 the yield began
-to fall off as the vein was followed downward, and
-in 1882 the amount of bullion taken out was small,
-not paying expenses.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_86">86</div>
-<p>In the meantime (while the big bonanza of the
-Consolidated Virginia and California companies was
-being worked out) most of the leading companies had
-exhausted their second bonanzas. Instead of prospecting
-further in their immediate neighborhood,
-they all determined to go still farther east, sink a new
-line of shafts, and tap the vein at a still greater depth.
-This time they went out about 2,000 feet beyond their
-second line of hoisting works, or 3,000 feet east of
-the croppings of the lode. As it would be necessary
-to sink shafts to a depth of about 3,000 feet to intersect
-the vein, the hoisting works, hoisting machinery,
-and all else was made much larger, more powerful,
-and on a grander scale in every respect, than the second
-line. The principal works on this third line are
-those of the Combination shaft, New Yellow Jacket
-shaft, Osbiston and Union shafts, and the Forman
-shaft. In sinking these several companies united, the
-work was prosecuted with the greatest energy, and no
-expense was spared as regarded machinery and appliances.</p>
-<h3 id="c46"><span class="smaller">THE COMBINATION SHAFT.</span></h3>
-<p>Of these shafts, that which attained the greatest
-vertical depth was the Combination&mdash;the joint shaft
-of the Chollar, Hale &amp; Norcross, and Savage Companies.
-Before work on it was discontinued it had
-reached the great depth of 3,250 feet. There is but
-one deeper vertical shaft in the world. This is the
-<span class="pb" id="Page_87">87</span>
-Adalbert Shaft, in the silver mines of Bohemia, which
-is 3,280 feet deep. There is no record of the time
-when work on this mine in Bohemia was commenced,
-though its written history extends back to 1527. The
-Combination Shaft was sunk at the rate of three feet a
-day, even in rock as hard as flint. The whole shaft
-is sunk in very hard rock (andesite), every foot of
-which had to be blasted. It is thirty feet by ten feet
-in size and is divided into four compartments for the
-accommodation of the hoisting and pumping apparatus.</p>
-<p>The shaft was sunk to the depth of 2,200 feet before
-more water was encountered than could be hoisted
-out in the &ldquo;skips&rdquo; with the dirt. Down to the 2,400
-level two Cornish pumps were used, each with columns
-fifteen inches in diameter. A drift run west
-into the vein tapped more water than the Cornish
-pumps could handle, when the management introduced
-hydraulic pumps. These pumps are run by the
-pressure of water from the surface through a pipe running
-down from the top of the shaft, whereas the
-Cornish pumps were run by huge steam engines.
-The shaft is connected with the Sutro drain tunnel at
-the depth of 1,600 feet, and to that point it was necessary
-to pump all the water. At the 3,000 level were
-placed a pair of hydraulic pumps, the deepest in the
-world. In Europe the deepest point at which a hydraulic
-pump has ever been worked is 2,700 feet.
-This is in the Hartz Mountains, in Germany.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_88">88</div>
-<p>When one stood at the 3,000 level and looked up
-a compartment of the shaft (five feet by six feet in
-size) the little spot of daylight seen at the top appeared
-to be about four inches square. At this great
-depth even the smallest bit of rock falling from the
-top whistles like a rifle-ball before reaching the bottom,
-and, striking a man on the head, would instantly
-kill him. Should a man fall that distance little would
-remain on which to hold an inquest&mdash;his body would
-be quite &ldquo;dissipated.&rdquo; The Cornish and the hydraulic
-pumps working together had a daily capacity of
-5,200,000 gallons&mdash;a small river! Hydraulic pumps
-were placed at the 2,400-foot level, the 2,600 and the
-3,000 levels. Some idea of the great size of these engines
-and pumps may be formed when it is stated
-that the stations excavated for them were eighty-five
-feet long, twenty-eight feet wide, and twelve feet high.
-All this space was so filled with machinery that there
-was only room left to move about among it. Drifts
-were run to the west to the lode at the 2,400, 2,800
-and 3,000-foot levels. On the 3,000 level the distance
-from the shaft to the east wall of the vein was
-found to be only 250 feet. The lode at this depth
-(3,000 feet) was found to be of great width and well
-mineralized&mdash;indeed the Hale &amp; Norcross folks had a
-good showing of ore.</p>
-<h3 id="c47">The Deepest Workings.</h3>
-<p>Although the Combination Shaft is the deepest vertical
-opening on the lode, it is not the point of deepest
-<span class="pb" id="Page_89">89</span>
-mining. The deepest workings are in the mine of the
-Union Consolidated Company, toward the north end
-of the lode. There long drifts were run and much
-prospecting done at the great depth of 3,350 feet.
-This depth was obtained by running a drift from the
-bottom of the vertical shaft and then sinking a winze
-from the drift.</p>
-<p>The Yellow Jacket (new) shaft has a vertical depth
-of 3,050 feet, and much prospecting was done in the
-mine at a depth of 3,000 feet; also in the Belcher
-and Crown Point. In the Belcher excellent prospects
-were being obtained when the company were obliged
-to discontinue work. By connecting adjacent shafts
-by means of drifts and otherwise maintaining a proper
-system of ventilation miners experience no difficulty
-in working at any depth yet attained on the Comstock
-Lode.</p>
-<h3 id="c48">A Return to the Second Line of Works.</h3>
-<p>February 13, 1882, a flow of water was tapped on
-the 2,700 level of the Exchequer Mine, that flooded
-not only that mine, but also the Alpha, Imperial,
-Yellow Jacket, Kentuck, Crown Point, Belcher, Overman,
-Segregated Belcher, and Caledonia. The water
-rushed to the Yellow Jacket Shaft, where the pumping
-was done which drained the advanced workings (most
-eastern) of all the mines named. The Yellow Jacket
-folks pumped and bailed an average flow of 110 miners
-inches a day for seven days. Though they were raising
-1,320 gallons every minute the water gained on
-<span class="pb" id="Page_90">90</span>
-them and raised to the level (2,700) on which it was
-tapped by the Exchequer. The water had then filled
-all the drifts, cross-cuts, and winzes of the whole group
-of mines from the Bullion south to the Caledonia.
-Pumping was still continued, for the purpose of exhausting
-the subterranean reservoir in the Exchequer,
-till March 28, when the water had been so far reduced
-that there was a depth of only 950 feet above
-the 3,000 level of the Yellow Jacket Shaft. Then, as
-no combined arrangement could be made among the
-several companies interested to continue the work
-and drain all the mines, the Yellow Jacket Company
-stopped pumping and shut down their works. This
-stopped all work below the level of the Sutro drain tunnel,
-and the works have never since been started up.
-Had all the companies &ldquo;stood in&rdquo; for a time longer all
-the flooded mines would have been thoroughly drained.</p>
-<p>The cost of the new works on the advanced line
-had been so much, and the expense incurred in hoisting
-and pumping from such great depths was so heavy,
-that stockholders in all the mines along the lode now
-became discouraged. They declared that what had
-happened in the case of the Gold Hill group of mines
-was liable to happen in the other deep workings, and
-began to clamor for a general return to the works at
-the second line of shafts, where it was known that
-pay ore had been left behind in the race after depth.
-When stockholders found that the deep shafts did
-not at once cut into pay ore, when they tapped the
-<span class="pb" id="Page_91">91</span>
-vein, they had no patience to wait for much prospecting
-to be done. They demanded that paying deposits
-be sought for at once in the old levels above
-the Sutro Tunnel, where there could be no trouble from
-water. Thus it happens that along the whole lode all
-the mining now being done is at the works situated
-over the second line of shafts, and above the level of
-the Sutro Tunnel. These shafts are by no means
-shallow, as they range in depth from 2,000 to 2,900
-feet. The return has been fortunate. The vein being
-from 400 to 1,000 and even in places 1,400 feet
-in width between walls, it was very little explored in
-the neighborhood of the works of the second line of
-shafts. When the bonanzas in sight were exhausted,
-the universal cry was: &ldquo;Get away to the east! Strike
-the lode at greater depths! Another 1,000 feet of
-depth will give us a third fertile zone&mdash;a third line of
-bonanzas!&rdquo; Now it is being discovered that large and
-rich deposits of ore had been left behind&mdash;that they
-are scattered in all directions in the great breadth of
-vein material like plums in a pudding. Again dividends
-are the order of the day along the famous old
-lode.</p>
-<h3 id="c49">The Old First Bonanzas.</h3>
-<p>Out of the first &ldquo;bonanzas&rdquo; great fortunes were
-taken. The bonanza of the Ophir, into which the
-first discoverers of silver&mdash;O&rsquo;Riley and McLaughlin&mdash;accidentally
-dug, yielded about $20,000,000 before it
-was exhausted; the Savage, $16,500,000; Hale &amp;
-<span class="pb" id="Page_92">92</span>
-Norcross, $11,000,000; Chollar and Potosi, $16,000,000;
-Gould &amp; Curry, $15,500,000; Yellow Jacket,
-$16,500,000; Crown Point, $22,000,000; Belcher,
-$26,000,000; Overman, $3,250,000; Imperial, $2,750,000,
-and the Kentuck, Sierra Nevada, Justice, and
-many other mines sums running from hundreds of thousands
-up into millions. In all, the yield of the mines
-on the Comstock Lode from the discovery down to the
-present time has been between $350,000,000 and
-$400,000,000. Of much of the silver and gold at
-first taken from the lode, both at Gold Hill and Virginia
-City, there is no record; and in many instances
-since that time much gold and silver bullion has been
-obtained from ores, tailings, slimes, and sulphurets
-that was never fully accounted for.</p>
-<h3 id="c50">The New Departure.</h3>
-<p>In the new departure, of which a return to the second
-line of hoisting works was the leading feature, the
-two bonanza mines&mdash;the California and the Consolidated
-Virginia&mdash;were consolidated and incorporated
-as one mine under the name of the Consolidated California
-and Virginia. Work was resumed in the old
-upper levels and soon small streaks of low-grade ore,
-that had formerly been passed by, led to deposits of
-fair milling ore. In working these deposits other
-bodies were found, and finally many new and valuable
-ore bodies were developed. A fire which had been
-smouldering for about ten years in a section of the old
-workings was extinguished by the use of carbonic acid
-<span class="pb" id="Page_93">93</span>
-gas, and this gave access to large deposits of milling
-ore that had not before been available. This and the
-new discoveries soon gave the company large bodies
-of ore in a number of places above the Sutro Tunnel
-level. Again many miners were employed, and the
-output of ore became sufficient to keep many stamps
-in constant operation.</p>
-<p>The total yield of the &ldquo;Big Bonanza,&rdquo; in the California
-and Consolidated Virginia, was as follows:
-Consolidated Virginia, $65,116,822.69: California,
-$46,858,938.70, making a total of $111,975,761.39.
-Out of this the Consolidated Virginia paid dividends
-amounting to $42,930,000, and the California a total
-of $31,320,000 in dividends.</p>
-<h3 id="c51">Present Yield of Leading Mines.</h3>
-<p>Since the consolidation of the two mines, the Consolidated
-California and Virginia has yielded $8,001,856.95,
-and has paid dividends amounting to $2,440,800,
-up to and including December, 1888. The total
-yield of the great ore deposit known as the &ldquo;Big
-Bonanza,&rdquo; from the time of its discovery to the end of
-December, 1888 (under both incorporations), was
-$119,977,618.34, and the total amount of dividends to
-the same date was $76,690,800. To give an idea of
-the rate of the present yield of the mine the following
-details are furnished: For the quarter that ended
-March 31, 1888, the mine produced 39,552 tons of
-ore, yielding $921,903.77 in bullion, an average of
-<span class="pb" id="Page_94">94</span>
-$23 30 a ton. In April (1888) there was worked a
-total of 13,893 tons of ore, yielding bullion to the value
-of $418,729.43. The average assay value a ton was
-$36.83, and the average yield a ton was $30.13.
-In May the yield was $411,173.13; in June,
-$405,834.08; July, $206,672.26; August, $352,554.97;
-September, $267,386.18; October, $339,814.45;
-November, $220,373.74; and in December, $260,320.56.
-The falling off in the month of July and thereafter
-throughout the year was due to the dry season in
-the summer and a phenomenally dry fall and winter.
-In January, 1889, there was a fair milling stage of
-water in the Carson River the greater part of the time,
-and the yield of bullion rose to $267,847.51.</p>
-<p>The mine has kept the Morgan and Eureka Mills
-going to their full capacity whenever there was sufficient
-water to run them at all. Owing to a scarcity of
-water at the sources of supply in the Sierra Nevada
-Mountains, the Virginia and Gold Hill Water Company
-have for some months been unable to furnish
-water for the two California Mills in this city; to furnish
-water to the Nevada Mill has been a heavy draft
-on the reservoirs. With proper storage reservoirs in
-the Sierras the mills on the Carson River might be
-run the year round. At present eighty per cent of all
-the water flows into the &ldquo;sinks&rdquo; and is lost.</p>
-<p>More mines on the Comstock are at the present
-time producing paying ore than ever before in the history
-<span class="pb" id="Page_95">95</span>
-of the lode. The following mines are now ore
-producing: Consolidated California and Virginia,
-Gould &amp; Curry, Occidental, Ophir, Andes, Savage,
-Hale &amp; Norcross, Chollar, Potosi, Confidence, Challenge,
-Yellow Jacket, Belcher, Crown Point, Alta,
-Justice, Overman, Baltimore, and Kentuck. Several
-other companies who own mines on the lode have
-quartz that yields promising assays in the precious
-metals, and are liable at any time to find paying deposits.</p>
-<p>To show the rate at which some of the mines have
-been paying during the past year, though handicapped
-by an unusually dry season and a lack of milling facilities,
-I give a few statistics, as follows: During the
-quarter that ended March 31, 1888, the Chollar
-Company milled 1,415 tons of ore that yielded $21,795.70
-in bullion; the Confidence 1,722 tons, yielding
-$42,541.72; Hale &amp; Norcross, 7,958 tons, yielding
-$236,047.32; Kentuck, 1,027 tons, yielding $13,055.50;
-Potosi, 3,050 tons, yielding $56,461.16, and the
-Yellow Jacket, 16,780 tons, yielding $121,027.82.</p>
-<p>For the quarter ending June 30, 1888, the Hale &amp;
-Norcross yielded 18,075 tons of ore, that produced
-$451,740 in bullion; the Chollar, 4,750 tons, yielding
-$74,507; Confidence, 17,285 tons, yielding $401,293;
-Yellow Jacket, 7,080 tons, yielding $55,022.</p>
-<p>For the quarter that ended September 30, the Hale
-&amp; Norcross yielded 6,365 tons of ore, that produced
-$173,941.80 in bullion; Confidence, 9,207 tons, yielding
-<span class="pb" id="Page_96">96</span>
-$176,064.93; Yellow Jacket, 1,370 tons, yielding
-$9,932.</p>
-<p>For the quarter that ended December 30, 1888, the
-Chollar milled 2,835 tons that yielded $38,130.81:
-Challenge, 1,875 tons, yielding $31,096.16; Confidence,
-6,195 tons, yielding $105,970.59; Yellow
-Jacket, 3,388 tons, yielding $25,856; Savage, 5,292
-tons, yielding $66,422.75; Hale &amp; Norcross, 4,820
-tons, yielding $90,015.59, and the Alta, 946 tons,
-yielding $23,330.</p>
-<p>The Consolidated California and Virginia has steadily
-paid $108,000 monthly in dividends. The Confidence
-and Hale &amp; Norcross also paid dividends during
-1888 at the rate of from $49,000 to $50,000 a
-month. And during the year the pay rolls of the several
-companies have aggregated from $250,000 to over
-$300,000 a month.</p>
-<p>During 1888, new bodies of ore were found in the
-Consolidated California and Virginia, Hale &amp; Norcross,
-Confidence, Yellow Jacket, Crown Point, Gould
-&amp; Curry, Savage, Chollar, Potosi, Best &amp; Belcher, and
-some others. Crown Point and Belcher have made
-connection with the Sutro drain tunnel, and are again
-working below that level. Eventually the leading
-companies will get back into the deep workings now
-deserted.</p>
-<h3 id="c52">Vicissitudes of Fortune in Mining.</h3>
-<p>The vicissitudes of fortune are probably more striking
-in mining for silver than in any other kind of
-<span class="pb" id="Page_97">97</span>
-mining. In all silver-producing countries we are
-told of mines being again and again abandoned because
-it was thought their rich &ldquo;bonanzas&rdquo; had been
-exhausted, but they have again and again been reopened
-and new and rich bodies of ore discovered.
-The Valenciana Mine, on the Veta Macbee (mother
-vein), of Guanaguato, Mexico, was reopened in 1760,
-on a part of the vein where work had been done in
-the sixteenth century, and which had afterwards lain
-as worthless for 200 years, and in 1768 a bonanza was
-struck at a depth of only 240 feet, from which $1,500,000
-was extracted annually. And from 1788 to 1810
-the annual average was still $1,383,195. At a depth
-of 1,200 feet the ore was considered too poor for extracting,
-and the mine was allowed to fill with water.
-Afterwards it was again opened and again paid immensely
-by working the almost inexhaustible quantities
-of low-grade ore.</p>
-<p>The Veta Grande, at Zacatecas, which from 1548
-to 1832 yielded $660,000,000, occurs in propalite, as
-does the Comstock, and has a similar structure, the
-vein branching out toward the surface, and dipping at
-an angle of forty-five degrees. It is, however, much
-smaller than the Comstock. It averages only about
-thirty-three feet, and eighty feet is its greatest width.
-In the upper part the ore was found concentrated in
-chimneys, but at depth it was found to be distributed
-through nearly the whole width of the vein. At first
-this low grade material could not be made to pay, but
-<span class="pb" id="Page_98">98</span>
-since it has been profitably worked and the bullion
-product has reached a high figure. Scores of such examples
-may be found in all silver-producing countries,
-as chronicled by Humboldt, Ward, Von Cotta, and
-others.</p>
-<p>Even when no more large deposits of rich ore are to
-be found on the Comstock, there are immense and
-almost inexhaustible areas of low-grade ore upon
-which to fall back. In working these small bonanzas
-are sure to be encountered&mdash;scattered plums in the
-pudding&mdash;which will assist in sending up the average.
-New processes for working and concentrating ores are
-constantly being discovered, new methods in mining
-are being introduced, and new labor-saving
-machinery is almost daily being invented. Water-power,
-steam, compressed air, and electricity are fast
-taking the place of muscle. Each year machinery
-guided by mind is lessening the work to be done by
-mere power of muscle. Already the cost of milling
-has been greatly reduced, as has the cost of transporting
-ores and the cost of wood, lumber, and mining
-timbers. Present expenses will shortly be still further
-reduced.</p>
-<h3 id="c53">TOWNS OF WESTERN NEVADA.</h3>
-<h3 id="c54">Virginia City.</h3>
-<p>Virginia City having been sufficiently well described
-in connection with the Comstock Lode, it now remains
-to briefly mention the other towns of Western Nevada.
-These all lie near the Sierras within a space of territory
-<span class="pb" id="Page_99">99</span>
-forty-four miles long and twenty-five miles wide&mdash;under
-the &ldquo;eaves&rdquo; of the mountains.</p>
-<h3 id="c55">Gold Hill.</h3>
-<p>The town of Gold Hill was originally about one
-mile south of Virginia City&mdash;a mile south of where
-silver was first struck in the Ophir Mine. Buildings
-now unite the two towns. The boundary line between
-the two places is on the ridge called the &ldquo;Divide,&rdquo;
-but at that point there is no break in the rows
-of buildings on the streets. Gold Hill is built along
-the deep and narrow gorge that forms the head of Gold
-Canyon. From the north line on the Divide it straggles
-down the hill and along down the canyon for a
-distance of about two miles&mdash;almost down to Silver
-City indeed, the main business street following what
-was formerly the channel of the ravine.</p>
-<p>There were houses and settlers in Gold Hill before
-there were either in Virginia City, therefore it is the
-older town. Here it was that the Comstock Lode was
-first struck&mdash;though not the silver ore&mdash;by &ldquo;Old Virginia&rdquo;
-(John Bishop) and others, who were prospecting
-for placer mines. The town is 6,000 feet above the
-level of the sea, and, being shut in on the east and
-west sides by hills, it is always two or three degrees
-warmer than Virginia, 1,000 feet above on the mountain-side.</p>
-<p>The first miners at Gold Hill were really at work in
-a &ldquo;chimney&rdquo; of the Comstock, a little hill sometimes
-called &ldquo;Gold Hill proper,&rdquo; to distinguish the hill from
-<span class="pb" id="Page_100">100</span>
-the town. Much gold was taken out of the top of
-this chimney, and at depth it yielded many millions in
-silver. Although scores of millions have been taken
-out of the vein beneath the foundations of the town, it
-is still yielding its millions, and still new ore bodies
-are being developed in the great vein.</p>
-<p>Under the town are situated the world-famous Crown
-Point, Belcher, Yellow Jacket, Imperial, Kentuck,
-Confidence, and other mines, while farther down the
-canyon (under Lower Gold Hill) are the Overman,
-Alta, Benton, Justice, and several other well-known
-mines. The mining works in the town are in every
-respect first-class and are lighted with electric lamps.
-In the town are many fine buildings, both public and
-private. There is a handsome Catholic Church, and
-the High School building is one of the best buildings
-of the kind in the State. The Miners&rsquo; Union have a
-commodious hall on Main Street, and the other
-societies and orders have fine halls. Conspicuous
-among the private residences of the town is that of
-U. S. Senator J. P. Jones&mdash;the &ldquo;Jones mansion,&rdquo; as
-it is familiarly called. The town has an abundant
-supply of water (from the Virginia and Gold Hill
-Water Company&rsquo;s works), and is well supplied with
-fire hydrants; it also has electrical lights. In 1878
-the population was about 8,000, but it is now less than
-half that number. About the town are many handsome
-private grounds. Shade and ornamental trees
-begin to abound, and to the north, towering hundreds
-<span class="pb" id="Page_101">101</span>
-of feet above the town, are picturesque castellated piles
-of bare granite rocks. The Virginia and Truckee
-Railroad passes through the town.</p>
-<h3 id="c56">Silver City.</h3>
-<p>Silver City is situated on Gold Canyon, a short distance
-below Lower Gold Hill. The two towns are
-separated by a rugged ridge of porphyritic rock,
-through which is a pass only three or four rods wide,
-known as the Devil&rsquo;s Gate. About and below Silver
-City much gravel mining was done by the Johntowners
-in the early days. It was at Silver City that
-the first silver mill (Paul&rsquo;s Pioneer) was built. It
-had a newspaper&mdash;the <i>Washoe Times</i>&mdash;before a newspaper
-was published in Virginia, the <i>Territorial Enterprise</i>
-being then (1860) published in Carson City.
-At one time it had many big silver mills and promised
-to be the big town of the State; but the tide
-turned and all crowded in about the big mines at Virginia
-City. The town contains at present a population
-of only about 600. There is a fine public-school
-building, church, Miners&rsquo; Union Hall, and many
-handsome and comfortable dwellings, with an adequate
-supply of saloons, stores, and shops.</p>
-<p>About the town are an immense number of small
-veins of gold-bearing quartz that pay from the surface
-down. Nearly every head of a family in the town
-has his own mine, and when he wants money he
-shoulders his pick, goes out to his mine, and digs it,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_102">102</span>
-as a farmer in the East digs a &ldquo;mess&rdquo; of potatoes.
-Of late some large veins have been opened up in and
-about the town&mdash;as the Oest, Hawood, and others&mdash;and
-Silver City bids fair soon to become a busy mining
-center. The people have lived off their home
-mines for thirty years, and constitute the most thoroughly
-independent mining community to be found
-in Nevada.</p>
-<h3 id="c57">Dayton.</h3>
-<p>Dayton, the county seat of Lyon County, lies five
-miles below Silver City, on the Carson River, at the
-mouth of Gold Canyon. The beginning of this town
-was a log building, erected as a dwelling and trading-post
-by John McMarlin, in the fall of 1849. Being on
-the overland wagon road passing over the Sierras by the
-Placerville route, there was a good deal of trade with
-incoming immigrants, as well as with the miners, who
-soon began to earn from $8.00 to $12 a day in the
-gravel bank and bars of Gold Canyon. In 1856,
-about fifty Chinamen came over the mountains and
-began mining on the lower part of the canyon, working
-over the banks and bars left by the white miners.
-In 1858, nearly 200 Chinamen were at work in the
-canyon from its mouth up toward Johntown. These
-had their shanties about McMarlin&rsquo;s store, and the
-place took the name of &ldquo;Chinatown,&rdquo; by which name
-it was known at the time of the discovery of silver.</p>
-<p>In 1861 an attempt was made (many whites having
-then settled there) to give the place the name of &ldquo;Nevada
-<span class="pb" id="Page_103">103</span>
-City.&rdquo; This did not take, as there was already
-a Nevada City in California, and for a time the town
-was called &ldquo;Mineral Rapids,&rdquo; but this finally gave
-way to the present name of Dayton. The place grew
-apace, it being then expected that nearly all the ore
-of the Comstock would be worked at and near the
-town in mills driven by water-power. This hope was
-not realized, though several fine mills were built near
-the town. It had in 1878 a population of about
-1,200, and has since held its own very well. Though
-not a very large town, it has always been a very pleasant
-and flourishing one.</p>
-<p>The Carson and Colorado Railroad passes through
-the town, and from this a branch built in 1888 extends
-down the river to the Rock Point Mill. Here (at
-Dayton) is to be the scene of the operations of the
-Carson River Dredging Company, an Eastern incorporation
-headed by Dr. J. H. Rae. The object is to
-pump up from the bottom of the Carson River the
-millions in gold and silver, amalgam, and quicksilver,
-washed into the river and lost with the tailings running
-from the many mills. No doubt the &ldquo;millions&rdquo;
-found their way into the river, but whether they can
-be brought out of its bottom by means of a big suction
-pump remains to be seen. It is the universal wish
-that the dredger may prove a success. All will be in
-readiness to try it this season on a large scale.</p>
-<p>Dayton contains good public buildings of all kinds
-required, both county and town, has several mills, and
-<span class="pb" id="Page_104">104</span>
-many handsome private residences, surrounded with
-gardens and fruit and shade trees. In summer the
-place is completely embowered.</p>
-<p>The acid works of J. M. Douglass &amp; Co. manufacture
-daily two tons of sulphuric acid. The
-sulphur used is a native product of Nevada, and is
-brought from the mine in Humboldt County at a cost
-of $40 a ton. Dayton is surrounded with a fine
-agricultural and grazing region. A narrow-gauge
-railroad five miles long runs down the river from the
-Douglass Mill to a large tailings reservoir.</p>
-<h3 id="c58">Sutro.</h3>
-<p>Sutro is a town laid off at the mouth of the Sutro
-Tunnel by Adolph Sutro. Mr. Sutro claimed that
-his town would kill Virginia City, as all the reduction
-works would be located there, and all the miners would
-reside there, passing to and from their work through
-the tunnel. As there would no longer be any need of
-anyone remaining in Virginia, the place would be
-given up to bats and owls&mdash;coyotes would sit upon
-the peak of Mount Davidson and &ldquo;bay the moon.&rdquo;
-Believing Mr. Sutro to have got hold of the mantle of
-some ancient financial prophet, many persons were
-induced to flee the &ldquo;wrath to come&rdquo; (bats, owls and
-coyotes), and settle down at the mouth of the tunnel.
-There was quite a brisk little town there for a few
-years, but when the tunnel was completed and the
-miners discharged Sutro&rsquo;s &ldquo;bats and owls&rdquo; came home
-to roost&mdash;they found no rest for the soles of their feet
-<span class="pb" id="Page_105">105</span>
-at Virginia. Once the men who had been engaged in
-driving the tunnel went away, there was nothing more
-to make or keep up a town than at any other point
-along the edge of the valley; for the big reduction
-works promised by Mr. Sutro were never built.</p>
-<h3 id="c59">Carson City.</h3>
-<p>Carson City is the county seat of Ormsby County
-and the capital of Nevada. It is situated in Eagle
-Valley, immediately east of the high-timbered hills
-forming the eastern base of the main range of the
-Sierra Nevada Mountains. Unlike the majority of
-Nevada towns, it has a dry, level plain for its site.
-The city was laid out in 1858 by Major Ormsby and
-others. The streets conform to the cardinal points of
-the compass. There being no lack of level land, the
-streets were made sixty-six and eighty feet wide. Previous
-to 1858 there was no town where Carson now
-stands, and only one house, which was at Eagle Ranch,
-which ranch gave its name to the valley in which it
-was situated. Afterwards this ranch became better
-known as King&rsquo;s Ranch.</p>
-<p>Carson City grew rapidly from the start, for it was
-not only pleasantly situated, but also occupied an advantageous
-position as a center of trade. For several
-years in its infancy it derived a good deal of benefit
-from its trade with the great immigrant trains that
-yearly rattled in across the &ldquo;plains;&rdquo; besides, it was a
-halting-place for people rushing to the silver mines
-<span class="pb" id="Page_106">106</span>
-from the California side of the mountains. In nearly
-all directions it is surrounded by excellent agricultural
-and grazing lands. With the regular and scientific
-opening of the mines Carson became the headquarters
-of an enormous trade in wood, lumber, and mining
-timbers, a business it still retains. The city has at
-present a population of about 4,100.</p>
-<p>Carson contains many fine and costly buildings,
-both public and private. The pride of the city is the
-State Capitol. It is the most striking structure in the
-place. The building is handsome architecturally, being
-well proportioned in all its parts. It also has a
-very substantial appearance, as it is constructed of
-stone throughout. This stone is a beautiful, fine-grained
-sandstone obtained from a quarry at the State
-prison, about a mile and a half east of the town. The
-building was erected in 1870. The Capitol occupies
-the center of a square several acres in extent. This
-square is surrounded with a handsome and substantial
-iron fence. The grounds are handsomely laid out
-and well kept. They are well swarded and contain a
-great variety of shade and ornamental trees, shrubbery,
-and flowering plants. The whole is a credit to the
-State.</p>
-<p>The U. S. Branch Mint building is a large, substantial,
-and imposing structure. It is also of stone, from
-the State Prison quarry. The building was completed
-in July, 1869. It has done and is still doing a great
-deal of work.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_107">107</div>
-<p>The State Orphans&rsquo; Home is a large and well-arranged
-building with a small farm in connection therewith.
-In this institution a great number of orphan
-children from all sections of the State are cared for.
-The home is governed in a paternal way, and the children
-are well clothed, well fed, and well educated both
-morally and intellectually.</p>
-<p>The town contains several churches of leading denominations,
-excellent school-houses, and a number of
-halls of various societies, orders, and lodges. There
-are half a dozen fine hotels, many large fire-proof
-stores and business houses, with the usual proportion
-of neat and attractive retail shops of all kinds, saloons,
-and the like.</p>
-<p>The buildings of the Virginia and Truckee Railroad
-Company are a noticeable feature of the town. The
-depot buildings are commodious and conveniently
-arranged, and are always kept neatly painted and in
-good repair. In the town they have an immense car
-shop. The building is in large part constructed of
-iron. In it are a foundry, machine shop, roundhouse,
-and car manufactory.</p>
-<p>Carson has a large box factory and other manufacturing
-establishments of several kinds. The
-place has both electrical lights and gas. It is
-well supplied with pure mountain water, which is led
-through all the streets under a heavy pressure. The
-town site has sufficient slope to the eastward to afford
-good drainage. The city supports two daily newspapers,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_108">108</span>
-the <i>Appeal</i> and <i>Tribune</i>, and has a good
-theater.</p>
-<p>A fine large brick building has this year (1889)
-been erected in the town by the United States Government.
-It will contain several public offices. It
-fills a gap in the center of the town that long
-stood as a staring vacancy&mdash;supplies a &ldquo;long-felt
-want.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>There are pleasant drives in all directions from
-Carson, with smooth and level roads. A mile west
-of town are Shaw&rsquo;s Hot Springs, with every convenience
-for either bathing or swimming. The swimming
-bath is 60 by 24 feet, 4&frac12; feet deep at one end
-and 5&frac12; at the other.</p>
-<p>All visitors to the town of a scientific turn of mind
-will wish to visit the State prison and grounds, situated
-a mile and a half east of the place. A portion of
-the building now occupied as a State prison was built
-for a hotel by Col. Abe Curry (of whom the State
-purchased the property), and was of stone, two stories
-high, 32 feet wide, and 100 feet long. Colonel Curry
-also excavated and walled up the magnificent swimming
-bath now connected with the prison and fed by
-warm springs.</p>
-<p>In the floor of the quarry, beneath from fifteen to
-twenty feet of strata of sandstone, is a stratum of fine-grained
-stone that is filled with the tracks of all manner
-of animals and birds, and even one set of tracks supposed
-to have been made by some prehistoric giant of
-<span class="pb" id="Page_109">109</span>
-the human species. There are tracks of elephants,
-horses, deer, lions, tigers, panthers, giant cranes, and
-all manner of creatures. The tracks supposed to be
-human present the appearance of having been made
-by a large man wearing moccasins of the undressed
-hide of some animal. All the tracks tend toward a
-common point, which must have been a spring or
-small lake.</p>
-<p>Omnibuses run to the Hot Springs and the State
-prison, and stages leave for Lake Tahoe and Genoa
-on the arrival of trains.</p>
-<p>There are several lumber flumes near Carson that
-are worthy of inspection.</p>
-<h3 id="c60">Empire City.</h3>
-<p>This town is situated on the banks of the Carson
-River, three and a half miles east of Carson, and on the
-line of the Virginia and Truckee Railroad. Empire is
-pre-eminently a milling town. Here are located the
-Mexican, Morgan, Brunswick, and Merrimac Mills,
-all first-class silver reduction works. The town is in
-Ormsby County, and contains about 700 inhabitants.
-Each year thousands of cords of wood floated down
-the Carson River from Alpine County, California, are
-taken out here. Formerly no fewer than 150,000
-cords of wood came down to this town in the drives
-of a single season. On account of these wood
-drives Empire was jockularly termed the &ldquo;seaport&rdquo;
-of Nevada. The wood &ldquo;drives&rdquo; and the landing of
-them for a time each year gave employment to a great
-number of men and teams.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_110">110</div>
-<p>The town contains a number of handsome residences
-and a few good public buildings.</p>
-<h3 id="c61">Genoa.</h3>
-<p>Genoa is the oldest town in Nevada, and is the
-place where the first white settlement was made.
-These settlers were Mormons, and they established a
-station there as early as 1848. For this reason the
-place was long known as &ldquo;Mormon Station.&rdquo; For
-several years most of the settlers in the valley and
-about the town were Mormons. Genoa is the county
-seat of Douglas County, and is situated in Carson
-Valley, at a point about 13 miles south of Carson
-City. Although in a beautiful valley it lies close in
-against the Sierras, at an altitude of 4,335 feet above
-the level of the sea. To the westward the main
-timbered Sierra Nevada Mountain Range rises to a
-great height, while above its ridge tower many bald,
-granite peaks. Among these (to the southward)
-Job&rsquo;s Peak rises to the height of 10,639 feet.</p>
-<p>The town contains a fine court-house, and other
-handsome public buildings, as school-houses, churches,
-and halls. There are in the place several good, substantial
-stores, and business houses and shops. There
-are many neat dwellings and cottages surrounded
-with fine gardens and grounds. In the town is published
-the Genoa <i>Courier</i>, a sprightly weekly paper
-devoted to the interests of the people of the town
-and county. In this town was first published (in
-1859) the <i>Territorial Enterprise</i>, the pioneer newspaper
-<span class="pb" id="Page_111">111</span>
-of Nevada. The paper was moved to Carson
-in 1860, and thence in a short time to Virginia City,
-where it was soon made a daily, and where it has ever
-since been published as such.</p>
-<p>Fine ranches lie up and down the valley. A mile
-and a half south of the town are Walley&rsquo;s famous hot
-springs, of which more particular mention will be
-found in another place. Lake Tahoe forms part of
-the western boundary of Douglas, and both Glenbrook
-and Cave Rock are in the county. The Carson
-River passes near Genoa and through the heart of
-the county. Genoa contains about 1,000 inhabitants.</p>
-<h3 id="c62">Reno.</h3>
-<p>Reno, on the line of the Central Pacific Railroad,
-and pleasantly situated on the banks of the beautiful
-Truckee River, is the county seat of Washoe County.
-Reno began to be a town in 1868, and under the influence
-of the Central Pacific Railroad, it grew very
-rapidly. The town at once became the shipping-point
-of all goods, machinery, and supplies destined
-for the Comstock Mines, and for all parts of Storey,
-Lyon, Ormsby, and Douglas Counties; also for Susanville,
-Honey Lake Valley, and a great scope of
-country to the northward. In the days before the
-completion of the Virginia and Truckee Railroad,
-Reno was filled with teams and stage coaches. The
-place was a sort of teamsters&rsquo; paradise. This was
-good for the town, but it could not be expected to
-last forever. The present ambition of the place is to
-<span class="pb" id="Page_112">112</span>
-become a railroad and manufacturing center. It has
-the Virginia and Truckee Road leading southward,
-while to the northward the Nevada and California is
-fast advancing to completion.</p>
-<p>Reno is the center of one of the finest agricultural
-and grazing sections in the State, and is a point for
-the shipment to California of immense numbers of
-beef cattle. Although there are in the town large and
-fine reduction works for smelting refractory ores, and
-two flouring mills, it may be said that hardly a commencement
-has been made toward the utilization of
-the immense water-power afforded by the Truckee
-River at and near the town.</p>
-<p>Here is located the Nevada Insane Asylum, the
-building and grounds of which do credit to the town
-and State. The State University is also now located
-at Reno (having been removed from Elko), and is in
-a more flourishing condition than ever before. The
-buildings, and grounds, and teachers are all that
-could be desired. This institution has recently been
-made an Agricultural Experiment Station. Here is
-located Bishop Whitakers&rsquo; excellent school for young
-ladies, and also a similar school, first-class, in charge
-of the Sisters of Charity. There are, besides, five
-public schools. The town is well supplied with
-churches and public buildings of all kinds adequate
-to present requirements.</p>
-<p>The town contains many first-class fire-proof business
-houses, five depots and railroad buildings, many
-<span class="pb" id="Page_113">113</span>
-attractive retail stores and shops, excellent and commodious
-hotels, &ldquo;palatial&rdquo; saloons, and handsome
-and comfortable private residences. It is lighted with
-electrical lamps, has good water works, and almost
-everything else that its public-spirited citizens have
-thought it necessary to provide. It has two excellent
-daily newspapers, the <i>Gazette</i> and <i>Journal</i>, and a
-first-class theater. This spring (1889) there has been
-in the place a boom in town property, and much
-building is in progress. Not only is the town
-on the highway of the nations of the world leading
-East and West, but is on the highway of the Pacific
-Coast leading North and South, along the great range
-of the Sierra Nevada Mountains, from Oregon to Arizona.
-The present population is estimated at 5,000
-souls.</p>
-<h3 id="c63">OTHER TOWNS IN WASHOE COUNTY.</h3>
-<p>It may be worth while for the satisfaction of persons
-traveling southward from Reno on the Virginia
-and Truckee, to mention some once promising towns
-in Washoe County that now only exist as sleepy
-hamlets:&mdash;</p>
-<h4 id="c64"><span class="sc">Washoe City.</span></h4>
-<p><span class="sc">Washoe City.</span>&mdash;This place is situated at the North
-end of Washoe Valley, sixteen miles south of Reno.
-It was formerly the county seat of Washoe County,
-and contained about seven hundred inhabitants.
-There was in the town a substantial brick courthouse,
-Masonic and Odd Fellows&rsquo; Hall, Methodist
-Church, public school building, good hotels, and
-many stores, shops, and saloons.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_114">114</div>
-<h4 id="c65"><span class="sc">Ophir.</span></h4>
-<p><span class="sc">Ophir.</span>&mdash;This town, three miles south of Washoe
-City, on the west side of Washoe Lake, at one time
-contained two or three hundred inhabitants. Here
-was situated a big seventy-stamp mill erected by the
-Ophir Mining Company at a cost of over $500,000.
-To reach this mill with ores from the Ophir Mine a
-bridge a mile in length was built across the north end
-of Washoe Lake, at a cost of $75,000. The ores
-were amalgamated by the barrel or Freyburg process,
-and everything was on a grand scale, the buildings
-covering over an acre of ground.</p>
-<h4 id="c66"><span class="sc">Franktown.</span></h4>
-<p><span class="sc">Franktown.</span>&mdash;This town, one mile south of Ophir,
-was originally settled by Mormons (about the same
-time of the settlement at Genoa). Mormon fashion,
-it was laid off in four-acre lots, and small streams of
-water ran through all the streets. Here John Dall
-had a thirty-stamp water mill, and there were several
-other mills on Franktown Creek. The town had over
-two hundred inhabitants in 1869.</p>
-<p>At one time there were in operation in Washoe
-County ten mills (four or five near Washoe City),
-having an aggregate of 281 stamps, but the completion
-of the Virginia and Truckee Railroad to the
-Carson River was sudden death to all the mills, and
-killed all the towns. All the ore went to the river.</p>
-<h4 id="c67"><span class="sc">Wadsworth.</span></h4>
-<p><span class="sc">Wadsworth</span>, on the Central Pacific, thirty-four
-miles east of Reno, is a bright and growing little
-town. It is situated at the &ldquo;Big Bend&rdquo; of the
-Truckee River, a place well known to those who
-<span class="pb" id="Page_115">115</span>
-toiled across the plains in the early days. The place
-contains about 600 inhabitants. In it are the machine
-shops, round-house, and freight depot of the Central
-Pacific, and many good and substantial buildings,
-both public and private. Before the Carson and
-Colorado Railroad was built, Wadsworth was a shipping-point
-for many mining towns and camps to the
-southward. It still has a very fair trade.</p>
-<h4 id="c68"><span class="sc">Verdi.</span></h4>
-<p><span class="sc">Verdi</span>, eleven miles west of Reno, on the Central
-Pacific, is a pleasant little lumbering town on the
-Truckee River, at the eastern base of the Sierras.
-It is a town of saw-mills and of manufactories of
-articles made of wood. In the way of mills and
-machinery Verdi contains a large amount of valuable
-property.</p>
-<h3 id="c69">LAKE TAHOE.</h3>
-<h3>Surrounding Objects of Interest.</h3>
-<p>All visitors to the Pacific Coast who are lovers of
-the beautiful and picturesque in natural scenery, will
-endeavor to spend some time at Lake Tahoe. Taking
-into consideration the surroundings, there is
-nowhere in the world a more grandly beautiful mountain
-lake. The lake lies between the eastern and
-western summit ridges of the main ridge of the Sierra
-Nevada Mountains, at an elevation of 6,247 feet
-above the level of the sea. Its length is a little over
-twenty-one miles, and its width about twelve miles.
-Roughly it has the form of a parallelogram, lying
-nearly north and south, about one-third in Nevada
-<span class="pb" id="Page_116">116</span>
-and the remainder in California. It has an area of
-204 square miles, as is shown by measurements made
-in four places across its width, and longitudinally
-(north and south) in three places. Its greatest depth
-is 1,800 feet.</p>
-<p>It is shut in and surrounded on all sides by mountains
-that rise to a height of from 2,000 to 5,000 feet
-above its surface. The lake evidently occupies an
-extinct volcanic crater of great size. Soundings show
-in the bottom a deep channel or crevice which extends
-nearly the whole length of the lake in a north
-and south direction. In this the depth is everywhere
-from 1,500 to 1,700 feet. The deepest spot (1,800
-feet) is toward the south end of the lake, in front of
-Mount Tallac. The water is of great purity and
-crystal clearness, and never freezes.</p>
-<p>The lake receives the waters of fifty-one creeks and
-brooks, the largest of which is the Upper Truckee,
-which falls in at the south end. It also receives the
-aqueous contributions of almost innumerable ravines,
-gorges, and canyons. It drains an area of over 500
-square miles, composed largely of lofty mountains on
-which the snow falls to a depth of many feet, and by
-the melting of which the numerous streams are fed.
-There are also many living springs on the sides of
-the surrounding mountains, with a great number
-(both hot and cold) along the shores of the lake, and
-doubtless a much larger number deep beneath its
-surface. The only outlet of the lake is the Truckee
-<span class="pb" id="Page_117">117</span>
-River, at its northwest corner. This outlet, which
-forms the head of the Truckee River, is fifty feet in
-width, has an average depth of five feet, and a velocity
-of six feet a second, making the discharge 123,120,000
-cubic feet in twenty-four hours, in early spring
-when the snow in the mountains is rapidly melting.</p>
-<p>Since it was first seen by white men the lake has
-been given several different names. Tahoe is popularly
-supposed to be a Washoe Indian word, that
-means &ldquo;big water.&rdquo; Some say the word means
-&ldquo;deep water,&rdquo; &ldquo;clear water,&rdquo; &ldquo;elevated water,&rdquo; or
-&ldquo;bright water.&rdquo; The Washoe Indians themselves
-say they know nothing about the word. Fremont
-saw it in 1844, and simply called it &ldquo;Mountain
-Lake.&rdquo; It was once mapped as &ldquo;Lake Bonpland,&rdquo;
-and in 1859 was mapped by Dr. Henry De Groot as
-&ldquo;Lake De Groot.&rdquo; It was also once known as &ldquo;Lake
-Bigler,&rdquo; being so named by some in honor of a Democratic
-Governor of California, and the name is still
-used by some of the strait-laced among the Democracy.
-Tahoe, whatever it may mean, is a name now
-so universally acknowledged and so firmly fixed that
-it is not likely that it will ever be supplanted by any
-other.</p>
-<p>Lake Tahoe is surrounded on all sides by mountains
-that have an elevation of from 3,000 to 5,000
-feet above its surface. Mount Tallac towers to a
-height of 11,000 feet above the level of the sea;
-Pyramid Peak, 10,000; Monument Peak, 10,000;
-<span class="pb" id="Page_118">118</span>
-Rubicon Peaks, fifteen miles west of the lake, 9,284;
-Job&rsquo;s Peak, 10,637; Sand Mountain, back of Rowland&rsquo;s,
-8,747 feet; and Bald Mountain, Mount Pluto,
-Mount Anderson, Old Hat, Mount Ellis, Barker&rsquo;s
-Peak, Table Mountain, the Cliffs, the Needles, and
-many other peaks, rise to a height of over 8,000 feet.
-On all sides great old peaks stand about gazing down
-forever upon their reflected images in the lake below.
-It is a grand convocation of mountains, a convention
-of granite peaks, gray and ancient. In a circle about
-the lake stand pine-clad mountains, snow-clad mountains,
-and unclad mountains that are merely stupendous
-piles of granite&mdash;granite cathedrals piled up by
-nature for the delectation of those of her votaries that
-ever gladly worship at her shrine.</p>
-<p>In places towering rocks stand quite near the water,
-and around the shores are so many bays and inlets,
-so many jutting points and tongues of land, that
-there is a constant change of views&mdash;an endless succession
-of either grand or picturesque effects. A
-single cliff&mdash;as Shakespeare Rock&mdash;seen from different
-points and distances, takes a dozen different shapes,
-and so of all prominent capes and caves. The distance
-round the shores of the lake is 144 miles, and
-may be said to represent that many miles of landscape
-panorama of unrivaled beauty and grandeur.
-Volumes have already been written descriptive of the
-wonders and the beauties of Lake Tahoe, and innumerable
-volumes will still be written as the ages pass,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_119">119</span>
-yet to comprehend the place it must be seen and
-<i>felt</i>.</p>
-<p>It speaks well for Lake Tahoe that its beauties are
-appreciated and prized by persons living near by in
-California and Nevada, and that it is a favorite place
-of summer resort with the people everywhere on the
-Pacific Coast. In the Bible it is said: &ldquo;A prophet is
-not without honor, save in his own country and in his
-own house,&rdquo; and the same may generally be said of
-celebrated natural objects, but it is different in the
-case of Tahoe&mdash;the grand and picturesque scenery of
-the lake is admired and esteemed at home. It is not
-only looked upon as being a great sanitarium of the
-Pacific Coast, but also as a grand store-house of all
-the delights of mountain scenery. In Tahoe the
-careworn and debilitated find a cure for both mind
-and body.</p>
-<p>The water of the lake is as cold and pure as that
-of the best living springs, and it possesses wonderful
-charms&mdash;almost the transparency of the atmosphere.
-Near the shore, when shallow, it is of an emerald
-green here; in deep water, in the sunshine, it is of
-an ultramarine tinge, and in the shade an indigo blue.
-Tossing, distant, deep water in certain lights assumes
-tints of purple and violet, with beautiful flashes of
-ruby. Seated in a boat on the lake in a calm, one
-may see the stones and pebbles at the bottom, with
-trout cruising about, where the sounding line shows
-seventy-five feet of water. The whole dome of the
-sky, with every fleecy cloud, is there perfectly reflected.
-<span class="pb" id="Page_120">120</span>
-We are midway between the heavens above and the
-heavens below, gently rocking upon the waving veil of
-blue that separates the two firmaments.</p>
-<p>It is difficult to swim in the lake. Some have supposed
-this to be on account of the great elevation
-and reduced atmospheric pressure on the water, rendering
-the lake less buoyant than bodies of fresh
-water at sea level. This, however, is a mistake.
-Water is only very slightly compressible. The great
-purity of the water of course renders it less dense than
-that of lakes holding minerals in solution, but it is the
-coldness of the water and the variety of the atmosphere
-that render swimming difficult and laborious.</p>
-<p>The bodies of persons drowned in the lake (unless
-very near shore) are never again seen. The bodies of
-no fewer than ten or twelve white men are known to
-lie at the bottom of the lake; and no doubt among
-them lie the skeletons of not a few Indians. The
-lake is in some respects treacherous and dangerous.
-It is subject to sudden and heavy squalls. Fierce
-gusts of wind at times rush down the big canyons,
-and, striking the water, cause it to boil like a pot.
-These squalls are liable to capsize a sail-boat. Unless
-an experienced boatman be of the party, it is best
-to have the sail in hand, that it may be let go in a
-moment. The squalls generally plunge down the
-canyons and gorges on the west side of the lake.</p>
-<p>The route of the passenger steamers round the lake
-is near the shores. These are in some places rocky
-<span class="pb" id="Page_121">121</span>
-and in others level. In the mountain gorges and on
-the ridges are pines and various other evergreen trees,
-but down near the edge of the water are small groves
-of quaking asp, willow, and other trees of deciduous
-foliage.</p>
-<p>At the Hot Springs is a good hotel, bathing houses,
-and other accommodations. At Tahoe City will also
-be found good hotels, boats, fishing tackle, and all
-such little sporting supplies as the visitor is likely to
-require. McKinney&rsquo;s, at Sugar Pine Point, on the
-west side of the lake, is a popular place of resort and
-possesses many attractions. At Glenbrook, on the
-east side of the lake, are good hotel accommodations,
-and there may also be had boats, fishing tackle, and
-all ordinary supplies. In many charming nooks and
-valleys around the shores are hotels and cottages for
-the accommodation of visitors.</p>
-<h4 id="c70"><span class="sc">Emerald Bay.</span></h4>
-<p><span class="sc">Emerald Bay.</span>&mdash;One of the most beautiful spots
-about Lake Tahoe is Emerald Bay. It is the gem of
-the place. The bay is situated at the south end of the
-lake. It is 2&frac12; miles long and 1&frac14; wide, nearly as
-large as Donner Lake. The entrance to it is through
-a channel less than 200 yards in width, but containing
-a depth of water sufficient to float a man-of-war.
-Emerald Bay is surrounded by grand and picturesque
-mountains, the peaks of which are 9,000 feet above
-the level of the sea, and some of which rise precipitously
-to a height of 4,000 feet above the surface of
-the bay. The water is nearly always of a beautiful
-<span class="pb" id="Page_122">122</span>
-emerald green. In the bay is a rocky and romantic
-little island of about three acres, on which is a handsome
-little cottage. On the island is a tomb excavated
-in the rock by an old boatman known as &ldquo;Captain
-Dick.&rdquo; Captain Dick fondly hoped that this
-tomb would be his last resting-place, but his body
-lies at the bottom of the lake. In October, 1873,
-his boat was capsized in a furious squall, and Captain
-Dick was never seen again.</p>
-<p>Emerald Bay, with 519 acres of surrounding land,
-belongs to the estate of the late Dr. P. T. Kirby, of
-Virginia City, who at the time of his death was
-about to build a fine and commodious hotel. Before
-his death, however, he had built over a dozen neat
-cottages. Heretofore, owing to lack of accommodations
-there, many tourists have failed to visit this bay,
-the most beautiful nook about the lake, but it will
-now at once become a favorite haunt of all lovers of
-the grand, picturesque, and beautiful. The island is
-a little gem, and has about it a style that gives it almost
-the appearance of being a toy constructed by a
-landscape gardener. It has been very appropriately
-named &ldquo;Coquette Island.&rdquo; It rises to a height of
-about 200 feet above the surface of the bay. At the
-south end of the bay are the &ldquo;Lovers&rsquo; Falls.&rdquo; These
-falls are high up on the side of a steep and rocky
-mountain. They are on a small creek which makes
-many leaps down perpendicular terraces of rock.
-The falls are supposed to have been the favorite tryst
-of a Digger chief and his Washoe lady-love.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_123">123</div>
-<h4 id="c71"><span class="sc">Fallen Leaf Lake.</span></h4>
-<p><span class="sc">Fallen Leaf Lake.</span>&mdash;This lake lies one mile south
-of Lake Tahoe, and about three miles south of Emerald
-Bay. It is a beautiful sheet of water two miles in
-length and a mile in width. It has an outlet into
-Lake Tahoe.</p>
-<h4 id="c72"><span class="sc">Silver Lake.</span></h4>
-<p><span class="sc">Silver Lake.</span>&mdash;Silver Lake is a perfect little beauty
-in its way, but is seldom visited; as it lies high on the
-side of a mountain which is covered with chaparral.
-It is about half as large as Fallen Leaf Lake, from
-which it is distant two miles in a northwest direction.</p>
-<h4 id="c73"><span class="sc">Cornelian Bay.</span></h4>
-<p><span class="sc">Cornelian Bay.</span>&mdash;This bay lies north of Tahoe
-City, and has a smooth, pebbly beach, where are found
-agates, cornelians, and jasper of several colors. To
-sail along the shore the distance from Tahoe City
-is seven miles.</p>
-<h4 id="c74"><span class="sc">Agate Bay.</span></h4>
-<p><span class="sc">Agate Bay.</span>&mdash;Agate Bay is a place similar to that
-just described. It lies a short distance west of the
-Hot Springs.</p>
-<h4 id="c75"><span class="sc">Crystal Bay.</span></h4>
-<p><span class="sc">Crystal Bay.</span>&mdash;This beautiful cove forms the extreme
-north end of Lake Tahoe. It lies northeast of
-Hot Springs.</p>
-<h4 id="c76"><span class="sc">Shakespeare Rock.</span></h4>
-<p><span class="sc">Shakespeare Rock.</span>&mdash;In sailing round the lake
-from Tahoe City to Glenbrook several picturesque
-rocky points, studded with stately pines, will be seen,
-also Shakespeare Rock, which is a cliff towering high
-above the level of the lake. On the face of this cliff
-are seen ridges, fissures, and patches of color which at
-a distance resolve themselves into the likeness of the
-face of the immortal dramatist.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_124">124</div>
-<h4 id="c77"><span class="sc">Cave Rock.</span></h4>
-<p><span class="sc">Cave Rock</span> is passed before reaching Glenbrook.
-It is about 300 feet in height and seen from the deck
-of the steamer, towers upward like the castle of some
-&ldquo;Blue Beard&rdquo; giant of the Sierras. It has in its face
-a yawning cavern some 80 feet in depth. In this
-dark cave one might suppose the giant to live.</p>
-<h4 id="c78"><span class="sc">Glenbrook.</span></h4>
-<p><span class="sc">Glenbrook</span> is on the east side of the lake near a
-large cave. Here are several large saw-mills, owned
-by Yerington, Bliss &amp; Co., which manufacture an
-immense quantity of all kinds of lumber. The mills
-are furnished with electrical lights. The mill company
-have here a narrow-gauge railroad nine miles
-in length, which carries their lumber and timber to
-the flumes at the top of the mountain (Eastern Summit),
-whence it is floated down to the valley near
-Carson City.</p>
-<h4 id="c79"><span class="sc">Cascade Mountain.</span></h4>
-<p><span class="sc">Cascade Mountain</span>, at the south end of the lake,
-is 9,500 feet in height. Near it are beautiful cascades,
-and from the top are to be seen a number of small
-lakes, and much wild and grand mountain scenery.</p>
-<h4 id="c80"><span class="sc">Rubicon Springs.</span></h4>
-<p><span class="sc">Rubicon Springs</span>, which lie just over the Western
-Summit of the Sierras, are easily reached by a good
-stage road from McKinneys&rsquo;. Here, on the headwaters
-of the Rubicon River, is some of the most
-charming scenery to be found anywhere in the
-mountains. There are innumerable nooks, in which
-the disposition and proportions of water, foliage, and
-rugged granite rocks is such that all would seem to
-have been arranged for the special delectation of the
-<span class="pb" id="Page_125">125</span>
-artist and the lover of nature. The water of the
-springs at this place possesses wonderful curative powers.
-No invalid ever left them with a feeling of disappointment,
-however highly they might have been
-recommended to him.</p>
-<p>Besides the places named there are scores of nooks
-and corners, cliffs, streams, fountains, canyons, and
-gorges that are not even honored with a name, which
-in almost any other part of the world would be lauded
-to the skies, and which would attract swarms of visitors
-from great distances. There is not a spot about the
-lake that would not astound the dweller in the prairies
-of the West were he placed before it.</p>
-<h3 id="c81">Routes to Lake Tahoe.</h3>
-<h3 class="inline" id="c82"><span class="smaller">THE ROUTE FROM TRUCKEE.</span></h3>
-<p>Persons in California, or tourists bound East, who
-wish to visit Tahoe will leave the Central Pacific at
-Truckee. The distance to the lake is but fourteen
-miles, over a good stage-road, which passes along up
-the Truckee River, amid grand and beautiful scenery.
-High, rocky, and picturesque mountains wall in the
-gorge through which winds the river and the road,
-and on all sides are groves of stately pines. In places
-where the walls recede from the stream are charming
-little nooks, valleys, and meadows. Indeed, at every
-turn in road and river new beauties are disclosed.</p>
-<p>There are fresh surprises on every furlong of the
-road from Truckee to Tahoe City, which town is
-situated at the outlet of the lake which forms the
-<span class="pb" id="Page_126">126</span>
-Truckee River. At Tahoe City will be found good
-hotels and accommodations of all kinds. Here, too,
-will be found in waiting a steamer to carry the visitor
-round the lake to Glenbrook, passing near the principal
-points of interest on the way, or to make the
-circuit of the lake. While to follow every projection
-and indentation of the shore-line would require a sail
-of 144 miles, a circuit of about 75 miles carries the
-visitor sufficiently near for a satisfactory view of the
-more charming and picturesque points.</p>
-<p>Below are given the distances from Tahoe City to
-the principal points around the lake on the route
-usually taken by the steamers:&mdash;</p>
-<h3 id="c83"><span class="ss">Distances from Tahoe City.</span></h3>
-<table class="center">
-<tr class="th"><th> </th><th><span class="sc smaller">Miles.</span></th></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">Tahoe City to McKinney&rsquo;s </td><td class="r">7</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">Sugar-Pine Point </td><td class="r">9</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">Emerald Bay </td><td class="r">16</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">Tallac Mountain and Hotel </td><td class="r">20</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">Rowlands </td><td class="r">24</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">Glenbrook <i>via</i> Rowlands </td><td class="r">34</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">Glenbrook, direct </td><td class="r">14</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">Cornelian Bay </td><td class="r">7&frac12;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">Observatory </td><td class="r">2&frac12;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">Hot Springs </td><td class="r">10</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="l">Round the lake </td><td class="r">75</td></tr>
-</table>
-<p>On his arrival at Glenbrook, the tourist that came
-<i>via</i> Truckee will find stages in waiting to carry him
-to Carson City, where he will take the Virginia and
-Truckee Railroad to the Central Pacific at Reno.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_127">127</div>
-<h3 id="c84">The Route from Reno.</h3>
-<p>The traveler from the East who wishes to view the
-wonders of Tahoe in passing across the continent, or
-to see the Comstock Silver Mines, will leave the
-Central Pacific at Reno, allowing his baggage to go
-on to his point of destination in California. The
-Virginia and Truckee will then take him to Carson
-City, a distance of thirty-one miles to the southward,
-passing through an interesting region all the way.</p>
-<p>At Carson stages for Lake Tahoe will be found in
-waiting. The distance from Carson to Tahoe is
-fourteen miles. The road is fine, and the mountain
-scenery wild and beautiful. In passing up Clear
-Creek Canyon, the tourist will travel for a considerable
-distance alongside the big lumber flume of the
-Carson and Tahoe Lumber Company. This flume
-is in the shape of the letter V. It has a length of
-twenty-one miles. Through it runs a small stream
-of water, and a stick of timber, billet of wood, or
-piece of lumber dropped into the V-shaped trough
-at the summit at once darts away at race-horse speed,
-and very shortly thereafter is dumped at the wood
-and lumber yard at Carson. In one day may thus
-be sent down the flume 700 cords of wood, or 500,000
-feet of mining timbers. Hank Monk, the famous
-stage-driver who for a long time drove over this piece
-of road, and who once &ldquo;hurled&rdquo; Horace Greeley
-from the summit of the Sierras down into Placerville,
-is now dead, and lies buried at Carson City.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_128">128</div>
-<p>On arriving at Glenbrook, the traveler will find
-ready a steamer which will take him round Lake
-Tahoe to Tahoe City, whence he will take a stagecoach
-fourteen miles down the Truckee River to the
-Central Pacific, at the town of Truckee.</p>
-<h3 id="c85">The Town of Truckee.</h3>
-<p>Truckee is situated in a heavily-timbered basin,
-lying between the two ridges, or summits, of the
-Sierras. In this basin is contained an area of over
-250 square miles of as fine pine forest as is to be
-found in the mountains. The town is the center of
-a great and flourishing lumbering industry, and immense
-quantities of ice are each winter harvested and
-stored in the immediate vicinity. In 1883 it was
-estimated that the forests of Truckee Basin contained
-5,000,000,000 feet of lumber, and that 50,000,000
-feet might be cut every year for 100 years. The
-town has an elevation of 5,866 feet, or over a mile
-above the level of the sea, yet for eight months of
-the year the climate is pleasant. Where the town
-now stands was formerly &ldquo;Coburn&rsquo;s Station,&rdquo; on the
-old Dutch Flat wagon-road. The place was named
-Truckee, and began to build up in 1865, with the
-construction of the Central Pacific Railroad at that
-point. It is a brisk and thriving place, and, besides
-its lumber and ice industries, has a good trade with
-an extensive farming and grazing region. It is wonderful
-that so large a town exists as is now seen, in
-view of the fact that since 1868 it has seven times
-<span class="pb" id="Page_129">129</span>
-been swept by terrible fires, and by two or three of
-these it was, in different years, almost wiped out of
-existence.</p>
-<h3 id="c86">Donner Lake.</h3>
-<p>This beautiful little sheet of water is but three miles
-from the town of Truckee, and is reached by a delightful
-drive over a smooth and level road. Donner
-Lake is about three miles long and from a mile to a
-mile and a half wide. It is about 200 feet in depth
-in the deepest place, and lies at an elevation of 5,938
-feet above the level of the sea. It has for feeders
-several sparkling trout-brooks, and has an outlet called
-Donner Creek, which is an affluent of the Truckee
-River. The lake is full of trout of the same species
-as are found in Lake Tahoe, with minnows of several
-kinds, known as &ldquo;chubs&rdquo; and &ldquo;white fish.&rdquo; It is a
-safe and beautiful lake on which to row or sail. As
-regards the matter of safety it may be set down as the
-&ldquo;family lake&rdquo; of the mountains&mdash;is as reliable and
-devoid of tantrums as the old &ldquo;family mare.&rdquo; The
-lake is surrounded with grand old mountains. Lake
-Ridge, to the southward, rises to the height of 8,234
-feet, and its lower part is covered with pine and other
-evergreen trees. To the west rise huge, bare granite
-mountains. The track of the Central Pacific Railroad
-runs along the side of the ridge to the southward,
-and presently disappears in a tunnel under the bald
-mountains in the west. Owing to the track being
-covered with snow-sheds, passengers get only occasional
-glimpses of the lake.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_130">130</div>
-<p>At the upper and lower ends of the lake are patches
-of meadow land, groves of pine and tamarack, and
-handsome clumps of willow and quaking asp. Donner
-is a favorite place of resort for camping parties
-from Nevada and California. There are grand
-views in all directions. Artists here find constant
-use for their sketching tools. A fine picture of the
-lake was painted by Bierstadt in 1872. He chose
-the month of August for his picture.</p>
-<h4 id="c87"><span class="sc">The Donner Disaster.</span></h4>
-<p>At the foot of the lake
-is the scene of the sufferings of the Donner party.
-The spot is marked by a tall wooden cross. At this
-little mountain-begirt lake, in October, 1846, arrived
-a party of emigrants (mostly from Illinois), under the
-leadership of George Donner. There were with the
-train seventy-six men, women, and children. That
-winter the snow fell a month earlier than usual, and in a
-single night the party found themselves overwhelmed,
-caught in a <i>cul-de-sac</i>. It was impossible to attempt
-the mountains when the snow in the lower ground
-about the lake was so deep that the wagons could not
-be moved; besides, it snowed without ceasing. In
-one night, when their cattle were scattered about,
-snow fell to such a depth as to completely cover and
-hide them from sight. It was then decided to build
-cabins and winter on the spot. Being short of provisions,
-they at once killed all the cattle they could
-find, using the hides to roof the cabins. In December
-all provisions were exhausted, and parties were
-<span class="pb" id="Page_131">131</span>
-sent out one after another to reach California and
-there make known the condition of those left in the
-camp. Most of those thus sent out perished, but
-finally one or two persons reached Sutter&rsquo;s Fort, at
-Sacramento. The first relief parties failed, and it was
-not until February that a party reached the starving
-people of the camp. These, meantime, had been reduced
-to such extremity as to cook and eat the raw
-hides covering their cabins and the bones thrown away
-earlier in the season. Toward the last there was at least
-one instance of cannibalism. Of the seventy-six persons
-but forty survived, some perishing in the mountains
-(where the snow was thirty feet deep) in trying
-to get through to California, and others dying in the
-cabins. Those found in the cabins were mere skeletons.
-A thick volume would be required to give a full
-account of all the sufferings and trials of the ill-fated
-Donner party. It was a disaster that shocked all California
-for years, and which created a profound sensation
-of horror and pity throughout the whole United
-States. The history of what occurred at Donner
-Lake that winter has never been fully written, and
-never will be, as there were happenings that the survivors
-were never willing to talk about.</p>
-<h4 id="c88"><span class="sc">Surrounding Points of Interest.</span></h4>
-<p>Donner Peak,
-to the west of the lake, a towering pile of granite,
-rises to a height of 8,154 feet above the level of the
-sea, and Glacial Point, in the same direction, is 7,708
-feet in height. Fremont&rsquo;s Peak&mdash;sometimes called
-<span class="pb" id="Page_132">132</span>
-Castle Peak, or Mount Stanford&mdash;towers in the northwest
-to the height of 9,237 feet above sea level. It is
-seen about four miles north of Summit Station. At
-this peak heads Pioneer Creek. From its granite
-pinnacle, on a clear day may be seen the Downieville
-Buttes, Marysville Buttes, the Coast Range, and many
-mountains and valleys in California; and looking
-eastward, Mount Davidson, the sinks of the Carson
-and Humboldt, are seen, with many other mountains
-and deserts. Near Summit are about a dozen small
-lakes, some of them charming both in themselves and
-in their surroundings of rocks and trees.</p>
-<h3 id="c89">Independence Lake.</h3>
-<p>This beautiful lake is nineteen miles distant from
-Truckee, and is reached by stage or carriage. It is
-three miles long and three-quarters of a mile wide.
-The lake was named by Lola Montez (when a resident
-of Grass Valley, California) on the occasion of
-a visit to it on a picnic excursion, July 4, 1853. It
-is held up toward the heavens to a height of 7,000
-feet by a circle of grand old peaks. It is very deep,
-and in places has never been fathomed. Owing to
-its great depth, the lake is supposed to occupy an
-extinct volcanic crater, whereas Donner Lake was
-formed by a moraine deposited across the valley by a
-glacier. The lake is alive with trout of a peculiar
-species, a good deal resembling brook trout, and for
-which they are often sold. The surrounding scenery
-is as wildly beautiful as the imagination can picture.
-<span class="pb" id="Page_133">133</span>
-From the peak of Mount Lola, 4 miles north of the
-lake and 11,000 feet high, can be seen Mount Shasta,
-distant 180 miles to the northward; Mount Diablo,
-140 miles distant; all Sacramento Valley, and scores
-of peaks of note in all directions. There is a hotel
-at the lake and good accommodations of all kinds.
-Bear, deer, and grouse are to be found in the chaparral,
-mountain glades, and pine forests. The lake
-has an outlet which is the head of one of the principal
-branches of the Little Truckee.</p>
-<h3 id="c90">Webber Lake.</h3>
-<p>This lake lies twenty-five miles north of Truckee,
-and is reached by stage over a road bordered with
-charming scenery. The lake is circular in form and
-about a mile in diameter. It is 6,925 feet above sea-level.
-It is surrounded with mountains of graceful
-outline, nearly all of which are wooded to their tops.
-The deepest spot to be found measures only 80 feet.
-The lake is of glacial origin. It abounds in trout&mdash;a
-very game variety, introduced nearly thirty years
-ago. About the lake are numerous attractions.
-About a mile south from the lake, on a tributary
-creek, are falls over 100 feet in height; a mile north
-is a little gem of a lake, with an area of 50 acres,
-which is called the Lake of the Woods, and which is
-7,500 feet (nearly a mile and a half) above the level
-of the sea; near at hand is Prospect Peak, from the
-top of which, in a clear day, mountain peaks distant
-300 miles may be made out, while all about are other
-<span class="pb" id="Page_134">134</span>
-tall peaks and objects of interest. Small mountain
-game is plentiful near the lake. Bear may be found
-by those anxious to see them by taking a tramp in the
-chaparral thickets of the higher peaks. There is a
-good hotel at the lake, yet it is a great place of resort
-for campers. Where the greatest depth of water is
-only 80 feet, no one is afraid of drowning. The lake
-has an outlet, which is one of the affluents of the
-Little Truckee.</p>
-<h3 id="c91">Pyramid Lake.</h3>
-<p>We have now to speak of a few Nevada lakes not
-mentioned in connection with the rivers of the State.
-The greatest of these, and the largest lake between
-the Sierra Nevada Range and the Rocky Mountains,
-except Great Salt Lake, Utah, is Pyramid Lake. It
-is fed by the Truckee, the course of which river has
-already been traced, and the head of which has been
-particularly described as the outlet of Lake Tahoe.
-Pyramid Lake lies in Washoe County, on the west
-line of Humboldt County. The lake is nearly 40
-miles long by from 15 to 20 miles in width, and has
-an elevation of 4,000 feet above the level of the sea.
-It has no outlet. It is the most picturesque sheet of
-water in all the Great Basin region, owing to its numerous
-rocky islands. As it lies off the usual lines
-of travel and traffic it is seldom visited, yet it is well
-worthy of the attention of the tourist. Pyramid Lake
-lies about 25 miles north of Wadsworth, a brisk and
-thriving town on the Central Pacific Railroad. It is
-<span class="pb" id="Page_135">135</span>
-at Wadsworth that the traveler by rail from the East
-first reaches the Truckee River, and is where the
-traveler from California takes his leave of the stream.
-At Wadsworth the river turns abruptly to the north,
-which course it holds to the lake.</p>
-<p>A vehicle for a trip to the lake can always be found
-at Wadsworth. The road lies down along the timbered
-banks of the river, and here and there will be
-seen the cabins of the Indians of the Pyramid Reservation.
-Most of the groves seen are of cottonwood
-and willow trees. The Truckee River has two
-mouths, one of which empties into Pyramid Lake
-and the other into Winnemucca Lake. The branch
-which feeds Pyramid Lake is only about one mile in
-length, whereas the more meandering branch, which
-is the feeder of Winnemucca Lake, has a length of
-six miles.</p>
-<p>Pyramid Lake contains several islands. Some of
-these, near the middle of the lake, are pyramidal in
-shape, and gray in color. They rise to a height of
-several hundred feet above the surface of the water,
-and it is from these natural pyramids that the lake
-takes its name. Far away toward the north end of
-the lake is seen a tall, slender pyramid that is perfectly
-white. Some of the isolated rocks seen are
-egg-shaped, and 300 to 400 feet high. Fremont&rsquo;s
-Pyramid is the name borne by one of the taller of
-the pyramidal rocks near the head of the lake. One
-of the largest islands contains large flocks of goats,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_136">136</span>
-the progeny of a few pairs of the animals turned loose
-there many years ago. The island has an area of
-about five square miles, and is well covered with
-vegetation, being less precipitous and rocky than the
-others. The only picturesque addition needed to
-this island is a &ldquo;Crusoe&rdquo; and his hut.</p>
-<p>One small, rocky island is wholly given up to rattlesnakes.
-It is the home of thousands of the venomous
-reptiles. They have their dens in the rocks, and live
-upon the eggs and young of water-fowl, and such
-small fish as are cast ashore.</p>
-<p>Pyramid Lake is of immense depth. No one
-knows its depth in the deepest part. At the last
-attempt to sound it, 600 fathoms (3,600 feet) of line
-were run out without finding bottom. Where it
-enters the lake the water of the Truckee River is as
-pure and sweet as where it leaves Lake Tahoe, yet
-the water of Pyramid Lake is slightly brackish.
-However, myriads of trout are found in Pyramid
-Lake. The Piute Indians of the Reservation every
-year catch and sell thousands of tons of trout, deriving
-a snug sum from this source. The lake never
-freezes, and is generally very rough. The Indian
-fishermen, however, navigate its waters at all times
-quite fearlessly, even when seated astride of a bundle
-of tules.</p>
-<h3 id="c92">Winnemucca Lake.</h3>
-<p>This lake lies to the east of, and parallel with, Pyramid
-Lake, from which it is separated by only a single
-<span class="pb" id="Page_137">137</span>
-ridge of gray rock and sand. It lies principally in
-Humboldt County, though a part reaches south into
-Churchill County. The lake is now about sixty miles
-long, with an average width of twelve miles. Of late
-years it has been rapidly increasing in size, as more
-water has been flowing through its feeder than formerly.
-It has on the east side a high rocky ridge,
-like that which separates it from Pyramid, therefore
-it lies in a trough between two ranges of hills.
-Though so near to each other, the surface of the
-water in Winnemucca Lake is forty feet lower than
-that in Pyramid. The Piutes remember a time when
-all was one lake. Were the waters of these twin lakes
-now united they would make a lake quite as large as
-the great Salt Lake of Utah. The inlet to Winnemucca
-Lake contains several old rafts of drift-wood,
-which prevent a free flow of water through it. Some
-years ago a freshet lifted these rafts from the bed of
-the stream, and the water found a channel beneath
-them. Since that occurred Winnemucca Lake has
-been steadily increasing in size. There are many
-Indian traditions connected with these lakes, one of
-which is in regard to immense animals that once
-herded in the neighborhood. This seems to be a
-tradition of the elephant or mastodon. All this
-region was once covered by an inland sea of fresh
-water, over 200 miles in length, and 80 or 90 miles in
-width.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_138">138</div>
-<h3 id="c93">Washoe Lake.</h3>
-<p>Washoe Lake is situated in Washoe Valley, and is
-seen in going by rail from Reno to Carson. The
-lake proper is about four miles long, and from a mile
-to a mile and a half wide. On the west and north
-extend large tule marshes, which at times contain a
-considerable depth of water. The lake is fed by
-small streams from the Sierras, and it has an outlet
-into Steamboat Creek. The lake is filled with perch
-and catfish, planted a few years ago; also contains
-swarms of native fish of the &ldquo;chub&rdquo; species. It is
-a favorite resort for anglers from Carson and the
-towns of the Comstock. At certain seasons the lake
-is visited by great numbers of ducks, geese, and other
-water-fowl. It is shallow, and having a muddy bottom,
-it is not a suitable sheet of water for either brook
-or lake trout. Carp, however, would flourish in its
-muddy depths and tule shallows.</p>
-<h3 id="c94">Thermal and Medicinal Springs.</h3>
-<p>The hot springs of Nevada are numbered by thousands
-and tens of thousands, and scores of them in all
-parts of the State possess more or less medicinal value.
-Hot springs are found from the Oregon and Idaho
-lines southward to the Colorado River, and from the
-eastern base of the Sierras across the whole breadth
-of the State. No one has ever attempted to number
-the many warm and hot springs, and they are literally
-innumerable. Springs which would attract great attention
-in the Atlantic States, and which would be
-<span class="pb" id="Page_139">139</span>
-worth fortunes, here pass unknown, unnamed, &ldquo;unhonored
-and unsung.&rdquo; All the hot springs possess
-curative properties in the case of rheumatic and various
-skin diseases. Not one in a thousand of the
-springs on this side of the Sierras has been analyzed,
-for which reason the waters of only a few are used internally.</p>
-<h3 id="c95">Steamboat Springs.</h3>
-<p>The most noted hot springs in the western part of
-Nevada are those known as the Steamboat Springs.
-They were so named by the first white men who visited
-them, on account of the puffing sound some of
-them then emitted, and because of the tall columns
-of steam they sent up. These springs are in Steamboat
-Valley, ten miles south of Reno. The Virginia
-and Truckee Railroad passes close alongside the
-springs. They are situated at the eastern base of a low
-range of basaltic hills, and occupy the top of a flat ridge
-that is over a mile in length and has a north and south
-course. This ridge is about half a mile in width and
-is composed of a whitish silicious material evidently
-deposited by the waters of the many springs.</p>
-<p>The temperature of the principal springs is 204 degrees,
-which is as hot as water can be made at that altitude
-(5,000 feet above the level of the sea). Some
-of the springs rise through circular openings from a
-foot to three feet in diameter and are surrounded by
-conical mounds of silicious matters deposited by the
-waters, whereas others flow from fissures, which are
-<span class="pb" id="Page_140">140</span>
-evidently rents formed by earthquakes. Out of some
-of these fissures rush great volumes of hot gases that
-have a strong odor of sulphur. These fissures are
-perfectly dry, and the jets of hot air are invisible.
-From other dry crevices issue great clouds of very
-hot steam. Steam rises in great volumes from all the
-boiling springs, and of mornings when the air is cool
-and calm from 60 to 80 tall pillars of steam may be
-counted, rising to a height of 100 feet or more above
-the low, bare ridge. The air everywhere about the
-springs is strongly charged with sulphurous vapors
-in gases. The crevices have the same course as the
-great quartz veins of the country, <i>i. e.</i>, northeast and
-southwest. Here is no doubt a huge metallic vein in
-process of formation; indeed, various minerals are
-deposited by the gases, notably cinnabar. Some of
-the fissures may be traced from 1,000 to 3,000 feet,
-and have a width of from 16 inches to 3 feet. In
-places where nothing is seen to issue from these
-fissures at the surface, indications of tremendous subterranean
-activity are distinctly audible. Far down
-in under-ground regions are heard thunderous surgings
-and lashings as of huge volumes of water dashed
-to and fro in vast hollow, resounding caverns. In
-other places are heard fearful (dry) thumpings and
-poundings, as though at some flaming forge below a
-band of sweating Cyclops were at work at hammering
-out thunder-bolts for old Jove.</p>
-<p>Small springs in places send jets of hot water into
-<span class="pb" id="Page_141">141</span>
-the air to the height of two or three feet, with a hissing
-and sputtering sound, but for some years past
-none of them have thrown water to any great distance
-above the surface. In 1860, and for a few years
-thereafter, two or three of the springs rivaled the
-geysers of Yellowstone Park, sending columns of water
-a yard in diameter to a height of sixty or eighty feet
-once in from six to eight hours. Some springs sent
-columns of water from three to six inches in diameter
-to a still greater height. Even now the water is seen
-to rise and fall in some of the fissures in a threatening
-manner. At the springs is a fine and commodious
-hotel, bathing-houses for vapor baths, and every desirable
-accommodation. The springs are very beneficial
-to persons afflicted with rheumatic complaints,
-and are also useful in some cases of cutaneous diseases.</p>
-<h3 id="c96">Shaw&rsquo;s Springs.</h3>
-<p>These springs are situated about a mile west of
-Carson City. They are also much frequented by
-persons afflicted with rheumatism and kindred complaints,
-though more well than sick persons use
-the baths, as connected with them is a large swimming
-pool, 60 by 24 feet and from 4&frac12; to 5&frac12; feet
-deep. One of these springs is what is called a
-&ldquo;chicken-soup&rdquo; spring. By adding pepper and salt
-to the water it acquires the taste of thin chicken soup.</p>
-<h3 id="c97">State Prison Warm Springs.</h3>
-<p>About a mile east of Carson City, at the Nevada
-State prison, is a warm spring of great volume.
-<span class="pb" id="Page_142">142</span>
-Here Col. Abe Curry, who owned the property before
-it was acquired by the State, constructed the first
-swimming bath to be found on the Pacific Coast.
-It is 160 feet long by 38 feet wide, and is walled up
-with stone, and over it is erected a building, also of
-stone, of which there is a fine quarry on the spot.
-The water in the pool is from three to five feet deep,
-and is of about blood heat. This bath is not now
-open to the &ldquo;world at large,&rdquo; but is kept for a little
-world that is &ldquo;not at large.&rdquo;</p>
-<h3 id="c98">Walley&rsquo;s Springs.</h3>
-<p>There are in hundreds of places along the eastern
-base of the Sierras groups of hot springs of more or less
-celebrity, but none of which are more highly esteemed
-for their curative properties, or as a more popular
-place of resort for the afflicted, than Walley&rsquo;s Springs,
-a mile and a half south of Genoa. Persons who are
-troubled with rheumatism, or are afflicted with scrofula
-and like disorders, are much benefited by the baths at
-these springs. Here are also excellent mud baths, the
-hot, mineral-impregnated mud being found very efficacious
-in many cases of chronic rheumatic complaints.
-In the vicinity are many objects of interest, and near
-at hand may be found good hunting and fishing.
-There is a fine hotel, and the best of accommodations
-of every kind for both sound and sick, at the springs.
-The springs are fourteen and a half miles south of Carson
-and may be reached either by stage or private
-conveyance. The road lies through Carson Valley,
-and is fine and smooth.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_143">143</div>
-<h3 id="c99">Other Springs.</h3>
-<p>Near Elko are several hot springs, with fine springs
-of cold water in their immediate vicinity. Here, too,
-is a &ldquo;chicken-soup&rdquo; spring. The springs are situated
-to the northwest of the town, and a bathing-house
-has been erected for the accommodation of the rheumatic
-public.</p>
-<p>At Golconda are some very large hot springs, near
-which are others of ordinary temperature. Some of
-the hot springs are occasionally utilized for scalding
-hogs. In the cool pools connected with the flow from
-the hot springs, carp and some other kinds of fish
-have been planted. It is said that the carp grown in
-the ponds often venture upon darting through places
-where water almost boiling hot is bubbling up.
-These springs are near the Central Pacific Railroad
-station. Also half a mile south of the track of the
-Central Pacific road there are, at Hot Springs Station,
-near the sink of the Humboldt, several springs that
-send up columns of steam.</p>
-<p>There are only a few of the hot springs that are situated
-near main lines of travel. In Thousand Spring Valley,
-on the Upper Humboldt, there are literally thousands
-of springs, some of which send out whole brooks
-of water. The majority of these, however, are cold.
-In Churchill County, north of the Sand Springs salt
-marsh, are hot springs which are 50, 80, and even 100
-feet in diameter. They are on the edge of a desert at
-the foot of a range of rocky hills burnt to a brick-red
-<span class="pb" id="Page_144">144</span>
-by volcanic fires. Here, too, are seen thick veins of
-pure native sulphur. There are hot springs and
-scalding pools and brooks in every county in the State.
-In Nye County there are many hot springs in Hot
-Creek Valley, in Big Smoky Valley, and Lone Valley.
-There is also in this county the Cabezon Valley Hot
-Spring, which is medicinal. On the Rio Virgin, in
-Lincoln County, is one of the finest purgative springs
-on the Pacific Coast. With other ingredients amounting
-to 311 grains of solid matter to the gallon, it contains
-67 grains of sulphate of soda, 54 grains of sulphate
-of magnesia, and 3 grains of sulphate of
-potassa.</p>
-<h3 id="c100">Railroads in Nevada.</h3>
-<p>Although Nevada would appear at a first glance a
-difficult region in which to construct railroads, the
-fact is that it is quite the contrary. Between the parallel
-ranges of mountains running north and south, there
-are long level valleys, tracts of desert land, requiring very
-little grading. These valleys and deserts are linked together
-and connected by plains from the northern to
-the southern boundary of the State. As these valleys
-and deserts once formed the beds and connecting
-channels of chains of lakes now extinct, it is evident
-that in following their course a line of railroad might
-be very cheaply constructed. In many places for
-miles on miles there would be little to do but put
-down the ties and rails. In many places, too, there
-are remarkable passages leading east and west from
-<span class="pb" id="Page_145">145</span>
-valley to valley, called &ldquo;gates.&rdquo; There are clean level
-east and west cuts through ranges of mountains running
-north and south. The only difficulty to be encountered
-in railroad building in Nevada is in running
-roads to special points (as to mines) high above the
-general level of the country, as in the case of the
-Virginia to Truckee when it leaves the valley region
-to climb the Mount Davidson Range to the Comstock
-Lode. The whole plateau through which was upheaved
-the north and south ranges of mountains has
-a mean elevation of 5,000 feet above the level of the
-sea in all central Nevada; to the southward it gradually
-slopes downward, until at the south line of the
-State, on the Colorado River, the altitude above sea-level
-is only 800 feet.</p>
-<h3 id="c101">The Central Pacific.</h3>
-<p>The largest stretch of railroad in Nevada is the
-Central Pacific. Its length within the boundaries of
-the State, from where it enters, near Verdi, to where
-it passes out, near Tecoma, is a little over 450 miles.
-Though this is an east and west road (the course
-across the interior parallel mountain ranges), yet no
-great difficulties were encountered in crossing the
-State. The road enters Nevada from California along
-the course of the Truckee River, which stream it follows
-as far east as Wadsworth. Leaving Wadsworth
-the road traverses a level, sandy plain till the Humboldt
-River is reached. The road then follows the
-course of the Humboldt to Cedar Pass, not far from
-the Utah line.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_146">146</div>
-<h3 id="c102">The Virginia and Truckee.</h3>
-<p>Having already given a description of this road, it
-will not be necessary in this place to do more than to
-mention the distance from point to point between
-Reno and Virginia City. Soon after leaving Reno
-the dumps of the flumes that bring wood and lumber
-down from the pine forests of the Sierras will be seen
-to the right of the road. The first of these is four
-miles from Reno; three miles farther on, near Huffaker&rsquo;s
-Station, is another, and at Brown&rsquo;s is a third.
-Others will be seen about Washoe Valley and Franktown.
-They are from ten to twenty miles in length,
-and of the same <span class="ssn">V</span>-shape as that at Carson City.
-Steamboat Springs Station is eleven miles from Reno;
-Washoe, sixteen miles; Franktown, twenty-one miles;
-Carson City, thirty-one miles; Carson to Empire, three
-miles; Mexican Mill, three and one-fourth; Morgan
-Mill, four; Brunswick, five; Merrimac, five and one-half;
-Vivian, six; Santiago Mill, seven miles; Mound
-House, ten; Silver Switch, twelve and three-fourths;
-Scales, sixteen and one-half; Baltic Switch, seventeen
-and one-half; Crown Point, eighteen; Gold Hill,
-nineteen; Virginia City, twenty-one miles from Carson
-and fifty-two from Reno.</p>
-<h3 id="c103">Carson and Colorado.</h3>
-<p>At Mound House, ten miles from Carson City, the
-Carson and Colorado Narrow Gauge Railroad connects
-with the Virginia and Truckee. This road runs
-<span class="pb" id="Page_147">147</span>
-southeasterly through Lyon and Esmeralda Counties,
-in Nevada, then, turning more south, passes through a
-corner of Mono County, California, and enters Inyo
-County in the same State. It has a total length of
-293 miles, and its present southern terminus is at
-Keeler, at the south end of Owen&rsquo;s Lake, Inyo
-County. The road passes through regions of very
-diverse products and industries. Agricultural and
-grazing sections alternate with those in which the
-ruling pursuit is mining for the precious metals, and
-these with others where are immense salt, soda, and
-borax marshes.</p>
-<p>Six miles from Mound House is Dayton, on the
-Carson River. It is a milling town with agricultural
-surroundings. The road runs eastward near the
-course of the Carson River through a fine agricultural
-and grazing country, then turns southward through
-Churchill Canyon to the town of Wabuska, thirty-eight
-miles.</p>
-<h4 id="c104"><span class="sc">Wabuska.</span></h4>
-<p><span class="sc">Wabuska</span> is a thriving little place at the edge of
-Mason Valley, one of the finest agricultural and
-grazing regions in the State, the Walker River affording
-excellent facilities for irrigation. After leaving
-Wabuska, Walker Lake is soon reached. The road
-passes along the eastern shore of the lake nearly its
-whole length, affording many fine and picturesque
-views. It is a beautiful sheet of water, but lacks trees
-and vegetation, hardly a green thing being seen on
-its shores, except at the upper end, at and about the
-mouth of the Walker River.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_148">148</div>
-<h4 id="c105"><span class="sc">Hawthorne.</span></h4>
-<p><span class="sc">Hawthorne</span>, 100 miles from Mound House, is
-situated about 3&frac12; miles beyond the foot of the lake.
-Although only a little more than eight years old, the
-town is beginning to present a comfortable appearance.
-It stands on a plain the soil of which at the
-time the town was laid out seemed to be nothing
-better than pure sand, yet on such a foundation has
-been conjured an oasis of shady groves, blooming
-grounds, and productive gardens. The town has a
-population of about 600. There are many small
-veins of gold and silver-bearing quartz in the surrounding
-mountains that are rich and easily worked.
-Here stages leave for Aurora, 26, and Bodie, 37
-miles to the southward. Much freight is taken by
-team from Hawthorne to the two mining towns
-named. The Walker Lake <i>Bulletin</i>, a good local
-paper, is published weekly in the town.</p>
-<h4 id="c106"><span class="sc">Luning.</span></h4>
-<p><span class="sc">Luning</span>, 125 miles from Mound House, is in the
-midst of a mining region the veins of which have
-about the same characteristics as those about Hawthorne.
-Stages and teams leave the town for Downieville,
-Grantsville, and Belmont.</p>
-<h4 id="c107"><span class="sc">Belleville.</span></h4>
-<p><span class="sc">Belleville</span>, 150 miles from Mound House, is a
-thriving mining and milling town.</p>
-<h4 id="c108"><span class="sc">Candelaria.</span></h4>
-<p><span class="sc">Candelaria</span>, 158 miles from Mound House, is a
-brisk mining town of about 600 inhabitants. It contains
-several mines of note, and has yielded great
-quantities of bullion. The Mt. Diablo Mine is at the
-present time the leading bullion producer. The town
-<span class="pb" id="Page_149">149</span>
-has several mills, some good buildings, and a good
-system of water works. Stages leave the town for
-Columbus, Silver Peak, Montezuma, Alida Valley,
-and Gold Mountain.</p>
-<p>Leaving Candelaria, the road soon passes into California,
-striking down into Independence Valley near
-the White Mountains, the highest peak of which
-stands 12,000 feet above the level of the sea. The
-line runs through a rich agricultural and grazing
-region, with high mountain ranges on either hand, in
-which are found many veins rich in the precious
-metals.</p>
-<h4 id="c109"><span class="sc">Benton.</span></h4>
-<p><span class="sc">Benton</span>, in Mono County, California, is 193 miles
-from Mound House. It is situated in a rich section
-of Independence Valley and is a fine fruit-growing
-region. In the neighborhood of the town, which
-contains about 200 inhabitants, are many good farms,
-orchards, and vineyards.</p>
-<h4 id="c110"><span class="sc">Bishop Creek.</span></h4>
-<p><span class="sc">Bishop Creek</span> is a flourishing agricultural settlement,
-224 miles from Mound House. It is in Inyo
-County. The lands and surroundings are much the
-same as those of Benton. The hamlet constituting
-the trading-post at the railroad, and the farms in the
-neighborhood, have a population of about 250.</p>
-<h4 id="c111"><span class="sc">Independence.</span></h4>
-<p><span class="sc">Independence</span>, 267 miles from Mound House,
-with the farms in its immediate neighborhood, has a
-population of about 400. The town stands in the
-midst of a fine farming, grazing, and fruit-growing region.
-Bordering the valley are mountains in which
-<span class="pb" id="Page_150">150</span>
-are many good mines of the precious metals, though
-these have been but little worked and many have not
-been opened at all, the settlers in the valleys who discovered
-them being devoted to agricultural pursuits.
-Here is published weekly the <i>Inyo Independent</i>, an
-excellent local paper.</p>
-<h4 id="c112"><span class="sc">Keeler.</span></h4>
-<p><span class="sc">Keeler</span>, the present terminus of the Carson and
-Colorado Railroad, is 293 miles from Mound House.
-The town is situated on the east side of Owens Lake
-and near its south end. It is a new place and contains
-only about 200 inhabitants. Stages leave the
-town for Cerro Gordo, Darwin, and Panamint.</p>
-<h3 id="c113">Owens Lake.</h3>
-<p>Owens Lake, which is the &ldquo;sink&rdquo; of Owens River,
-has an area of about 110 square miles. Its waters
-are heavily charged with salt and alkaline minerals.
-One United States standard gallon (8&#8531; pounds, or
-231 cubic inches) of the lake water contains 4,422.25
-grains of solid matter, sodium carbonate and sodium
-chloride predominating and aggregating 2,561.83
-grains.</p>
-<p>The water of the lake contains only a trace of
-borax. It is evaporated on a large scale near Keeler,
-for the valuable alkaline minerals it holds in solution.
-The water of Owens Lake contains a much greater
-quantity of mineral matter than that of the Dead Sea.
-In Dead Sea water there is only 1,680 grains of solid
-matter to the United States gallon. Dead Sea water
-is evidently less salt than that of many of the lakes of
-the Great Basin region, as fish are found in it at and
-<span class="pb" id="Page_151">151</span>
-near the mouths of tributary streams, and in places
-along its shores shell-fish are to be seen.</p>
-<h3 id="c114">Mono Lake.</h3>
-<p>Mono Lake,
-about 100 miles north of Owens Lake, in Mono
-County, has an area of 85 square miles. Its water is
-almost precisely similar in every respect to that of
-Owens Lake.</p>
-<p>Owens River, over 100 miles in length, flows
-through the valley nearly its whole course, and, with its
-many tributary creeks, affords water sufficient to irrigate
-a great area of land. The whole region is rapidly
-being taken by settlers. The soil is exceedingly
-fertile and the climate very fine. To the west of the
-chain of valleys the snow-clad Sierras tower to a vast
-height. Above all surrounding peaks Mount Whitney
-rises to a height of 15,000 feet. The Carson
-and Colorado road will eventually be extended southward
-to a connection with the railroad system of
-Southern California.</p>
-<h3 id="c115">Eureka and Palisade.</h3>
-<p>This railroad is ninety miles in length. It is a
-narrow gauge and connects Eureka with the Central
-Pacific at Palisade. It was constructed to transport
-machinery and supplies to the mines and town of
-Eureka, and to carry out the products of the smelting
-furnaces.</p>
-<h4 id="c116"><span class="sc">Palisade.</span></h4>
-<p>Palisade contains about 250 inhabitants.</p>
-<h4 id="c117"><span class="sc">Eureka.</span></h4>
-<p><span class="sc">Eureka</span> is a town of smelting furnaces. It is situated
-in the midst of a region in which very rich
-smelting ores are mined. The mines at Eureka were
-discovered in 1864, but not much was done with
-<span class="pb" id="Page_152">152</span>
-them until, two years later, and in 1869 the place began
-to boom and the yield of the mines soon became
-from one to three millions of dollars annually. Like
-other mining towns, Eureka has its ebbs and flows of
-fortune. For a year or two it was in &ldquo;barrasca,&rdquo; but
-since the beginning of 1888 it has been again getting
-into &ldquo;bonanza.&rdquo; It is the county seat of Eureka
-County, and has a population of about 2,500. In
-1880 it had a population of 4,207, but in 1886-87 it
-lost inhabitants. Now it is once more gaining. It is
-the point from which many interior mining towns and
-camps receive their supplies. There are many fine
-and substantial public and private buildings in the
-town, and a good system of water works. In the
-<i>Sentinel</i>, published weekly, the place has a good local
-paper. Eureka is the Pittsburg of Nevada. In all
-directions its furnace chimneys vomit volumes of
-black, sulphurous smoke&mdash;when Government officials
-do not &ldquo;pester&rdquo; the people on account of their cutting
-scrub timber.</p>
-<h3 id="c118">Nevada Central.</h3>
-<p>This road is a narrow gauge, 93 miles in length,
-and connects Austin with the Central Pacific at Battle
-Mountain. From Battle Mountain the road runs
-nearly south up the valley of the Reese River. There
-are many good farms in Reese River Valley, and good
-grazing ranges on the higher ground.</p>
-<h4 id="c119"><span class="sc">Battle Mountain.</span></h4>
-<p><span class="sc">Battle Mountain</span> is a town of about 500 inhabitants,
-situated very pleasantly, and cheaply supplied with
-<span class="pb" id="Page_153">153</span>
-water by means of artesian wells of trifling depth. Its
-business is derived from the surrounding farming and
-grazing regions, from the Central Pacific Railroad, and
-from the several mining sections with which it has
-communication. It contains many good public and
-private buildings, and handsome cottages are numerous.
-<i>The Central Nevadan</i>, a sprightly weekly paper,
-is published in the town.</p>
-<h4 id="c120"><span class="sc">Austin.</span></h4>
-<p><span class="sc">Austin</span> is the oldest town in Eastern Nevada, and
-the mother of mining in that part of the State. It is
-the county seat of Lander County. Austin was laid
-out in February, 1863. It is situated nearly upon the
-summit of the Toyabee Range of mountains, about
-six miles from Reese River, and is nearly in the geographical
-center of the State. It contains many good,
-substantial public and private buildings of brick and
-stone. Before the completion of the Central Pacific
-the overland stages passed through the town, when it
-had about 5,000 inhabitants, as it was also then the
-center of a rich mining region. The mines at and
-about Austin have produced many millions in gold
-and silver bullion. Like all other mining towns, Austin
-has had her periods of elevation and depression&mdash;her
-&ldquo;streaks of fat and streaks of lean&rdquo;&mdash;and this
-year (1889) seems to be getting out of a lean streak
-into a streak that shows a considerable amount of
-&ldquo;fatty&rdquo; matter. August 18, 1874, the town was
-nearly ruined by a cloud-burst which tore up the
-roadway and sidewalks of the main street, flooded
-<span class="pb" id="Page_154">154</span>
-buildings, and filled them with mud and sand to the
-depth of several feet. The damage done was estimated
-at $100,000. As the people had warning of
-what was coming, no lives were lost. In this the
-Austinites were more fortunate than were the people
-of Eureka in the month of July, in the same year,
-as there a cloud-burst not only did immense damage
-to the town, but also drowned fifteen persons. An
-excellent daily paper, the <i>Reese River Reveille</i>, is published
-at Austin.</p>
-<h3 id="c121">Nevada and California.</h3>
-<p>This narrow-gauge railroad starts at Reno and runs
-northward into Lassen County, California. It has now
-attained a length of about eighty miles, and is still in
-process of construction. It is penetrating a region of
-country containing vast forests of pine timber, good
-mines, and many fine mountain valleys. Eventually
-it will be run northward into the interior of Oregon.
-It will presently bring to Reno great quantities of
-lumber and timber to be shipped eastward into the
-timberless regions of the Great Basin country.</p>
-<h3 id="c122">Proposed Railroads.</h3>
-<p>A section of railroad of narrow gauge has been constructed
-through the Beckworth Pass westward. It
-connects with the Nevada and California road at
-Moran, and is called the Sierra Valley and Mohawk
-Railroad. After rails had been laid through the pass
-and a short distance down the western slope of the
-<span class="pb" id="Page_155">155</span>
-Sierras, work was discontinued. It is supposed that
-the section of road was laid in the interest of some
-one of the great Eastern roads now heading toward
-the Pacific Ocean in order to hold the pass. The
-Beckworth Pass is nearly 2,000 feet lower than that
-through which the Central Pacific Railroad is laid.</p>
-<h4 id="c123"><span class="sc">The Salt Lake and Los Angeles.</span></h4>
-<p><span class="sc">The Salt Lake and Los Angeles</span> is a proposed
-railroad on which surveying parties have been engaged
-for nearly a year. It is intended to start at Milford,
-on the Utah Central, pass through Lincoln County,
-Nevada, and connect with the railroad system of
-Southern California at Barstow. This road would
-tap a rich mining and a fine agricultural and grazing
-region in Southern Nevada. It would give life to an
-immense region of country that has long lain as
-dead.</p>
-<h4 id="c124"><span class="sc">Nevada, Central, and Idaho</span></h4>
-<p>Another proposed road is an extension of the Nevada
-Central from Battle Mountain northward into
-Idaho.</p>
-<h3 id="c125">Nevada a Land of Great Possibilities.</h3>
-<p>Notwithstanding its sterile and forbidding appearance,
-Nevada is capable of supporting an immense
-population. The soil, which to the eyes of strangers
-appears so poor and barren, is one of the strongest
-and richest in America. It is formed of decomposed
-lava and various kinds of volcanic rocks, and contains
-large quantities of all the various mineral constituents
-necessary to a strong and healthy growth of every kind
-of farm produce known to the temperate zone. All
-<span class="pb" id="Page_156">156</span>
-that is required to produce a rank growth of vegetation
-of every kind is a supply of water; all other life-giving
-agents are contained in the soil. On the
-mountain slopes and the bench-lands, which look so
-arid and worthless, the soil is even stronger and more
-kindly than in the valleys. With water all the mountain-sides
-may be made veritable hanging gardens.
-Until within the past year agriculture (as regards irrigation)
-has been left to take care of itself. It has
-been left to individuals, each working after a plan of
-his own. There has been no established system of
-irrigation, and, save in one or two instances, no attempt
-at storing water in order to maintain a large
-and regular supply. The water used is taken as it
-flows from the mountains, as the snow banks deposited
-in winter melt away in the early spring and first
-summer months. Then, in average seasons, there are
-for a month or two floods of water pouring down all
-the rivers, creeks, and canyons. This great rush of
-water passes down into the interior lakes and &ldquo;sinks&rdquo;
-without being utilized for any purpose, and is lost.
-Were this water caught up in storage reservoirs ten
-times the area of land at present irrigated could be
-brought under cultivation.</p>
-<p>At last a movement has been made toward the systematic
-reclamation of the arid lands of Nevada, and
-the proper storage and utilization of all the available
-water in the State. In November, 1888, a corps of
-U. S. Engineers began a hydrographic survey on the
-<span class="pb" id="Page_157">157</span>
-headwaters of the Truckee, Carson and Walker Rivers.
-This survey&mdash;interrupted by the cold weather of winter&mdash;will
-be completed this year. Already a survey
-of 800 square miles has been completed. Major
-Powell says Lake Tahoe constitutes an immense natural
-storage reservoir of almost incalculable value.
-He estimates that in it may be stored sufficient water
-(with a four-foot dam) to irrigate 500,000 acres of
-land. If this be true, then Donner Lake may be made
-to contain water sufficient to irrigate from 150,000 to
-200,000 acres. On the headwaters of the Carson and
-Walker Rivers are many lakes and basins of extinct
-lakes that may be turned into vast storage reservoirs
-at small cost.</p>
-<p>Among the mountain ranges of the interior of the
-State many reservoirs may be profitably constructed.
-Also in the interior valleys and basins artesian wells
-will be of great value. Already there are in the State
-110 flowing wells. Though the flow from some of
-these is strong it is trifling to what might be obtained
-at greater depth, the present wells being only from 100
-to 300 feet deep. Artesian water has been found to
-exist everywhere in the valleys lying between the
-mountain ranges of the interior.</p>
-<p>Last winter the State government for the first time
-took hold of the irrigation question and made a move
-toward the establishment of a system of reservoirs and
-other works, appropriating $100,000 therefor.</p>
-<p>To the southward of the line of the Central Pacific
-<span class="pb" id="Page_158">158</span>
-lies a region of country large enough to make half a
-dozen New England States, that is almost unoccupied.
-There tens of thousands of families might find homes.
-Lack of transportation facilities at present prevents
-settlers from going into that portion of the State, but
-the building of the Salt Lake and Los Angeles, or any
-other of the proposed railroads, would cause a rush to
-its semi-tropical valleys.</p>
-<p>A beginning having been made, the time is not distant
-when Nevada will no longer be branded as a land
-whose soil is only capable of supporting the jackrabbit,
-the lizard, and the horned-toad.</p>
-<hr class="dwide" />
-<h2 id="c126"><span class="small">A HISTORY OF THE COMSTOCK SILVER LODE &amp; MINES</span>
-<br />By Dan De Quille</h2>
-<p>At a time when most mining companies
-and maverick prospectors had fanned out
-from California in pursuit of richer gold
-claims, three uneducated miners accidentally
-stumbled upon the world&rsquo;s richest
-silver deposit in Nevada. The year was
-1859 and it marked the beginning of the
-West&rsquo;s most exciting era in mining history.
-De Quille&rsquo;s account of this startling discovery
-(on what was subsequently to be
-called the Comstock Lode) and his eyewitness
-report on Virginia City in the
-heydays of the 1880&rsquo;s is one of the most
-fascinating and detailed to be found on
-the subject.</p>
-<p>After describing the events surrounding
-the initial discovery, the author traces the
-rapid development of the earliest makeshift
-towns and mills that were erected on
-the site. Most notable during this period
-are the years between 1860 and 1863 when
-Virginia City emerged and grew uncontrollably
-in wealth and population as
-thousands of miners from California, the
-Atlantic seaboard and Canada converged
-on the city to labor for the highest wages
-paid on the American continent. Other key
-events, such as The Great Fire of 1875
-which wiped out a large section of the city,
-and its miraculous rebuilding in 60 days
-are covered as well.</p>
-<p>The major portion of the book, however,
-is devoted to the author&rsquo;s first-hand experience
-in Virginia City during its biggest
-boom period of the 1880&rsquo;s. The vivid
-composite he creates of the manners and
-habits of this society is surpassed only by
-the astounding wealth of facts and figures
-<span class="pb" id="Page_160">160</span>
-he provides on the mining companies&rsquo;
-record-breaking profits, the lengths and
-depths of the Comstock veins, and the
-multitude of methods utilized for extracting
-and refining crude silver. Reliable information
-such as this, and in such bulk,
-was even scarce in its day.</p>
-<p>A general description of the major towns
-of Nevada, the physical characteristics of
-the State and its mineral and agricultural
-resources rounds out the text.</p>
-<h3 id="c127">ABOUT THE SERIES</h3>
-<p>No other nation has ever expanded as
-rapidly as the United States between the
-years 1820 and 1860. Marching onto immense
-stretches of territory belonging to
-Mexico, the Indians and foreign powers,
-America&rsquo;s pioneers brought with them a
-new language, new religions and new concepts
-of society. Within the brief span of
-40 years they had spread political unity
-and cultural uniformity over this vast new
-land.</p>
-<p>Few will deny that the pioneers who subdued
-that last, great West between the
-Rockies and the Pacific braved a more hostile
-country, endured more gruelling hardships
-and faced greater dangers than did
-any other settlers in the three-century-long
-conquest of the continent.</p>
-<p><i>America&rsquo;s Pioneer Heritage</i> is comprised
-of scarce and long out-of-print books that
-detail our western saga. Among the works
-included in the series are eyewitness
-accounts, journals, letters and other primary
-source materials which are so crucial
-to an understanding of the American
-character.</p>
-<p class="tbcenter"><span class="larger ss">PROMONTORY PRESS</span></p>
-<h2>Transcriber&rsquo;s Notes</h2>
-<ul>
-<li>Silently corrected a few typos.</li>
-<li>Retained publication information from the printed edition: this eBook is public-domain in the country of publication.</li>
-<li>In the text versions only, text in italics is delimited by _underscores_.</li>
-<li>Collated Table of Contents against chapter headings; added chapter headings or TOC entries to correspond.</li>
-</ul>
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A HISTORY OF THE COMSTOCK SILVER LODE & MINES ***</div>
-<div style='text-align:left'>
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