Equal to the wealth of the gold ridges is the treasure
of history & romance that lies in the rugged San Juan Ridge. Not only from
the pits of the long-deserted mines, the hundreds of miles of rotting flumes,
overgrown, debris-filled ditches, and still more from the picturesque towns that
are found along the mountain roads, does one get a sense of the comedy and
tragedy that made up one of the most stirring periods in the great epic of
California's mining era. Some of these cities of the past can claim about 100
inhabitants today, while others, far off the usual routes of travel, are mere
ghosts, deserted, crumbling obliterated, and unmarked except for the inevitable
diggings which are everywhere visible in spite of the smoothing over by the
passage of time. Beginning at the lower tip of the ridge, the road passes thru
French Corral, the 1st of the historic mining camps to spring up along the
ancient San Juan River channel. There in 1849, the 1st settler, A Frenchman,
built a corral for his mules. Very soon it was discovered that the locality was
rich in placer gold, and a town quickly grew up on the site of the Frenchman's
corral. Later, as hydraulic mining developed, French Creek became 2nd only to
North San Juan in size & importance, numbering its population in the
thousands. Now a village of only a few dozen people, French Corral retains a
flavor of ro-mance in its historic landmarks. The office of the Milton Mining
& Water Co., in which one terminus of the 1st long-distance telephone line
was located, has long been torn down, but that site is marked. The brick walls
of the old Wells Fargo Express office built in the 1850's and equipped with iron
doors, and window shutters, which once guarded millions of dollars in gold
against would-be robbers, look as though they could stand for generations to
come. The former schoolhouse was used as a hotel in the 1850's; and a number of
houses are still in use today. Written by. Bob Stelow Looking for Gold mine property or what your home is worth in Nevada County. I can tell you. Free Nevada County Home Evaluation |
Nevada city Real Estate
Thursday, December 27, 2012
French Corral Ghost Town
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