Tuesday, August 26, 2014

Salt Lake Temple Quarry

I was sick over the weekend, so visiting the Temple Quarry was frankly, a cop-out. I was going to post pictures of the awesome old chisel holes in granite, and say 'see you next week'. When I got there this sign greeted me before I got to the historical marker:
In case you don't click on it to read it... During the turn of the 20th century thousands lived in the mouth of Little Cottonwood Canyon. The towns were Graniteville (yes, that's how they spelled it), Wasatch (which I had always thought was the name of the neighborhood that still stands there), Hogum, Tannersville, Central City, Alta (as in the ski resort. It's on my list to visit one of these weekends, so I won't add it below) and Emmaville (can you get a more Mormon sounding name?). I wandered digitalnewspapers.org again and found old newspaper stories of these towns! Yes! They existed and there's proof! So fun to find these! (Warning, I may split this post apart if I get to visit something for each of these towns.)

So a quick little bit of stories before I post a bunch of awesome pictures of granite.I apologize for the serious lack of information. I honestly was not looking for a ghost town on this visit (thus, I didn't look anything up). I was going to look at a granite quarry.

Emmaville: Maybe I spoke too soon. First story I found was (dated 1871) a letter to the editor of the Salt Lake Herald that Emma is popular with Mormon and Gentiles. He then talks about the furnaces in Emmaville and Granite[ville]. Here's a story that gives a glimpse into the life of one man and mentions a mine in Emmaville.
Emmaville was a good stopping point between Alta and Salt Lake City. "Emma Mine" is near Alta. I'll have to go find that.  This town had stores, hotels, boarding houses, blackmith, livery and two saloons (definitely going to try to find it by Alta). Emmaville was a ghost before 1900.

Graniteville: I can't find anything yet. My searching keeps taking me to either the ghost town of Gransville in Tooele County or the ghost town of Graniteville in Montana.

Wasatch: I'm going to have to do more research on this one too.

Hogum: (No, google, I'm not misspelling Hyrum.) Well, apparently there's great skiing at Hogum's Fork in Little Cottonwood Canyon... give me some time. I'll find out about this one too.

Tannersville: So, apparently around 1851 John Tanner and his sons built a sawmill and boarding house for the mine and timber workers. The settlement was abandoned after the hotel burned down in 1872. I'm still looking to see if there are markers of any kind for this town.

Central City: I'm going to have to do more research on this one too.

And now for a bunch 'o' pictures!




Several of the signs could use a little maintenance. :(



There's an old dam... and yes... I strayed off the path, but in my defense, the dried river looks like a trail


There was broken concrete here and this random hollow post with wiring. What is this? Looks cool, tho.



Practice??



There's an old pump in here. So much to see at the Quarry! Go check it out!!


Bibliography:
Carr, Stephen L. The Historical Guide to Utah Ghost Towns. Salt Lake City: Western Epics, 1972.

http://miningutah.com/id253.html

Monday, August 18, 2014

Park City, Summit County

Ok. I know Park City is not a ghost town right now. Over seven thousand people live there. However, were it not for skiing  and "the greatest snow on earth", this city would have died. Before skiing, before the Sundance Festival, Park City was a silver mining town.  (FYI... lots of pictures below)
Similar to the mining towns in Bingham Canyon, silver was found by the U.S. Army in the 1860's. Arguably, Colonel Patrick E. Conner of Fort Douglas, was trying to bring prospectors to the Utah Territory so non-Mormons coming to the prospector towns would outnumber the Mormons. The first claim of the Park City Mining District was made December 1869. The vein of silver became the Ontario Mine, which would be the largest silver producer in the United States by 1928 and become known as the greatest silver mine in the world. 
Park City was named by George Snyder in 1872 "for it is a veritable park." Hundreds of prospectors came and set up camp along the hillsides, including many Chinese who had worked on the transcontinental railroad. From 1870 to 1900, Park City had boarding houses, schools, mills, stores, saloons, prostitute "cribs," theatres, and of course, the mining buildings.
If you go to Park City today, there are many buildings on Main Street with plaques sharing part of their history. Many will mention a fire in 1898. The wooden town was almost completely destroyed by fire that June. $1,000,000 damage in 1898 is an incredible fire. The story is told in snippets on Main Street.
After World War I, strikes, the Great Depression, then oddly, the high demand for metal during World War II resulted in an exodus. By the 1950's Park City had a population of about 200 people. It was a ghost town.
Then... the Park City Ski Area was opened, the mines gave tours and the town came alive again, thriving on recreation.


A peek inside the Claimjumper





The original City Hall now houses the Park City Museum


Details from the fire!!







At the top of Main Street before it becomes a dirt road
 AND NOW- for the abandoned ghosts I search for! These can be seen up Guardsman Pass







You could feel the cold air coming from this abandoned mine.





Railroad ties can still be seen on the remnant of this wall

Abandoned rails next to the main road. This vanishes under the street



The view behind the above Ontario Mill sign







Sources: David Hampshire, Martha Sontag Bradley and Allen Roberts, The History of Summit County

Monday, August 11, 2014

Bingham Canyon Mining Towns, Salt Lake County

There are several company towns that were born in Bingham Canyon. The only left to visit now is one of the biggest open pit mines in the world. It's a spectacular sight, one I highly recommend seeing.
You can see Kennecott from anywhere in the valley

I just love what the rain has done to the overburden.
A drive up Butterfield Canyon and you can almost see to the bottom of the mine!




Each of those trucks is easily the size of a two story house

Using the camera zoom for binoculars!

Thomas and Sanford Bingham gave the canyon its name. They grazed horses and cattle in the canyon in the 1850's when they discovered precious metals. They told Brigham Young who advised them to leave it alone. After being driven from their homes multiple times, he feared the discovery would bring prospectors and persecutors who would drive them out of the valley.

The U.S. Army lay claim in 1863 (or 1883 according to other sources) after the discovery of gold. Colonel Patrick Conner sent soldiers stationed at Fort Douglas to the Oquirrh mountains and organized a mining district. Several towns grew.  The first miners lived in dugouts on the canyon walls.

Before 1920 over 5,000 people were employed by the mines, roughly 4,000 of them foreign born. It was a true melting pot!

Bingham is the biggest and seemingly best known of the old towns.  Organized in 1904, this town grew up a narrow canyon. At its largest, the town was seven miles long and only a half block wide. This town had a short life. Engineers established in 1910 the whole mountain had enough copper ore to have an open pit mine rather than tunnel for ore. Mine operations grew and overtook the town. By 1961 many residents had moved to Copperton to make way for the overburden. The town board send a request to Utah Power to shut off the street lights in 1972. "This is to advise that as of June 30, 1972, there will be no more office in Bingham Canyon; it is finished." 


Lark was a prospector who came with the rush. The town of Lark was established January 1866. By 1929 the United State Smelting and Refining Company expanded the town. At its peak the population topped 800. As non-copper mines began to close, the town went into decline. The last silver, zinc and lead mine closed around 1971. Kennecott Copper bought the land in 1972 and announced foreclosure in 1977. The Bingham Canyon Mine (which most of us locals call "Kennecott") needed more land for the overburden. Lark got national news as some residents fought for the towns survival. Particularly from 81 year old Hilda Grabner, who is the resident I found quoted in every article I read. Kennecott paid 120% of the appraised value of the homes and an additional $1000 to relocate. Many homes themselves were moved to Copperton. By 1978 Lark was dismantled. There is currently a "Lark entrance" in memory of the town, but the site has since been buried.

Some of the articles are very dramatic. "Doomed Lark, Utah Faces Death on New Year's Day" reads a California headline. New Year's Day 1979 there were 25 families left in the town. 18 of which were having their homes moved to Copperton. There are fantastic pictures of the homes and buildings of Lark at BYU's archive.

Another town was Highland Boy, also called Utah Consolidated, but that's boring. This town was known for its seasonal fires and snowslides. At its peak the town had hotels, boarding houses, saloons, stores and schools. Highland Boy was the most successful of the little claims in the canyon because it was the first to not see the copper as a nuisance to the gold mining. Most other mines in the canyon were silver and gold. Copper was shipped out for processing in 1896. The Deseret News in February 1900 says this mine produced 70% of the country's copper output, or 300 MILLION POUNDS annually. In 1900 that must have been quite a feat.
Kennecott currently produces 300,000 TONS of copper, 400,000 ounces of gold, 4 million ounces of silver, 30 million pounds of molybdenum and 1 million tons of sulfuric acid annually.

Copperton, built by the Utah Copper Company in 1927, is the last company town from the 20,000 residents who lived in these mountains at their peak (Bingham, Copperton, Highland Boy and numerous smaller camps). The canyon is full of overburden, but many of the homes here are from the other mine towns, preserving the memory of the previous ventures. The homes were sold to employees starting 1956.

Copperton doesn't look like a ghost town, until you hit the street that once went up the canyon



Bibliography: (I'm tired right now, so I'll finish this bibliography properly... later...)


http://utahethnicandminingmuseumofmagna.com/Brief_History.html 

http://archives.utah.gov/research/agencyhistories/78.html

MSS P 780; Kennecott Copper Corporation photographs of Lark, Utah; Photographic Archives; L. Tom Perry Special Collections, Harold B. Lee Library, Brigham Young University. Following citations: MSS P 780, LTPSC.

http://www.ghostdepot.com/rg/mainline/utah/bingham.htm

Pictures of Lark:  http://contentdm.lib.byu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/SCMisc/id/29065

Milwalkee: http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1499&dat=19780703&id=9lwaAAAAIBAJ&sjid=pCkEAAAAIBAJ&pg=3830,1333648

California: http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1356&dat=19781230&id=5J5PAAAAIBAJ&sjid=6AUEAAAAIBAJ&pg=5109,9213116


http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=336&dat=19000202&id=EIJIAAAAIBAJ&sjid=ClYDAAAAIBAJ&pg=3055,1517469

Picture of old Bingham town: http://www.ghostdepot.com/rg/images/utah/bingham%20canyon%20main%20street%20bev%20c1940%20pc.jpg