Bradshaw City, Arizona Explained

Bradshaw City, Arizona
Settlement Type:Ghost town
Coordinates:34.1967°N -112.3558°W
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Type1:State
Subdivision Type2:County
Subdivision Name:United States
Subdivision Name1:Arizona
Subdivision Name2:Yavapai
Established Title:Founded:
Established Date:c. 1860
Extinct Title:Abandoned:
Extinct Date:c. 1880
Named For:William D. Bradshaw[1]
Elevation Ft:6358
Elevation M:1938
Timezone:MST (no DST)
Utc Offset:-7
Blank Name:Post Office Opened:
Blank Info:July 1, 1874
Blank1 Name:Post Office Closed:
Blank1 Info:December 15, 1884

Bradshaw City is a ghost town in Yavapai County, Arizona, United States. It served as a mining camp from its founding in 1863 until the late 1880s. "Bradshaw City" is the namesake of its founder, William D. Bradshaw.[1]

History

William D. Bradshaw founded Bradshaw City as a mining camp in 1863 after prospectors working on the northwest slope of Mount Wasson discovered gold. The camp began as a loose collection of tents which were soon replaced with hundreds of buildings including dance halls, restaurants, saloons, and hotels as the population inflated to around 5000 people. The town supported the Tiger Mine, situated a short distance from the "Central #26: Crown King Back-road" which serviced the area at the time.

By the end of 1871, miners and prospectors began to move away from Tiger Mine to find work elsewhere. By the 1880s the Tiger mine had played out and Bradshaw city faded. Today, a few foundations and a forest service sign mark the spot where Bradshaw City once stood.[1] A portion of the city cemetery remains.[2]

See also

References

  1. http://www.apcrp.org/Bradshaw%20City/Bradshaw_CitY_Master.htm Bradshaw City, Arizona
  2. Book: Varney . Philip . Arizona's Best Ghost Towns . 1980 . Northland Press . Flagstaff . 0873582179 . 19 . One: Near Prescott • Ghosts of the Higher Ground. 79-91724.

External links