Gila City, Arizona Explained

Gila City, Arizona
Settlement Type:Ghost town
Pushpin Map:Arizona#USA
Pushpin Label Position:right
Pushpin Mapsize:250
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Type1:State
Subdivision Type2:County
Subdivision Name:United States
Subdivision Name1:Arizona
Subdivision Name2:Yuma
Established Title:Founded
Established Date:1858
Extinct Title:Abandoned
Extinct Date:1863
Elevation Ft:233
Elevation M:71
Population As Of:2011
Population Total:0
Timezone:MST (no DST)
Utc Offset:-7
Coordinates:32.755°N -114.3628°W
Blank Name:Post Office opened
Blank Info:December 24, 1858
Blank1 Name:Post Office closed
Blank1 Info:July 14, 1863

Gila City is a ghost town in Yuma County in the U.S. state of Arizona. The town was settled in 1858 in what was then the New Mexico Territory.

History

Gila City was founded on the south bank of the Gila River, 19 miles east of the confluence of the Gila and Colorado rivers. Also known as Ligurta, the town was established as a result of Arizona's first major gold rush, when Colonel Jacob Snively led a party of prospectors to a placer deposit along the Gila River in and around Monitor Gulch, which emerges from the Gila Mountains to the south. A booming gold camp, Gila City developed nearly overnight as prospectors rushed to the site. The Butterfield Overland Mail route passed through the boom town and one of its stations, Swivelers lay a mile to the east at the eastern edge of the placer deposits where a post office was established for Gila City on December 24, 1858.[1]

The Gila placers were worked for eight years by thousands of miners. They worked the plateaus and canyons nearby, panning out $20 to $125 a day in gold dust, and nuggets weighing up to 22 ounces each were deposited at the Wells Fargo office in Los Angeles.

In March 1859, the Gila Mining and Transportation Company sent a cargo to Robinson's Landing, in the schooner Arno. This cargo included a steam engine to pump water to the Gila mine that lay a mile from the Gila River. Included in the cargo was a disassembled 125 foot stern-wheel steamboat, built by Henry Owens.[2] The nameless steamboat had been sent to equip their own lower cost steamboat line, as a rival to the George A. Johnson Company, however it was lost there before it was ever unloaded. The tidal bore tore loose Arno's anchors, driving the ship on a sandbar holing and sinking it in a half-hour with the ship and cargo a total loss. Without the steam engine providing water for washing out the gold at the mine, these American miners used to the plentiful water of California's placers in the north, could not work it profitably and the town soon was mostly abandoned. Only Sonora miners familiar with dry wash techniques stayed and made it pay.[3] [4] [5] [6]

In 1859 Lieutenant Sylvester Mowry, reported about 100 men and several families working the gravels at Gila City and saw more than $20 washed from 8 shovelfuls of dirt. Some miners were paid $3 a day plus board to work lower grade deposits. Most of the gold was recovered by first drywashing, then by wetwashing the dry-panned concentrates at the Gila River.

Flooding of the Gila River in the Great Flood of 1862 destroyed the remnants of the town, and the post office was discontinued on July 14, 1863. Most of the population had already moved on to the new gold rush at La Paz. The best of the placers continued to be worked on a reduced scale until 1865, all the known productive ground was worked over at least once since then. A few large-scale operations were later attempted over the years, but these were unsuccessful.

Today

All trace of the town is gone, but small-scale mining continues today. The area of gold-bearing gravel extends from 1/4 mile east of Dome to 3 miles west of Dome, but most placer mining was centered on Monitor Gulch, miles west of Dome. Most of the gold in the gravels was found at or near bedrock in gulches, but much gold was recovered from bench gravels in the area.[7]

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://books.google.com/books?id=Hf97Akn8l9kC&pg=PA60 James E. Sherman, Barbara H. Sherman, Ghost Towns of Arizona, University of Oklahoma Press, 1969, p. 60
  2. http://quod.lib.umich.edu/m/moajrnl/ahj1472.2-25.145/21:4?page=root;rgn=main;size=100;view=image Scott, Erving M. and Others, Evolution of Shipping and Ship-Building in California, Part III, Overland Monthly and Out West Magazine, Volume 25, March 1895
  3. Sacramento Daily Union, Volume 17, Number 2500, 1 April 1859 p.5, Col. 2
  4. The Times-Picayune, New Orleans, May 6, 1859. Vol. XXIII, No. 88, p. 1, Col. 7, – p. 2, Col. 1
  5. https://books.google.com/books?id=SLMgAAAAYAAJ&dq=schooner+%22Arno%22+Colorado+River&pg=PA368 Sailors Magazine, for the Year ending August 1859, Vol. XXXI, American Seamans Friend Society, New York, 1859, p.368, Marine Losses May and June
  6. http://www.ansac.az.gov/UserFiles/PDF/08182014/X028_FMIBurtellLingenfelterSteamboats/FMI%20Lingenfelter%20Steamboats/Steamboats%20on%20the%20Colorado%20River%201852-1916.pdf Richard E. Lingenfelter, Steamboats on the Colorado River, 1852–1916, University of Arizona Press, Tucson, 1978
  7. Web site: Eldred D. Wilson, "Gold Placers and Placering in Arizona", Bulletin 168, State of Arizona, Bureau of Geology and Mineral Technology, Geological Survey Branch, A Division of the University of Arizona, Reprinted 1981, p. 18 . July 9, 2011 . July 21, 2011 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110721032946/http://www.azgs.az.gov/Mineral%20Scans/gold_bull168_ocr.pdf . dead .