Kearsarge, California Explained

Kearsarge
Other Name:Kearsarge City
Settlement Type:Former settlement
Pushpin Map:California
Pushpin Label Position:bottom
Pushpin Map Caption:Location in California
Pushpin Image:California Locator Map with US.PNG
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Type1:State
Subdivision Name1:California
Subdivision Type2:County
Subdivision Name2:Inyo County
Coordinates:36.81°N -118.325°W
Elevation M:2690

Kearsarge or Kearsarge City is a former mining settlement in Inyo County, eastern California. It was located high on the east slope of the Sierra Nevada, near Kearsage Pass, 8miles west of present-day town of Independence, California.

The mining camp was in the Kearsarge Mining District, located just below the 12621adj=midNaNadj=mid high granite Kearsarge Peak, and east of the Kearsarge Pass.

History

Kearsarge was named after the Union man-of-war, which had recently sunk the Confederate ship off the coast of France. A nearby settlement had been named Alabama Hills by Confederate sympathizers, so this "evened the score" after the naval battle.[1]

In the Autumn of 1864, on the side of a then-unnamed mountain, five woodcutters discovered a vein of rich silver and gold ore. The men staked their claims to Kearsarge, Silver Sprout, and Virginia Mines. They mined and shipped four tons of ore to a stamp mill in Nevada, receiving $900 a ton. The news of location of their mine leaked out, and the Kearsarge Mining District, and eponymous mining camp below the mines, was established high in the Eastern Sierra.

Several mine investors purchased the three main silver claims, forming the Kearsarge Mining Company. These new owners had driven a 50feet tunnel into the southeast side of the mountain by August 1865, reaching $650+ per ton ore.

After a winter of heavy snow, on the afternoon of March 1, 1866, an avalanche swept away most of the town and some of the population, killing the wife of the mine foreman and injuring several men.[2] A camp was relocated to a safer site nearby, but most of the town's population departed, except the miners who continued to operate the mines and a mill that was constructed that summer. The Rex Montis mine, which became the principal gold source in the District, was worked on a large scale from 1875 to 1883.[3]

Kearsarge was mostly abandoned by 1888. The mill was removed and little else remained, but it was occupied intermittently as attempts were later made to revive the mines with little success.[4] [5] [6]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Chalfant: The Story of Inyo, 1922, pp. 195-197.
  2. http://www.yosemite.ca.us/library/place_names_of_the_high_sierra/k.html Francis P. Farquhar, Place Names of the High Sierra, SIERRA CLUB. San Francisco, 1926, pp.91-92, KEARSARGE PASS, PEAK (12,650), PINNACLES, LAKE
  3. William B. Clark, Gold districts of California, Volume: No.193, California Division of Mines and Geology, Sacramento, 2005, p.84
  4. https://books.google.com/books?id=llRAAAAAYAAJ&q=%22prospected+from+their+camp.%22+ Willie Arthur Chalfant, The story of Inyo, The Author, 1922. pp.196-200
  5. https://books.google.com/books?id=gnDOAAAAMAAJ&q=On+July+31%2C+1888%2C+the+writer+went+with+John+Welch California. State Mining Bureau, California. Division of Mines and Geology, California journal of mines and geology, Volume 8, STATE OFFICE, SACRAMENTO, 1888, p. 232-33
  6. Clark, Gold districts of California, p.84