La Grange Mine Explained

La Grange Mine
Location:Trinity County, California

Along California State Route 299, about 4miles west of Weaverville, California
Designation1:California
Designation1 Number:778
Designation1 Date:1962
Founded:1862
Demolished:1918 (closed)

The La Grange Mine is a former mine located in Trinity County, California. At one time it was the largest hydraulic mine in California. Started operating in 1862, over 3,500,000 dollars of gold was extracted before it was closed down in 1918 due to rising costs of labor and steel after World War I. The quality of gold was low so hydraulic mining was used to take it from the ground. The site is now a California Historical Landmark.[1] [2] [3]

The name comes from the owner who bought it in 1893, the French baron Ernest de la Grange. He came from North of France with his wife (Clémentine de Chaumont Quitry) and his two children (Emilie and Amaury de la Grange)

California Historical Landmark #778 reads:

NO. 778 LA GRANGE MINE (HYDRAULIC) - This mine, originally known as the Oregon Mountain Group of Claims, first operated about 1862. In 1892 the mine was purchased by the La Grange Hydraulic Gold Mining Company, which brought water from Stuart's Fork through 29 miles of ditch, tunnels, and flume to deliver it to the mine pit under a 650-foot head. Over 100,000,000 yards of gravel were processed to produce $3,500,000 in gold. Large-scale operations ceased in 1918. [2]

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External links

Notes and References

  1. https://visittrinity.com/history/mining/la-grange-mine/ visittrinity.com, La Grange Mine
  2. https://noehill.com/trinity/cal0778.asp noehill.com La Grange Mine
  3. https://calisphere.org/item/e08217d024110c64808cf27230923af6/ calisphere.org La Grange Mine