Scranton, Utah Explained

Scranton
Pushpin Map:Utah#USA
Pushpin Label Position:left
Subdivision Name:United States
Established Title:Established
Established Date:1908
Extinct Title:Abandoned
Extinct Date:c. 1918
Coordinates:40.0489°N -112.2008°W

Scranton is a ghost town in Tooele County, Utah, United States. Located in Barlow Canyon near the Juab County line, it was a short-lived mining town. Scranton has been uninhabited for over a century, but some of its structures have survived relatively intact.

History

Scranton was founded in 1908 around the New Bullion Mine, a lead and zinc mine.[1] It was part of the North Tintic Mining District, organized in 1902 for the area's silver, lead, and zinc mines. The new town became the home of the Scranton Mining and Smelting Company, the owners naming it after Scranton, Pennsylvania, their home town.[2]

Some 90 miners lived in Scranton, a few with families. The town included homes, a boarding house, general store/post office, and assay office. The large pocket of good ore at the New Bullion lasted only about two years, and the town began to dwindle. Then in October 1914 a new company called the South Scranton was organized, and miners dug a long tunnel in search of other mineral resources. During World War I Scranton produced tungsten, sending it by insured parcel post due to its scarcity. After the war the town quickly emptied.

Four old buildings remained in fine condition as late as 1971, when a brush fire ignited by a National Guard exercise burned two of them to the ground. The other two buildings have since collapsed or burned. Some old mine equipment and several adits continue to mark the site of old Scranton.

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External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Carr, Stephen L. . The Historical Guide to Utah Ghost Towns . 3rd . June 1972 . 1986 . Western Epics . Salt Lake City . 33 . 0-914740-30-X .
  2. Book: Blanthorn, Ouida . A History of Tooele County . Utah Centennial County History Series . January 1998 . Utah State Historical Society . Salt Lake City . 129–130 . 0-913738-44-1 . PDF . July 15, 2012.