Carl Mengel (1868–1944) was a German-born American prospector and small-scale miner whose decades of solitary toil in the rugged Panamint Mountains of California’s Death Valley region epitomized the hardscrabble, post-boom era of desert mining. Though he never struck it rich and died impoverished, Mengel left a lasting geographic imprint on the landscape: Mengel Pass in the southern Panamint Range bears his name, as does the spring and cabin site where he lived for more than three decades. His claims, most notably the Keystone Mine (later incorporated into the Lotus Mine), represent the persistent, low-capital prospecting that continued in the Panamints long after the famous 1870s silver stampede at Panamint City had faded.
Early Life and Path to Mining
Carl Mengel was born in 1868 in Germany (Alsace-Lorraine region according to family lore). His father was from Alsace-Lorraine and his mother Saxon; the family immigrated to the United States when Carl was about six (circa 1874). Both parents died before he turned eleven. An uncle in Ventura, California, became his guardian, but at age seventeen Mengel ran away, working first on a ranch in California’s San Joaquin Valley and later at Angels Camp in Calaveras County during the lingering Gold Rush era. He eventually gained possession of his uncle’s orchard near Visalia. Stricken with Bright’s disease (chronic kidney inflammation), he sold the land and moved to Seattle, where he bought an old rum boat for $75, sailed it, regained his health, and sold the vessel for a profit before returning to California.
By the late 1890s Mengel had turned to prospecting. He claimed to have first entered Butte Valley (on the eastern flank of the Panamint Mountains) in 1898. In the early 1900s he worked claims in Nevada’s Esmeralda and Nye counties (1905–1907) and made a notable strike in the Black Rock Desert of Humboldt County, where he operated “Camp Mengel.” The 1910 U.S. Census confirms his presence in Humboldt County as a naturalized citizen born in Germany.
The Mining Accident and Move to the Panamints
Sometime before 1912 Mengel suffered a devastating mining accident—most likely in Nevada—that cost him part of his left leg. Accounts vary: one places it at Silver Peak, Nevada, around 1905, when a rock fall crushed his leg and required amputation; another claims he performed a self-amputation with a tourniquet while awaiting rescue; a third dates it even earlier, to about 1888. Whatever the exact circumstances, Mengel survived, was fitted with a wooden peg leg (later replaced by a mechanical prosthetic), and continued prospecting with remarkable agility. The injury did not deter him; if anything, it cemented his reputation as a tough, one-legged desert rat.
In 1912 Mengel settled permanently in the Panamint Mountains west of Death Valley. He purchased the Oro Fino claim in Goler Wash and refurbished an abandoned cabin at a spring (later called Mengel Spring or Greater View Spring) that Mormon prospectors had left in 1869. The site, about half a mile south of Anvil Spring in Butte Valley, offered commanding views across the valley floor. Here he made his home for the rest of his life, staking and working claims in the surrounding canyons and washes.
Role in Panamint Mountains Mining History
The Panamint Range had already seen its share of boom-and-bust cycles. The 1873–1876 silver rush at Panamint City in Surprise Canyon had drawn thousands before collapsing. Later gold strikes at Skidoo and other districts brought renewed activity in the early 1900s. By the time Mengel arrived, however, large-scale operations had largely given way to individual prospectors and small partnerships working marginal deposits of gold, silver, lead, and zinc.
Mengel became a fixture in the Butte Valley–Anvil Spring–Goler Wash district. In October 1924 he filed a cluster of claims south and west of Anvil Spring: the Topah Nos. 1–4, Topah Extension, and Mah Jongg Nos. 1–6. His most significant holding was the Keystone Mine, high above Goler Canyon on the west slope of the Panamints. Though never a major producer, the Keystone represented Mengel’s determined search for ore in the mineralized veins of the range.
In 1935, at an advanced age, Mengel sold majority interest in the Keystone to the Monte Cristo Mines company. They expanded the property into six unpatented claims. Shortly afterward the holdings passed to Lotus Mines of Burbank, California. The Lotus operation drove tunnels from the opposite side of the mountain to tap the same ore body Mengel had been pursuing, installing an aerial tram and other infrastructure. The Lotus/Keystone complex thus stands as a direct legacy of Mengel’s early work, illustrating how lone prospectors’ claims sometimes seeded later, modestly capitalized developments in the remote Panamints.
Mengel was no recluse. He maintained friendships with legendary Death Valley figures such as Shorty Harris and Pete Aguereberry and was a frequent visitor to the nearby communities of Shoshone and Tecopa, where locals remembered him as an elusive but colorful storyteller. He lived frugally in his stone-and-wood cabin at Greater View Spring, sometimes called the Stella-Mengel Cabin, surrounded by the stark beauty of the Panamints.
Final Years and Legacy
Mengel’s health declined sharply in 1943. He died on April 28, 1944, at age 76 in the San Bernardino County Charity Hospital from complications of tuberculosis. True to his desert life, he left no fortune—only his claims, cabin, and prosthetic leg. Friends Barbara and Bill Myers scattered his ashes atop the pass between Goler Wash and Butte Valley and built a stone cairn there, placing his old wooden peg leg on top. The site, roughly fifty feet outside the then-boundary of Death Valley National Monument, became known as Mengel Pass and remains a modest but poignant memorial within what is now Death Valley National Park.
Carl Mengel never achieved the fame or wealth of the region’s earlier mining barons, yet his story endures as a classic tale of the twentieth-century desert prospector. In the Panamint Mountains—where silver bonanzas had long since played out—he embodied the gritty persistence that kept small-scale mining alive amid isolation, injury, and economic hardship. Today, hikers and backcountry explorers still pass his namesake pass, visit the ruins of his cabin, and trace the tunnels of the Keystone/Lotus Mine, reminders of one man’s lifelong gamble on the mineral riches hidden in the Panamints.

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