Ballarat California – Inyo County Ghost Town

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Ballarat, California

Located in Inyo County, Ballarat California is a ghost town which supposedly has a few residents living their dream within the town. Ballarat is located in the Panamint Mountain range just off the Trona Wilderness Road and sough of highway 190.

As early as 1849, the area served as a watering hole known as Post Office Springs. Prospectors and travelers alike would stop for water in the hot and dry Mojave Desert.

The town of Ballarat was founded in 1897 and named for Ballarat, Victoria, Australia. The town is named by an Australian immigrant George Riggins. Ballarat California was originally founded as a supply point for the mines Panamint Mountains and surrounding area. A blacksmith shop and store supported this efforts.

Within a year of the founding, the towns population stabilized at about 500 residents. Three hotels, seven saloons, a school, jail and morgue all served this outpost along with a post office and Wells Fargo station. The town site featured few natural resources and ore to be shipped into the remote location. The town buildings is constructed primarily of Adobe bricks.

The town was relatively lawless and was mostly filled with hard working miners looking for relaxation and an opportunity to blow off steam. The saloons and a population of prostitutes were supported by Ballarat.

The main mine, the Radcliffe, produced 15,000 tons or more of ore from 1898 to 1903. From 1927 to 1942 its tailings are reprocessed with cyanided. This process reported recovery value of one quarter of a million dollars in gold. The town began to fail following the closure of the Radcliff Mine in 1903. Despite supporting other mining towns like Harrisberg, as the gold played out, so did the fortunes of Ballarat, which closed the post office in 1917.

In 1941 the Ballarat Mining and Milling Corporation, a Nevada company, bought property in the Slate and Panamint ranges in San Bernardino and Inyo counties. A Los Angeles company intended to make exhaustive metallurgical tests, paving the way for a projected modern fifty-ton reduction mill south of town to perform custom work. An assay office and metallurgical laboratory were to be part of the complex, and once again Ballarat would see a resurgence of mining activity.

“Shorty” Harris, along with a few other prospectors continued to live in and around the town site for decades after the closure. The last of these die hard prospectors, “Seldom Seen Slim” died in 1968.

Notoriety

In 1968 and 1969, Charles Manson and his “family” moved into Barker Ranch. The town of Ballarat was Mansons last link to civilization and served as a supply source for his desert exploits. Not to caste the town with the murderer, the town also supplied the arresting officers who raided Barker Ranch and subsequently arrested Manson and his family.

“Shorty” Harris founder of Harrisburg, photographed in Ballarat, California
“Shorty” Harris founder of Harrisburg, photographed in Ballarat, California

Time has taken its tole on the builds of the adobe buildings. Wind and water are literally melting the builds back into the desert.

Today, Ballarat is the subject of a few odd television shows and again made headlines with the Ballarat Bandit. In 2003, George Robert Johnston camped around Ballarat and Death Valley. During this time, he committed burglaries before leading investigators on a chase across the desert.

Ballarat Personalities

Charles Ferge "Seldom Seen Slim"

Charles Ferge “Seldom Seen Slim” – A Ballarat Prospector

Charles Ferge "Seldom Seen Slim" Charles Ferge “Seldom Seen Slim” (c. 1881–1968) was one of the last of the classic “desert rats”—solitary prospectors who embodied…
The booking photo of the dimunutive Charles Milles Maddox. Inyo County October 1969.

Charles Milles Maddox

Charles Milles Maddox AKA Charlie Manson was a serial killer and most of the bad parts of the Old Testament sort of criminal. He briefly…
Frank "Shorty" Harris

Frank “Shorty” Harris

Frank “Shorty” Harris (1857–1934) was one of the most colorful and enduring figures of the American desert West—a short-statured, hard-drinking, single-blanket jackass prospector whose 1904…
A police sketch of the Ballarat Bandit - George Robert Johnston

George Robert Johnston – The Ballarat Bandit

A police sketch of the Ballarat Bandit - George Robert Johnston George Robert Johnston, known as the Ballarat Bandit, was a petty criminal who lead…
Pete Aguereberry

Pete Aguereberry – A Panamint Valley Miner

Jean Pierre “Pete” Aguereberry (1874–1945), universally known as Pete Aguereberry, was a Basque-born prospector and miner whose four-decade solitary vigil at the Eureka Mine in…

4×4 Trails near Ballarat

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Indian Ranch Road

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The hottest place on earth, Death Valley National Park is on the order with California and Nevada

Jail Canyon Road

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References

Nelson Nevada and Eldorado Canyon – Clark County Ghost Town

Nelson, Nevada, is a small unincorporated community in Clark County, located in the rugged hills of El Dorado Canyon about 45 minutes south of Las Vegas along Nevada Highway 165. The canyon itself drains into the Colorado River (now part of Lake Mohave) and is best known for the historic Techatticup Mine—one of the oldest, richest, and most famous gold mines in southern Nevada. Together, Nelson and El Dorado Canyon represent a classic chapter in Nevada’s mining heritage: from early Spanish exploration and a violent 19th-century gold rush to 20th-century wartime production and today’s preserved tourist site. What began as a remote, lawless mining district became one of the most productive areas in the state’s southern history.

Rock spires carved by erosion located in Eldorado Canyon, Nelson, Nevada.
Rock spires carved by erosion located in Eldorado Canyon, Nelson, Nevada.

Pre-European History and Early European Contact

Long before miners arrived, the area was home to Ancestral Puebloans, followed by Paiute and Mojave tribes who lived along the Colorado River corridor for centuries. In 1775, Spanish surveyors exploring the canyon along the Colorado River discovered rich deposits of gold, silver, and lead. They named the canyon “Eldorado” (Spanish for “golden”) and established a small settlement at the river’s mouth, but the silver quantities proved too low to sustain operations, and they soon moved on—missing the far richer gold veins hidden in the canyon walls.

The Southwest Mining Company Quartz mill located just off the Colorado River.
The Southwest Mining Company Quartz mill located just off the Colorado River.

The 19th-Century Mining Boom (1850s–1870s)

Serious prospecting began in the 1850s when American miners sluiced streams feeding the Colorado River. In 1857–1858, steamboat captain George Alonzo Johnson formally named the canyon El Dorado after noting gold and silver deposits. The real rush ignited in April 1861 when Mojave Chief Irataba guided prospector John Moss to a rich silver (and gold/copper) vein. Word spread rapidly, triggering one of the largest mining booms in southern Nevada history and the formation of the Colorado Mining District (later called the Eldorado Canyon District).

The Salvage Vein—a vertically stacked ribbon of ore—became the focus. The most famous operation was the Techatticup Mine (named from Paiute words meaning “hungry” or “bread,” because local Paiutes came to the camps begging for food). Other key mines included the Wall Street, Queen City, Gettysburg, and Savage. These produced millions of dollars in gold, silver, copper, and lead over decades. Ore was initially shipped by steamboat down the Colorado River to Yuma, Arizona, and then to San Francisco. A 10-stamp steam-powered mill (the first in the canyon) was built in 1863 at El Dorado City near the river, cutting transportation costs.

Several mining camps sprang up: San Juan (upper canyon, near modern Nelson), Alturas and Louisville (mid-canyon near Techatticup), and Colorado City/El Dorado City at the river landing. During the Civil War, the area even hosted rival camps—Lucky Jim (Confederate sympathizers) and Buster Falls (Union)—highlighting the national divisions that spilled into the remote desert.

Many structures are still standing, Nelson, Nevada.
Many structures are still standing, Nelson, Nevada.

Lawlessness and the “Wild West” Reputation

El Dorado Canyon earned a notorious reputation for violence that rivaled Tombstone, Arizona. Its extreme isolation—hundreds of miles from the nearest sheriff in Pioche or Hiko—meant law enforcement rarely ventured in. Claim-jumping, shootings over ownership and labor disputes, greed, and vigilante justice were daily occurrences. Many miners were Civil War deserters seeking anonymity. Murders were so common that they barely made headlines. The U.S. Army established Camp El Dorado in 1867 at the canyon mouth to protect steamboat traffic and deter Paiute raids, but it was abandoned two years later.

Infamous figures included Paiute renegade Ahvote and Cocopah serial killer Queho, who murdered over 20 people in the early 1900s (one victim near the Techatticup Mine in 1919). Locals formed posses for justice when authorities could not respond.

The Rise of Nelson and 20th-Century Operations

The original riverfront town of Eldorado gradually declined after the 1870s. In 1905 a new hub emerged about seven miles up-canyon and was named Nelson (after early settler Charles Nelson). A 50-ton smelter was built, sparking a second boom. Mining slowed in the early 1900s but revived in the late 1930s to supply ore for the U.S. military during World War II. The Techatticup Mine—the longest-lived and most productive in the district—finally closed around 1941–1945 due to rising labor costs.

The construction of Davis Dam in the 1950s created Lake Mohave, flooding the old Nelson’s Landing, stamp mill site, and lower canyon. The historic cemetery was relocated one mile upstream to avoid inundation

The steamboat Mohave departing the landing in El Dorado Canyon.
The steamboat Mohave departing the landing in El Dorado Canyon.

Modern Era and Tourism

Today, only about 35 people live in Nelson, a quiet cluster of homes and remnants of the mining past. The Techatticup Mine site (51 acres) was purchased in 1994 by Tony and Bobbie Werly and their family. They restored buildings, cleared tunnels, installed lighting and safety features, and opened guided tours that explore both above- and below-ground sections (about 500 feet deep). The site now functions as a museum and living-history attraction with antique vehicles, mining artifacts, a gift shop, and even a wedding chapel. It has also served as a filming location for movies such as Breakdown (1997) and 3000 Miles to Graceland (2001), whose crashed airplane prop remains on display.

El Dorado Canyon is no longer an active mining district but a scenic desert landscape popular with hikers, photographers, and history buffs. Visitors can explore the preserved “ghost town” feel—rusting machinery, weathered buildings, and canyon views—while remembering its turbulent past of riches, bloodshed, and resilience.

Mill in Eldorado Canyon, circa 1890
Mill in Eldorado Canyon, circa 1890

Founded in 1905 Nelson, Nevada is located some seven miles west at the head of Eldorado Canyon. The town of Nelson slumped for two decades beginning in 1909, but the 1930’s found a resurgence in gold production. By 1941, the three cyanide mills processed 220 tons of ore daily. The population reached 600 persons, however increased costs caused the gold production to slow and eventually cease. The Techatticip mine produced over half of the total gold produced in the area. The gold produced by the region has an estimated valued at $10,000,000.00.

In 1951, Davis Damn is completed. The original town site in Eldorado canyon was buried and drowned by the rising waters of Lake Mojave.

A visitors center and store are open to those who travel here.  Nelson, Nevada
A visitors center and store are open to those who travel here. Nelson, Nevada

Today

Today, the town of Nelson hosts some 37 people in the 2010 census. The older section of town hosts many old buildings, ruins, cars, mining equipment and all in all is an eclectic collection of mining and western history. The current occupants have a wonderful collection of old mining gear and western history, mixed with an eclectic collection of art.

Nelson, Nevada

Conclusion

From Spanish dreams of El Dorado in 1775 to the chaotic gold rush of the 1860s, Civil War tensions, and World War II production, Nelson and El Dorado Canyon encapsulate the boom-and-bust cycle of Nevada mining. The Techatticup Mine’s millions in precious metals helped shape the American West, even as lawlessness and isolation defined daily life. Today, the restored site offers a safe window into that wild history—just a short drive from Las Vegas—preserving the stories of the miners, outlaws, and dreamers who once called this canyon home. For those interested in touring, reservations are required through Eldorado Canyon Mine Tours.

Nelson, Nevada is a quiet destination worthy of a few hours if you are in the area.
Nelson, Nevada is a quiet destination worthy of a few hours if you are in the area.

Nelson and El Dorado trail map

Goffs California – San Bernardino County Ghost Town

Originally known as Blake, Goffs, California is a small unincorporated community located off of Route 66 in the Mojave desert near the Piute Mountains.  Originally named for Isaac Blake, builder of the Nevada Southern Railway, the town was named Goffs in 1902, when it served as a railway stop, and housing for the Santa Fe Railroad.

Goffs, CA
Goffs California

In 1914, Goffs built a schoolhouse which served 1000 square miles of the surrounding desert.  The students were primarily children of railroad employees, miners and Mexican immigrant families.  The school continued to function as a educational facility until it’s closure in 1937 when the Goffs School District was merged with  the nearby Needles school district.  During World War II, the “Mission Revival” building served as a canteen for the Desert Training Center, which trained US servicemen for the hardships of desert life in preparation for the African Campaign.

Goffs Schoolhouse, Mojave, CA
Goffs Schoolhouse, Mojave, CA

Today, the Goffs school house is used by the Mojave Desert Heritage and Cultural Associations and a museum and cultural center.  The schoolhouse was recognized on the National Register of Historic Places on Aug 7th, 2001.  ( #01001102 )

Goffs California found it’s way onto my list of cool places by accident on a family vacation along the Old Mojave Road.  The first day in, we camped in the New York Mountains.  We scheduled a rest day where we could drive the jeeps with a non burden suspension and explore the Mojave Dessert.  Almost as an after-thought, we headed towards Goffs not knowing what to expect or who we would find.

As we pulled into the area, we could see a windmill and a couple of buildings which are located behind a locked gate.  We decided to get out to stretch a bit, and after a few minutes I noticed a man driving up in a golf cart.  At first I was concerned that some old desert hermit was investigating trespassers on his land, and was immediately surprised when this man opened the gate and invited us onto his property.  It turned our that this man was Dennis Casebier, the man who wrote the book and rediscovered the Old Mojave Road.

Hitchin a ride with the fascinating Dennis Casebier
Hitchin a ride with the fascinating Dennis Casebier

That afternoon, we spent a good portion of the day with the fascinating Mr. Casebier.  He told us how he retired to Goffs in the 1990’s and worked to protect the history of the area.   He relived the days of searching and marking off the Old Mojave Road by building rock cairns, hundreds of them.  He told the stories of the military activity in the area during World War II.  He offered us a complete tour of his land and collection of mining equipment, stamp mills, train equipment, etc…

Preserving the Old Mojave Road and the history of the area is Mr. Casebier’s work. At the time, he showed us a 2 stamp stampmill that he restored into working condition and share his plans to assemble a 10 stamp mill which he recently acquired.  I understand that he now has this mill working as well, so I need to schedule another trip down to Goffs.

As we were leaving, we thanked him for his hospitality and for opening up for us.  He replied that he could not ignore a couple of dirty jeeps driving down the road.

That night, around the campfire I reflected on how fortunate I was to meet Dennis Casebier.  I felt privileged, and yet, I suspect that I really was not that lucky.  I imagine this that I am one of many, who drove down the road into Goffs and talk with Dennis Casebier.

Functioning Stampmill, Goffs, CA
Functioning Stampmill, Goffs, CA

Further Reading

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