Johnnie Nevada

Johnnie, Nevada, is a small, sparsely populated community in Nye County, located approximately 15 miles north of Pahrump in the Amargosa Valley, near the Spring Mountains. Named after a Paiute guide known as “Indian Johnnie,” the town emerged in the early 1890s as a gold mining camp tied to the legend of the Lost Breyfogle Mine. Its history reflects the boom-and-bust cycle typical of Nevada’s mining towns, marked by brief periods of prosperity, challenges with water scarcity, and eventual decline into a near-ghost town. This report traces Johnnie’s historical development from its founding to the present day, drawing on available sources to provide a comprehensive overview.

Founding and Early Boom (1890–1894)

The Johnnie Mining District, also known as Montgomery, Mount Sterling, or Timber Mountain, was established around 1890 when a group of five prospectors, guided by a Paiute named “Indian Johnnie,” discovered gold while searching for the fabled Lost Breyfogle Mine. The legend of Charles Breyfogle, a prospector who in the 1860s claimed to have found a rich gold deposit but could not relocate it, fueled exploration in the region. In January 1891, George Montgomery and his party struck gold on the east slope of Mount Montgomery, sparking a rush to the area. The Johnnie and Chispa (later renamed Congress) Mines became the district’s primary operations, with outcropping quartz veins yielding significant gold.

By May 1891, the camp, initially called Montgomery, had grown to about 100 residents, supporting houses, stores, saloons, and other amenities typical of a boomtown. Water scarcity posed a significant challenge, as the nearest springs were four miles away, requiring water to be transported by donkey in canvas bags. A post office, named “Montgomery,” operated briefly in 1891, though some sources suggest a “Johny Post Office” existed from June 1898 to April 1899. The shallow veins were quickly exhausted, leading to a decline by 1893–1894, with many miners abandoning the camp.

Revival and Peak Years (1898–1914)

A revival began in 1898 when new investors acquired the Johnnie and Congress Mines, the district’s largest operations. The discovery of placer gold and renewed interest in lode mining revitalized the area, particularly after 1904, when regional mining excitement around Goldfield and Bullfrog swept through southern Nevada. In May 1905, a new townsite was platted closer to the mines, and a post office named “Johnnie” opened, reflecting the area’s growing identity. By 1907, the town reached its peak population of approximately 300, supported by saloons, stores, restaurants, hotels, stage lines, fire hydrants, and tree-lined streets. A 16-stamp mill was erected at the Johnnie Mine to process ore, contributing to production estimates ranging from $382,681 to over $1 million by 1913.

The Johnnie Mine, located four miles northeast of the townsite at an elevation of 4,045 feet, primarily extracted gold from limestone and quartzite host rocks. Underground workings included a 900-foot, 45-degree inclined shaft, with placer mining occurring in gulches below the mine. Placer gold discoveries in 1920 and 1921, particularly by Walter Dryer, triggered a short-lived boom, with drywashing and sluicing techniques used to extract gold from gravels. However, legal disputes, including a violent gun battle, disrupted operations, and production waned by 1914, leading to the post office’s closure in December 1914.

Decline and Intermittent Activity (1915–1960)

After 1914, Johnnie’s population and activity declined sharply, with the camp becoming nearly deserted by the late 1930s, housing fewer than 10 residents. The Johnnie Post Office reopened briefly from April 1916 to November 1935, and a separate Johnnie Mine Post Office operated from September 1937 to June 1942, reflecting sporadic mining efforts. Placer gold discoveries in the gulches below the Congress and Johnnie Mines occurred intermittently, with small-scale operations in 1935, 1949, and the early 1960s. Approximately 20 itinerant miners worked the placers in 1935, using drywashers, but total placer gold production likely did not exceed $20,000.

Mining continued sporadically during World War II, with figures like Alva Meyers, a prominent Goldfield miner, and J. Ross Clark, after whom Clark County is named, associated with the district. Unverified claims suggest that outlaw Butch Cassidy (Robert LeRoy Parker) worked and lived in Johnnie during the 1930s and 1940s, possibly dying there in 1944, though no definitive evidence supports this. By the 1960s, the district was largely inactive, with only occasional prospecting.

Geological Context

The Johnnie Mining District spans the northwestern Spring Mountains, encompassing Mount Montgomery, Mount Schader, and parts of Mount Sterling. The area features a 13,000-foot-thick section of upper Precambrian to Middle Cambrian rocks, including the Johnnie Formation, Stirling Quartzite, Wood Canyon Formation, Zabriskie Quartzite, and Carrara and Bonanza King Formations. These were deformed by the Late Cretaceous Sevier orogeny and later Basin-and-Range faulting, creating high-angle fractures and quartz veins that hosted gold deposits. Placer gold was concentrated in the six inches of gravel overlying bedrock, with values ranging from $6 to $30 per cubic yard in some areas.

Modern Era and Preservation (2014–Present)

In November 2013, the Bunker family donated four mines—April Fool, Johnnie, Teddys, and Teddys Terror, covering 72 acres—to the Pahrump Valley Museum and Historical Society for preservation, with a transfer tax value of $712,500. The donation included a large headframe, a 16-stamp mill remnant, a mine shaft with pulleys, and a cabin. The museum plans to restrict public access to guided tours to protect the site, installing gates and no-trespassing signs to prevent unauthorized entry. The donation agreement prohibits future mining, ensuring the site’s historical integrity.

As of 2023, Johnnie remains a sparsely populated area, with estimates suggesting a population of around 21,169 in the broader region, though this figure likely reflects Nye County data rather than the townsite itself, which is nearly deserted. The median household income is approximately $21,582, and the median age is 24.7, with homes valued at $78,800, significantly below Nevada’s average. The site, now part of the Toiyabe National Forest, retains historical significance but shows little evidence of the original townsite, with only rock foundations, mine shafts, and scattered debris remaining.

Connection to the Lost Breyfogle Mine

The legend of the Lost Breyfogle Mine is central to Johnnie’s history. Charles Breyfogle, a prospector of German descent, reportedly found a rich gold lode in the 1860s, assaying at $4,500 per ton, but could not relocate it after surviving an Indian attack. After his death in 1870 in Eureka, Nevada, others, including George Montgomery and “Indian Johnnie,” continued the search, with some believing the Johnnie Mine was Breyfogle’s lost lode. A 1964 article by Burr Belden, citing Yount family descendants, supported this theory, noting similarities between Breyfogle’s ore samples and Johnnie Mine ore. However, some historians argue the Lost Breyfogle Mine remains undiscovered, adding to Johnnie’s mystique.

Conclusion

Johnnie, Nevada, embodies the transient nature of Nevada’s mining frontier, rising from a gold discovery in 1890 to a bustling camp by 1907, only to fade into obscurity by the mid-20th century. Its history, intertwined with the Lost Breyfogle legend and the contributions of figures like “Indian Johnnie,” reflects the optimism and hardship of the American West. Today, preserved by the Pahrump Valley Museum, Johnnie’s remnants serve as a testament to its brief but vibrant past, offering a glimpse into Nevada’s mining heritage for historians and visitors on guided tours.

Troy Nevada – Nye County Ghost Town

In May 1867, prospector Alexander Beatty worked the the Grant Mountain range when he discovered silver and founded the town site of Troy, in Nye County, Nevada. Beatty quickly stacked five different claims in the valley. In 1868, Beatty started the Troy Mining District.

Troy Nevada is located in Nye County, Nevada.

In 1868, the town attracted a group of investors from England. After prospecting and exploring the area, these investors purchased Beattys mining claims and The Troy Silver Mining Company was founded in 1870.

The little town of Troy, in 1871 was home to seventy miners and their families. Their needs were meet with two general stores, a school, blacksmith shop, boarding house and an unofficial post office. The Troy Silver Mining company invested some $500,000.00 into the mining facilities and built a modern 20-stamp mill and furnaces.

Despite fund raising, the new mining company was not destined to be the next great boom town. The mines never produced as anticipated and by 1872 the company was on the verge of going under. In 1873 a new manager was able to get silver production up to keep the mines open. Flooding in the mines and the speculation from the flooding caused the stock prices to plummet. Despite this news, the stock holders voted to keep mining operations in place.

In 1876, the end finally came for Troy when the mines were closed and the assets sold and moved including the mills and furnaces. In December of that year, the Troy Silver Mining Company was dissolved.

George Sharp, a nearby rancher, purchased the mine site for back taxes in 1902. He demolished one of the two furnace chimneys for the raw materials for his ranch. Sharp sold the claims to the Birdno family.

The mining camp saw various revivals over the next 50 years. The population would teeter back and forth between 1904 – 1920. The Birdo Family sold out the claims and divested in 1936.

The final operations in the valley started in 1946 when the Locke Mine was opened above the town of Troy by Joseph Hafen. The Locke Mine produced gold and pipe delivered to water up to the mine to produce electricity for a mill which was assembled. The Locke Mined operated until the mid 1960s.

Town Summary

NameTroy Nevada
LocationNye County, Nevada
Latitude, Longitude38.34578302126987, -115.57371331915309
Elevation6000 feet
Population100

Troy Nevada Trail Map

References

Bullionville Nevada – Lincoln County Ghost Town

Bullionville, Nevada, is a ghost town in Lincoln County, located approximately one-quarter mile east of U.S. Route 93, one mile north of Panaca, and ten miles south of Pioche. This report explores the history of Bullionville, a short-lived but significant milling town that thrived from 1870 to 1882, driven by its strategic water resources and proximity to the silver mines of Pioche. Drawing from historical records, this account details its establishment, growth, decline, and lasting remnants.

Bullionville, Nevada, Horse-driven slip scrapers retrieve tailings to dump onto a conveyor and then dropped into a freight car. Before 1880
Bullionville, Nevada, Horse-driven slip scrapers retrieve tailings to dump onto a conveyor and then dropped into a freight car. Before 1880

Establishment and Early Development (1870–1872)

Bullionville was founded in February 1870 when John H. Ely and W.H. Raymond relocated a five-stamp mill from Hiko to a site selected for its reliable water supply from Meadow Valley Creek, a northern tributary of the Colorado River. Initially named Ely City, the settlement was renamed Bullionville later that year. The availability of water made it an ideal location for milling operations, prompting the construction of additional mills to process ore from nearby Pioche mines. Between 1870 and 1872, most of Pioche’s mills were established in Bullionville due to this advantage. The 1870 Federal Census recorded 96 residents, indicating early growth.

In 1872, construction began on the Pioche and Bullionville Railroad, a 21-mile narrow-gauge line costing $255,000, designed to transport ore from Pioche mines to Bullionville’s mills. Completed in 1873, the railroad facilitated efficient ore processing and spurred further development.

Peak Prosperity (1872–1875)

Bullionville experienced rapid growth between 1872 and 1875, reaching a population of approximately 500 by 1875. The town boasted five mills with a total of 110 stamps, making it a regional hub for ore processing. It also housed the first iron foundry in eastern Nevada, reflecting its industrial significance. The community supported a range of businesses, including hotels, stores, multiple saloons, blacksmith shops, and a daily stage service to Pioche. A post office opened in April 1874, further solidifying its status as a burgeoning settlement.

The Panaca Summit Charcoal Kilns, built in the mid-1870s, supported Bullionville’s mills by producing charcoal, a critical fuel for smelting silver ore. Constructed by skilled stone masons using rhyolitic tuff and operated by Swiss and Italian woodcutters known as “Carbonari,” these kilns processed up to 50 cords of wood per cycle, yielding enough charcoal to smelt one ton of ore per 30 bushels. The kilns, located near Panaca, operated until the late 1890s, outlasting Bullionville’s peak.

Decline and Abandonment (1875–1898)

The construction of a water system connecting Bullionville to Pioche in 1875 marked the beginning of the town’s decline. This system enabled Pioche to support its own milling operations, reducing the need for Bullionville’s facilities. Between 1875 and 1877, most mills were relocated to Pioche, and the Pioche and Bullionville Railroad ceased operations by 1880. The 1880 Federal Census reported only 68 residents, a sharp decline from the town’s peak.

In 1880, an attempt was made to sustain Bullionville by erecting a plant to process tailings left by the former mills. However, this effort failed to reverse the town’s fortunes. The post office closed in November 1886, briefly reopened from October 1892 to July 1898, and closed permanently thereafter. By 1900, the Federal Census recorded only two families, the Morgans (3 members) and the Clarks (10 members), residing in Bullionville. The town was effectively abandoned by the early 20th century.

Legacy and Current State

Today, Bullionville is a ghost town with few physical remnants. The Bullionville Cemetery, accessible via a short trail at Cathedral Gorge State Park, is one of the primary surviving features, documented in the 1980s as part of the Civic Historical Research Project led by Paul Vance. The cemetery offers insight into the lives of early residents, though no original buildings remain. The Nevada State Historical Marker No. 203, located along U.S. Route 93 one mile north of Panaca, commemorates Bullionville’s history.

Photographic evidence from the Nevada Historical Society, including images of mining operations circa 1910–1912, provides visual documentation of Bullionville’s industrial past. The Panaca Summit Charcoal Kilns, still standing, serve as a testament to the region’s mining heritage.

Conclusion

Bullionville, Nevada, was a fleeting but vital component of Lincoln County’s mining economy in the 1870s. Its strategic location and water resources fueled a brief period of prosperity, marked by industrial innovation and community growth. However, the development of infrastructure in Pioche led to its rapid decline, leaving Bullionville as a ghost town by the late 19th century. Its cemetery, historical marker, and nearby charcoal kilns preserve its legacy, offering a glimpse into Nevada’s boom-and-bust mining history.

Directions

Buillionville is located about 10 miles south of Pioche, near the intersection of the 319 and 93, Great Basin Highway. The Bullionville cemetary is located after a short hike in the Cathedral Gorge State Park.

Town Summary

TownBullionville
Latitude, Longitude37.803333, -114.406944
Elevation5220
Post OfficeApril 1874 – November 1886
October 1892 – July 1898
Nevada State Historic Marker203
Population500

Nevada State Historic Marker

Bullionville began early in 1870 when John H. Ely and W.H. Raymond removed their five-stamp mill at Hiko and placed it at this point. The enterprise prospered and during the next two years most of nearby Pioche’s mills were located here because of the proximity to water. A twenty-one mile narrow gauge railroad, the Pioche and Bullionville, was completed in 1873 at a cost of $255,000 to haul ore from the Pioche mines to the reduction mills. Bullionville grew rapidly and by 1875 it had five mills, a population of 500 and the first iron foundry in eastern Nevada. During the same year a water works was constructed at Pioche which eventually led to the relocation of the mills. Although a plant was erected here in 1880 to work the tailings deposited by the former mills, this failed to prevent the decline of Bullionville.

Nevada State Historic Marker

Bullionville Trail Map

Resources

Bodie California – Mono County Ghost Town

Bodie, California is the ghost town by which all others are judged.  Located at 8300 in the Bodie Hills above Mono Lake, Bodie is the largest and perhaps best preserved ghost town in America. Established as a ghost town and state park in 1962, the town site is now administered by the Bodie Foundation.

Currently preserved in “Arrested Decay” a condition and phrase coined by the State of California for the Bodie, the town site is preserved as it was found in 1962. This essentially maintains the structures as the were at that time, and work may be done to keep them to that standard. Some buildings get new roofs, windows sealed and foundation rebuilt to preserve the state of degradation. It is because of this forward thinking policy that the town remains in the state of decline that it does.

The Standard Mill, Bodie, CA. Photograph by James L Rathbun
The Standard Mill, Bodie, CA. Photograph by James L Rathbun

I remember my first visit to Bodie was probably in the the late 1970’s.  My father drove our old Ford truck into the town, and as I jumped out my eyes found the old Standard Mill.  The Standard Mill still dominates the valley with its grayish-blue siding, multiple smoke stakes and extreme size.  The Standard Mill is the most intact mill in California and processed over $14 million dollars in gold during its 25 years of service.

Evelyn Myers, a three year old girls grave marker located in Bodie, CA reminds us that not all mine camps were filled with men. Photograph by James L Rathbun
Evelyn Myers, a three year old girls grave marker located in Bodie, CA reminds us that not all mine camps were filled with men. Photograph by James L Rathbun

Formed in 1859, the town under went several mining booms, busts and fires.  At it’s peak in 1879, Bodie hosted 5000 – 7000 souls, 65 saloons, a “Redlight” district, a china town, four volunteer fire stations, several newspapers, churches and of coarse, a Jail.  Bodie maintain a rough reputation over the years and suffers from murders, shoot outs, stage robberies and the odd bar room brawl.

They say you were wild and woolly, Bodie

And fast on the draw as them make ’em;

That you lived at ease with the bad and the bold,

Who thought nothing of shooting a man down cold,

And defying the law to take ’em

Lillian Ninnis

By 1910 the population settled at about 700 people, mostly families, as the miners and those who service the miners moved on to more prosperous areas.  The last printed paper was in 1912, and signaled the beginning of the end for the scrappy little town.  Although labelled a ghost town in 1915, Bodie continued to linger and dwindle is size until 1940 when the Post Office closed.

The interior of a general store is virtually the way it was when the store owner left Bodie, Photograph by James L Rathbun
The interior of a general store is virtually the way it was when the store owner left Bodie, Photograph by James L Rathbun

Under threat and vandalism the state of California took over the town site, and currently hosts some 200,000 visitors per year.

Remote locations, harsh weather and rustic builds make Bodie is a popular site for photographers.

The road into Bodie is accessible to almost any vehicle, but can server as a launch point the many back roads and trails. Nearby attractions are Masonic, Chemung and Aurora who like to get off the beaten path.

A weathered wagon wheel in Bodie reminds us of a bygone era. Photograph by James L Rathbun
A weathered wagon wheel in Bodie reminds us of a bygone era. Photograph by James L Rathbun
General Store still found in Bodie, California. Photograph by James L Rathbun
General Store still found in Bodie, California. Photograph by James L Rathbun

Gold was first discovered in the Mono Lake region in 1352 and placer gold was then discovered at the future site of Bodie in July, 1859* by William S. Body. On July 10, 1860, the Bodie Mining District was organized. In August, 1859 quarts veins were also discovered in the area, but the lack of -water and the extreme difficulties of transporting supplies and equipment over the mountains and desert tended to severely restrict mining activities at Bodie for some time. From 1860 to 1877, Bodie polled only some 20 votes a year, and in 1865 the town still had only SOP 14 small frame and adobe houses.
In 1876-77, however, new quartz discoveries were made at the Bodie and Standard mines, touching off a great gold rush to Bodie in 1878. From a few shacks, a term of some 250 wooden buildings rapidly appeared in the desert and the population leaped to 10,000 or 12,000 persons, with the usual assortment of gambling dens, breweries, saloons, and the nightly shootings, stabbings and brawls. Bodie soon merited the title of “Shooters Town,” and a “Bad Man from Bodie” was then universally recognized to be a particularly unpleasant individual. In 1879, when Bodie reached its pinnacle, its main street was over a-mile long and built solidly with one and two-story frame buildings. In 1881 a 32- mile narrow gauge railroad was constructed from Mono Lake to Bodie to carry in fuel and lumber. % 1883, however, the boom was over and all but the Bodie and Standard mines closed down; these two mines finally consolidated in 1887. In 1895 Bodie had a small revival when the cyanide process of recovering gold was put in use, Mining continued intermittently up to World War II, when Bodie finally became a true ghost town.

NATIONAL SURVEY OF HISTORIC SITES AND BUILDINGS

Historic Images

Town Summary

NameBodie
LocationMono County, California
Latitude, Longitute38.2121, -119.0120
GNIS1658094
NewspaperBodie Standard 1878 – ?
Bodie Morning News
National Historic Landmark66000213

Bodie Map

Bodie Photo Gallery

Bodie Historic Events

"Bodie Bill" - Age 2 1/2 years - Firebug of the Bodie Fire, June 23, 1932

Bodie Fire June 23, 1932

The Fire of June 23, 1932, stands as one of the most devastating events in the history of Bodie, California, the once-thriving gold-mining boomtown in…
A vintage photo of the Standard Mill in Bodie as it appeared sometime during the 1980s. Photo by Paul Wight

Standard Mine Magazine Explosion – July 14, 1879

A vintage photo of the Standard Mill in Bodie as it appeared sometime during the 1980s. Photo by Paul Wight Bodie, California, emerged as a…
Miners Hall, Bodie, California - Photo by James L Rathbun

Treloar Murder January 14, 1881

Bodie, California, was a booming gold mining town in Mono County during the late 1870s and early 1880s, with a population peaking around 8,000-10,000 residents.…

Bodie Points of Interest

The Standard Mill, Bodie, CA. Photograph by James L Rathbun

Bodie and Aurora rivalry continues to this day

Two towns located in the hills above Mono Lake maintain, the Bodie and Aurora rivalry continues even now, long past their demise.  Bodie, CA and…
Bodie Railway and Lumber Company Locomotive. Photo courtesy of McDonnell sisters.

Bodie and Benton Railroad

The Bodie and Benton Railway operated for about thirty eights years, supplying the town of Bodie, California. The narrow gauge railroad travelled north, from the…
Evelyn Myers, a three year old girls grave marker located in Bodie, CA reminds us that not all mine camps were filled with men. Photograph by James L Rathbun

Bodie Cemetery

Nestled on a sagebrush-covered ridge overlooking the remnants of Bodie State Historic Park in Mono County, California, the Bodie Cemetery stands as a poignant testament…
The Boone store and warehouse located on the corner of Green Street & Main Stree in Bodie, CA. Photo James L Rathbun

Boone Store and Warehouse – Bodie California

The Boone store and warehouse located on the corner of Green Street & Main Stree in Bodie, CA. Photo James L Rathbun The Boone Store…

DeChambeau Hotel – Bodie California

The DeChambeau Hotel is a historic brick building located in Bodie, California, a once-thriving gold-mining boomtown that has since become one of the most well-preserved…

Firehouse – Bodie California

The firehouse in Bodie stands as a poignant symbol of the town's efforts to combat these threats, reflecting both the ambition of its heyday and…

IOOF Building – Bodie California

The Independent Order of Odd Fellows (IOOF) Building, also known as the I.O.O.F. Hall, is a prominent wooden structure located on Main Street in Bodie,…
J. S. Cain House i Bodie, California. Photo by James Rathbun

J. S. Cain House – Bodie California

J. S. Cain House i Bodie, California. Photo by James Rathbun The J.S. Cain House, located at the corner of Green and Park Streets in…
The Methodist Church found on Green Street in Bodie, CA. Photo by James L Rathbun

Methodist Church – Bodie California

Bodie, California, is a preserved ghost town and state historic park located in Mono County, east of the Sierra Nevada mountains. Once a bustling gold-mining…
Exterior View of the miners hall in Bodie, CA Photo by James Rathbun

Miners Union Hall – Bodie, California

Exterior View of the miners hall in Bodie, CA Photo by James Rathbun Bodie, California, is a well-preserved ghost town located in Mono County, east…

Sawmill – Bodie, California

The sawmill in Bodie, California, is a preserved structure within Bodie State Historic Park, a ghost town in Mono County that once thrived as a…
The Hoover House served as housing for the Director of Operations of the Standard Mill in Bodie. Photography by James L Rathbun

The Hoover House

The Hoover House, located in Bodie, California, is a significant part of the town's rich history. Bodie itself is a well-preserved ghost town that exemplifies…
Looking up at the trestle bridge which is used to haul gold ore into the Standard Mill, Bodie, CA. Two large mortar boxes are visible in the foreground. Photograph by James L Rathbun

The Standard Mill – Bodie, CA

The Standard Mill, also known as the Standard Consolidated Mining Company Mill, was a pivotal element in the history of Bodie, California. The building is…

Wheaton and Hollis Hotel – Bodie, California

The Wheaton and Hollis Hotel, a weathered wooden structure on Main Street in the ghost town of Bodie, California, exemplifies the transient and multifaceted nature…

Bodie Townspeople

Eleanora Dumont

Eleanora Dumont

Eleanora Dumont Eleanora Dumont, born around 1829, likely in New Orleans or of French Creole descent, was a famed American gambler known as Madame Mustache.…

James Stuart Cain

James Stuart Cain (April 17, 1853 - October 28, 1938) was a business man and entrepreneur who lived and worked in the mining town of…
Rosa May, Born Rosa Elizabeth White in January 1855

Rosa May

Rosa May, Born Rosa Elizabeth White in January 1855 Rosa May was a prostitute and madam in Bodie, California, during the late 19th and early…
Theodore Hoover in Bodie, Calif., 1904

Theodore Jesse Hoover

Theodore Hoover in Bodie, Calif., 1904 Early Life and Education Theodore Jesse Hoover was born on January 28, 1871, in West Branch, Iowa. He was…

Waterman S Bodey

Waterman S Bodey (14 May 1814 - 9 Dec 1859 ) was a prospector whose name became immortalized in the annals of American mining history through…

Bodie Historic Events

"Bodie Bill" - Age 2 1/2 years - Firebug of the Bodie Fire, June 23, 1932

Bodie Fire June 23, 1932

The Fire of June 23, 1932, stands as one of the most devastating events in the history of Bodie, California, the once-thriving gold-mining boomtown in…
A vintage photo of the Standard Mill in Bodie as it appeared sometime during the 1980s. Photo by Paul Wight

Standard Mine Magazine Explosion – July 14, 1879

A vintage photo of the Standard Mill in Bodie as it appeared sometime during the 1980s. Photo by Paul Wight Bodie, California, emerged as a…
Miners Hall, Bodie, California - Photo by James L Rathbun

Treloar Murder January 14, 1881

Bodie, California, was a booming gold mining town in Mono County during the late 1870s and early 1880s, with a population peaking around 8,000-10,000 residents.…

Bodie Newspapers

Bodie Evening Miner Newspaper

The Bodie Evening Miner was a key newspaper in Bodie, California, a bustling gold-mining town in Mono County that reached its zenith in the late…
Bodie Standard News, Bodie, Mono County, California

Bodie Standard News

Bodie Standard News, Bodie, Mono County, California The Bodie Standard News, originally known as the Standard and later as the Bodie Standard, was a cornerstone…
Daily Free Press - Bodie, California

Daily Free Press

Daily Free Press - Bodie, California The Daily Free Press was a prominent newspaper in Bodie, California, a gold-mining boomtown in Mono County that flourished…
The Bodie Chronicle, Bodie, Mono County Newspaper

The Bodie Chronicle Newspaper

The Bodie Chronicle, Bodie, Mono County Newspaper The Bodie Chronicle was a short-lived but notable newspaper in Bodie, California, a gold-mining boomtown in Mono County…
The Bodie Morning News Newspaper

The Bodie Morning News

The Bodie Morning News Newspaper The Bodie Morning News was a short-lived but significant publication in the bustling mining town of Bodie, California, during the…

Further Reading

Pathway Through Parks written by Carl S Chavez

A Pathway Through Parks

Pathway Through Parks written by Carl S Chavez "Bodie, the very sound of that name conjures up images of "The Bad Man From Bodie", a…
Bodie: 1859-1962 (Images of America) - Author Terri Lynn Geissinger

Bodie: 1859-1962 (Images of America)

Bodie: 1859-1962 (Images of America) - Author Terri Lynn Geissinger Nestled amongst the sage-covered, windswept hills of California’s Eastern Sierra is the site of one…
Bodie, Good Time and Bad - Author Nicholas Clapp

Bodie: Good Times & Bad

Bodie, Good Time and Bad - Author Nicholas Clapp Author Nicholas Clapp and photographer Will Furman portray Bodie in both vivid words and stunning photography—a…

Resources

Grantsville Nevada – Nye County Ghost Town

Grantsville Nevada 1886
Grantsville Nevada 1886

Named for Ulysses S. Grant, Grantsville Nevada is a ghost town and gold mining camp located in Nye County Nevada. Initial prospecting in the area which became Grantsville began in 1863 when gold was discovered by  P. A. Haven in the Union District. The camp was founded where a nest of ledges was worked. Initially the area was promoted by  P. A. Haven and lots were sold between $50 and $500, the the fledgling town was off to a good start. Soon the valley was home to about 50 people seeking fortune.

In 1877, a large mining company, the Alexander Mining Co. invested into the town and the small community started to show some promise. The mining company built a 20 stamp mill to process the ore produced by the nearby mines. Following the new investment, the population ballooned up to about 1000 people. The citizens brought commerce and soon the town supported the usual assortment of hotels, drug stores, general stores, blacksmiths and the ever profitable saloons. The town was served by two papers, the weekly Sun and later the Bonanza replaced the Sun’s weekly paper. Grantsville is also known to have a jeweler and brewery which was not commonly found in every boomtown.

Ulysses S. Grant - 1870-1880 - Brady-Handy Photograph Collection, Library of Congress
Ulysses S. Grant – 1870-1880 – Brady-Handy Photograph Collection, Library of Congress

The Grantsville post office opened in 1879 to supported the town. The Alexander Mining Co, expanded its milling operations by doubling the size of the mill from 20 to 40 stamps. The town had two stage routes running to Autin via a route through Ione and Eureka via the town of Belmont. Considerations were made from a train line with the Nevada Central. 1881 saw the opening of a bank and an express office to supply the town and its forty odd businesses. The citizens of Grantsville kept themselves entertained with dances, banquets and the odd baseball game to which the winner might received a keg of lager.

Despite the seemly solid financial foundation and commerce, the town population began to slowly fade in the 1880s and by 1884 the population fell to 400. Two years later the population was just 50 and the post office was closed in October 1887. There were several attempts to restart the mines, however none of these subsequent operations lasted for long.

Grantsville Town Summary

NameGrantsville
LocationNye County Nevada
Latitude, Longitude38.8454829, -117.5731563
Elevation2141 meters / 7025 feet
GNIS859881
Population400
NewspaperGrantsville Sun Oct 19, 1878 – Apr 16, 1879
Grantsville Bonanza May 7, July 30, 1881

Grantsville Nevada Trail Map

Resources