Nevadaville, Colorado, is a historic gold-mining town in Gilpin County, located in the Rocky Mountains just west of Central City at an elevation of approximately 9,000 feet. Now largely a ghost town with only a handful of residents (around 6 as of recent records), it represents a classic example of Colorado’s boom-and-bust mining history during the Pike’s Peak Gold Rush era.
Founding and Early Growth (1859–1860s)
Nevadaville traces its origins to 1859, shortly after John H. Gregory discovered the first significant lode gold deposits in the area (known as Gregory Gulch or Gregory Digging). At the time, the region was part of western Kansas Territory. The settlement initially formed as a camp for miners working nearby claims, particularly the Burroughs lode and Kansas lode. It was first known simply as Nevada or Nevada City (and sometimes associated with Bald Mountain), with the post office later operating as Bald Mountain to avoid confusion with other “Nevada” towns.
The town quickly attracted hundreds of prospectors, many of them Irish immigrants, who lived and worked in the crowded Gregory Gulch area alongside neighboring settlements like Central City (the social and economic hub) and Black Hawk (the smelting and industrial center). Nevadaville served primarily as a working-class residential community for miners. By 1860–1861, it had grown rapidly, boasting quartz mills (around 20–40 in the vicinity), stores, hotels, private dwellings, and a population that reportedly reached about 2,705—slightly larger than Denver’s at the time (around 2,603). Some accounts suggest it approached or exceeded 4,000 residents in its broader peak period.
Early institutions included a Masonic lodge organized in 1859 (initially Nevada Number 36 under the Kansas Grand Lodge, later becoming Nevada Lodge Number 4 under the new Colorado jurisdiction). A large fire in 1861 destroyed over 50 buildings, including a boardinghouse run by naturalist Martha Maxwell, but the town was quickly rebuilt.
Peak Prosperity (1870s–1890s)
The name changed to Nevadaville around 1870. The town continued to thrive as gold mining expanded, supported by stamp mills and other infrastructure. It featured saloons, a general store/trading post, city hall (which also served as a fire department and jail), churches, a school, and other businesses typical of frontier mining communities. The population hovered around 900–1,100 in the 1870–1890 census periods, with a predominantly working-class character compared to its flashier neighbors.
Colorado achieved statehood in 1876, and Nevadaville benefited from the broader mining economy in Gilpin County, one of the state’s earliest and richest gold districts. However, it faced challenges, including another major fire in 1887 that damaged much of the commercial district. Structures were often rebuilt using more durable stone foundations and brick. A second fire or economic pressures in the late 19th century further tested resilience, but the town persisted into the 1890s.
Decline and Transition to Ghost Town (1900s–1930s)
The primary cause of Nevadaville’s decline was the exhaustion of easily accessible gold (and later silver) ores around 1900. As mines played out, miners and families moved away in search of new opportunities. Economic factors like the Panic of 1893 accelerated the downturn. Census data shows a sharp drop: 823 in 1900, 367 in 1910, 51 in 1920, and just 2 by 1930. By the 1920s–1930s, most buildings were abandoned, demolished, or left to decay; two-thirds had vanished by the mid-1950s.
The town never fully recovered, unlike Central City and Black Hawk, which later benefited from gambling legalization in the 1990s. Nevadaville remained isolated and largely deserted, with scattered mine ruins, foundations, and a few grave sites dotting the hillsides.
Modern Era and Preservation
Today, Nevadaville is a semi-ghost town. A small number of private residents (estimates vary from 2 to 6) still live there, and visitors can drive or walk along the public Main Street to view remaining historic structures from the road. Key surviving buildings include:
- The Nevadaville Masonic Lodge #4 (built in the 1870s), Colorado’s only active “ghost town lodge,” which still holds meetings thanks to ongoing efforts by Freemasons to preserve it.
- The Kramer Saloon (or Joseph Kramer’s Saloon), City Hall (with basement jail cells), Bon-Ton Saloon, and Bald Mountain Trading Post/General Store.
All buildings and land are privately owned, so exploration beyond public roads is restricted and discouraged due to safety hazards from unstable structures and old mine shafts. The site is part of the broader Central City–Black Hawk–Nevadaville National Historic Landmark District.
The Nevadaville Heritage Foundation works to preserve the site’s history, restore remaining elements, and educate visitors about its frontier legacy. Some accounts describe it as potentially haunted, adding to its allure for paranormal enthusiasts, though its primary draw remains its tangible connection to Colorado’s Gold Rush past.
Significance
Nevadaville exemplifies the rapid rise and fall of Rocky Mountain mining towns. Born from the 1859 gold discovery that helped spark Colorado’s development, it grew into a vibrant community rivaling Denver before fading as resources depleted. Its story highlights themes of immigration (especially Irish miners), frontier resilience amid fires and economic panics, and the transient nature of boomtowns. While much has been lost to time, the surviving Masonic Lodge and scattered ruins serve as quiet reminders of a once-thriving “working man’s” town in Gregory Gulch.
For further reading, sources like Gulch of Gold by Caroline Bancroft or local historical archives provide deeper details on daily life, specific mines, and families who lived there. Visitors to the Central City area can easily stop by for a scenic drive-through, ideally before dusk, while respecting private property.
