Dixie Valley, Nevada – Churchill County Ghost Town

Dixie Valley, located in Churchill County, Nevada, is a remote, north-south trending basin in the Great Basin desert, flanked by the Stillwater Range to the west and the Clan Alpine Mountains to the east. Situated roughly 50–70 miles northeast of Fallon (accessible via Dixie Valley Road north from U.S. Highway 50), the valley features artesian springs, lush meadows in places, and geothermal resources. It is now largely part of the U.S. Navy’s Fallon Range Training Complex (FRTC), used for military aviation training, including by the Navy’s “Top Gun” school at Naval Air Station Fallon.

Early Exploration and Mineral Interest (1860s)

Indigenous peoples, likely including the Northern Paiute, used the valley for hunting, camping, and resources for centuries prior to Euro-American arrival. White settlers first entered the area around 1860–1861 during the early mining boom following Nevada’s territorial period.

In 1861, interest in mineral resources led to the organization of the Dixie Marsh District. Settlers targeted salt, potash, and borax deposits, particularly from the Humboldt Salt Marsh (also called Dixie Marsh) at the head of the valley. A small settlement called Dixie (sometimes referred to as the abandoned town of Dixie) was established at the head of the valley and named by Southern sympathizers during the Civil War era. Some borax production occurred—reportedly as many as ten cars shipped—but mining activity was intermittent and largely declined by 1868. Silver and gold prospecting in surrounding mountains continued sporadically.

The valley floor itself saw limited early development, partly due to its isolation. Federal surveys initially labeled it “Osobb” before the Dixie name took hold.

Brief Mining Revivals and Short-Lived Camps (Early 1900s)

Mining excitement returned briefly in 1907 when word of a silver discovery near the marsh reached the nearby camp of Wonder. A new townsite named Dixie was laid out in June 1907, quickly growing to include five saloons, two general stores, restaurants, a hotel, assay office, bakery, and a population of about 200. The boom faded by the end of summer as prospects proved disappointing. Another short revival occurred around 1911–1912 under French promoters who renamed the camp “Marvel,” but it too failed.

A separate gold and silver operation, the Dixie Comstock Mine, saw activity starting in 1935, with most production through 1942 (halted by wartime restrictions on non-essential gold mining). Sporadic work continued later, but output remained modest.

Ranching Community (1910s–1980s)

Unlike many Nevada mining ghost towns, the lasting settlement in Dixie Valley was agricultural. The first ranching families arrived around 1914, drawn by abundant artesian wells and springs that created fertile meadows ideal for growing alfalfa and raising cattle. Additional families followed, establishing a scattered ranching community with up to about 50 families or ranches at its peak. Homes were often isolated, with neighbors more than a mile apart.

The community maintained a one-room schoolhouse (serving grades 1–8, with the teacher living on-site; older students bused to Fallon). It also functioned as a community hall for meetings, dances, and elections. A post office operated from March 7, 1918, to December 30, 1933. The population was recorded as 49 in the 1940 census. There were no retail businesses, reflecting the self-sufficient, isolated nature of life in this “slice of Eden” amid the desert.

The valley experienced a significant natural event on December 16, 1954, when a major earthquake doublet struck central Nevada. A magnitude ~7.1–7.2 Fairview Peak earthquake was followed just over four minutes later by a ~6.8–6.9 Dixie Valley earthquake. These events produced extensive surface ruptures (up to several meters of offset) along faults, including the east-dipping Dixie Valley fault, visible as prominent scarps today. Damage in the remote valley was limited, with no reported injuries.

Geothermal Development

Geothermal exploration intensified in the 1980s. A medium-sized Dixie Valley geothermal power plant (66 megawatts) came online in 1988, utilizing steam from production wells. It continues to operate with a small workforce, highlighting the valley’s significant geothermal resources tied to its fault system.

Acquisition by the U.S. Navy and Transition to Ghost Town (1980s–1995)

In the 1980s, the U.S. Navy sought to expand its training ranges around Naval Air Station Fallon to accommodate growing aviation needs, including low-level flight training and weapons ranges. Negotiations for the Dixie Valley area (part of a larger ~5,500-square-mile expansion) began around 1984. Many residents resisted, citing concerns over compensation, the need to leave despite the Navy primarily wanting airspace, and increasing jet noise and sonic booms that disrupted daily life.

Most residents eventually accepted offers and relocated, primarily to Fallon, Reno, or other areas, with a 90-day evacuation period for some. The Navy acquired the land in 1995, incorporating it into the Fallon Range Training Complex (FRTC). Many homesteads and structures were demolished or left to deteriorate, though some ruins, outbuildings, an abandoned school bus, and scattered remnants (including military vehicles like tanks used for training) remain. The old schoolhouse was reportedly burned by the Navy in the late 1980s. A small cemetery with a few graves persists as a quiet reminder of the community.

Today

Dixie Valley is now a “different kind of ghost town”—abandoned not by economic bust but by federal acquisition. The area features abandoned ranch ruins, visible 1954 earthquake scarps, geothermal infrastructure, and active military use with jets frequently overhead. Access is limited in parts due to Navy restrictions, but some roads and viewpoints allow public exploration (check current regulations with the BLM or Navy). The valley retains its stark beauty, with springs, meadows, and desert expanses.

Dixie Valley exemplifies multiple layers of Nevada history: early mineral exploration during the Civil War era, 20th-century ranching resilience in a harsh environment, seismic activity along the Central Nevada Seismic Belt, renewable energy development, and modern military expansion. Its story contrasts with typical boom-and-bust mining towns, highlighting instead the tensions between civilian communities and federal land-use priorities in the American West. Ruins and interpretive remnants provide a tangible link to these chapters.