Genoa Station – Pony Express

Originally part of the Utah Territory, Genoa is a former Pony Express Station and unincorporated community in Douglas County, Nevada. The settlement was first founded in 1850 by Mormon Settlers when they founded the Mormon Station as a trading post for travelers bound for California. The original trading post operates in a roofless log enclosure built by H.S. Beatie and other Mormon settlers.

Simpson expedition, Genoa, Nevada, 1859
Simpson expedition, Genoa, Nevada, 1859

Travelers along the Carson Route to California could purchase supplies such clothing, tobacco, meat, canned goods, coffee, beans, sugar, flour and bacon. In 1852, the settlement hosts heavy emigrant traffic and a supports a post office, sawmills and blacksmith.

Pony Express

Most historical sources agree on the identity of Genoa as a station as well. However, James Pierson also identifies the site as the Old Mormon Station. The old post office also served as the station, which seems rather on point. The livery stable across the street supplied riders with fresh horses.

Much of Genoa, including the original fort, station, and hotel, was destroyed in a fire in 1910, but a replica of the fort was built in 1947. In 1976 the post office site was a vacant lot, and a picnic area occupied the livery stable location.

Nevada's first permanent building, Genoa trading post, established 1850
Nevada’s first permanent building, Genoa trading post, established 1850

Cheers

Genoa is home to the oldest bar in the state of Nevada, which opened in 1853

Genoa Station Summary

NameGenoa Station
LocationDouglas County, Nevada
Latitude, Longitude39.0044, -119.8472
Other NamesMormon Station
GNIS859807
Post Office1852 –
NewspaperTerritorial Enterprise (1858 – 1860)
NPS Station Number165
Next Westbound StationVan Sickle’s Station
Nest Eastbound StationCarson City Station

References

Van Sickle’s Station – Pony Express

The Van Sickle’s Station is the second Pony Express Station encountered when traveling east from Friday’s Station at the California/Nevada State Line. The Van Sickle Station is located at the bottom of Old Kingsbury Grade in Carson Valley.

Van Sickle's Station 1870
Van Sickle’s Station 1870

In 1857, rancher Henry Van Sickle built a two-story hotel to server traveler’s on their way to California. The building contained with a bar, kitchen and a store. The location is well suited as a rest stop before the climb over the high Sierra Nevada. The location served as a Pony Express in 1860, where the riders could stop to change horses. The National Park Service does not list this station on their website, so it’s active participation in the Pony Express could be in doubt. The National Pony Express Associate does list this location as a station for the pony express. This station may be on some lists as the riders would travel near the location, and it could serve as a navigation point.

Henry Van Sickle killed the outlaw and murderer Sam Brown on July 6th, 1860. Van Sickle is fully exonerated on July 8th, 1860, when the coroners jury found “Death by a just dispensation of an all-wise providence at his own expense”.

Over time, the hotel fell into disrepair and was eventually torn down in 1909.  Today, much of the history surrounding this property has been preserved in the current residence which was re-constructed in 1944 from the still standing stone store, warehouse, bar and blacksmith buildings of the original station, using the original hand-hewn beams and stone from the old quarry

Van Sickle’s Station Trail Map

Location Summary

NameVan Sickle’s Station
LocationDouglas County, Nevada
Latitude, Longitude38.9415, -119.8382
Next Westbound Station Friday’s Station
Next Eastbound StationGenoa Station

References

Friday’s Station – Pony Express

Friday’s Station is Union Army Military Post and Pony Express Station located near Lake Tahoe, in Douglas County, Nevada. The two story building is originally built as an inn and pony express station in 1860. The station is designated as a home station, where extra horses, firearms, men and provision are kept.

Friday's Station was a Pony Express station at Lake Tahoe - (Nevada Historical Society
Friday’s Station was a Pony Express station at Lake Tahoe – (Nevada Historical Society

Originally, the buildings are intended for the Union Army in the District of California. The location is chosen for the pony express due to its proximety to Lake Tahoe and the state line. Becuase of its location, the station is refered to as the “Lakeside Station” by some. In April, 1860, Robert (Pony Bob) Haslam made the first ride and shipment of mail from Sacramento at Friday’s Station and made his first run to Buckland’s Station, a distance of seventy five miles to the east.

Friday's Station with five freight teams and a prairie schooner arriving.
Friday’s Station with five freight teams and a prairie schooner arriving.

After the pony express failed, the property operated as a resort known as the “Buttermilk Bonanza Ranch.” Today, the original buildings still state and recognized as California Historical Landmark #728 and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

Location Map

Location Summary

NameFriday’s Station
LocationDouglas County, Nevada
Other NamesLakeside Station
Park Cattle Company Residence
Buttermilk Bonanza Ranch
Latitude, Longitude38.9639,  -119.9347
Elevation6,324 feet
California Historical Landmark728
National Register of Historic Places86003259
NPS Station Number166
Next Westbound Station
Next Eastbound StationVan Sickle’s Station

References

Timothy H. O’Sullivan – Photographer

CDV of Timothy H. O'Sullivan with imprint of F.G. Ludlow, Carson City, Nevada Territory on verso. Taken between 1871–74 while O'Sullivan was the official photographer for the Wheeler Expedition.
CDV of Timothy H. O’Sullivan with imprint of F.G. Ludlow, Carson City, Nevada Territory on verso. Taken between 1871–74 while O’Sullivan was the official photographer for the Wheeler Expedition.

Timothy H. O’Sullivan (c. 1840 – January 14, 1882) was a photographer best known for of the Civil War and the western United States. O’Sullivan began his photography career as an apprentice in Mathew Brady’s Fulton Street gallery in New York City. He moved on to the Washington, D.C., branch managed by Alexander Gardner. In 1861. At the age of twenty-one, O’Sullivan joined Brady’s team of Civil War photographers.

Little is known about his early life. He was either born in Ireland or New Work City. As a teenager, Timothy was employed by Matthew Brady where he learn the newly invented craft of photography. When the Civil War broke out, he is commission as a first lieutenant in the Union Army, in 1861.

After the was, in 1867, Timothy H. O’Sullivan is hired by Clarence King to accompany the Geological Exploration of the Fortieth Parallel as a photographer. O’Sullivan was with the Survey for the seasons of 1867, 1868, 1869 and 1872.

During these expeditions, he is known to carry two or possibly three camera outfits which include a 9″x12″ and 8″x1O” plates and for stereoscopic views. He developed the plates in the field, as was necessary with the wet plate process, and worked in either a photographic tent or a mule-drawn ambulance wagon. The negatives were usually sent back to the Survey offices in Washington D.C. where they are printed.

In 1871, O’Sullivan join the geological surveys west of the one hundredth meridian, under the command of Lieutenant George M. Wheeler of the U.S. Corps of Engineers. Wheeler would caption O’Sullivan’s photographs with practical information useful in the later establishment of roads and rail routes and emphasized the west’s suitability for settlement.

In 1873, on another Wheeler expedition, O’Sullivan photographed the Zuni and Magia pueblos and the Canyon de Chelly and its remnants of a cliff-dwelling culture. He returned to Washington, D.C., in 1874 and made prints for the Army Corps of Engineers. Soon after being made chief photographer for the United States Treasury in 1880, O’Sullivan died of tuberculosis at age forty-one.

Sand dunes, 1867, Carson Desert Western Nevada RG 77 Records of the Office of the Chief of Engineers, 1789-1988 Photographic Album of the Geological Exploration of the Fortieth Parallel – The King Survey, 1867-1872 ARC ID 519530 77KS-3-160

Timothy H. O’Sullivan Portfolio

Gold Hill, Nevada Circa 1867, 1868 Photographer Timothy H. O'Sullivan
Gold Hill, Nevada Circa 1867, 1868 Photographer Timothy H. O’Sullivan

References

Hazen, Nevada – Churchill County Ghost Town

Hazen is an unincorporated community in Churchill County, Nevada, often described as a semi-ghost town. It sits on the high desert plain at an elevation of approximately 4,006 feet (1,221 m), about 12 miles (19 km) southeast of Fernley and 16 miles (26 km) northwest of Fallon. The site lies along the historic Southern Pacific Railroad (now part of the Union Pacific system) and U.S. Route 50 Alternate—the former alignment of the Lincoln Highway, U.S. Highway 40, and early U.S. 50.

"Saloons and disreputable places of Hazen (Nev.) June 24, 1905." By Lubkin - NARA - 532037.jpg
“Saloons and disreputable places of Hazen (Nev.) June 24, 1905.” By Lubkin – NARA – 532037.jpg

Geographically, Hazen occupies a strategic transportation corridor in the arid Great Basin, positioned between the Truckee River and Carson Sink regions. Its location made it an ideal junction for rail and highway traffic in the early 20th century, though modern interstates later bypassed it. Today, scattered buildings, railroad remnants, and a few ranches remain, with the area still traversed by active freight trains.

William "Nevada Red" Wood, was Hung on February 27th, 1905 in Hazen, Nevada
William “Nevada Red” Wood, was Hung on February 27th, 1905 in Hazen, Nevada

Early History/Founding

The immediate area had limited pre-1903 activity. In the late 1870s, J.M. Sturdevant operated a small station or roadhouse along the overland route from Wadsworth eastward, serving stage and wagon traffic. However, no formal town existed until the Southern Pacific Railroad (SP) realigned its transcontinental main line in 1902–1903. The railroad shifted eastward from the old Wadsworth route (bypassing the steep Hot Springs Grade), creating a new siding and construction camp at the site.

Hazen was officially established in 1903 and named for Union Army General William Babcock Hazen (1830–1887), a Civil War veteran who served under General William Tecumseh Sherman during the “March to the Sea” and fought in major battles such as Shiloh, Corinth, Murfreesboro, and Chickamauga. General Hazen had no known connection to Nevada and died long before the town’s founding; the name was simply “generously donated” as a railroad honor. A U.S. post office opened on April 25, 1904, formalizing the settlement.

Some secondary sources note possible scattered settlement as early as 1869, but Hazen does not appear on maps until the 1903 railroad development. The town quickly grew from a tent city into a modest rail stop with hotels, saloons, restaurants, and worker housing.

Economic Activities

Hazen’s economy revolved around two major early-20th-century infrastructure projects: the Southern Pacific Railroad and the Newlands Irrigation Project (Nevada’s first major federal reclamation effort, authorized under the 1902 Reclamation Act and championed by U.S. Senator Francis G. Newlands).

  • Railroad Hub: Hazen became a key division point and junction. In 1905, the Nevada & California Railroad (an SP subsidiary) completed a standard-gauge line from Hazen southward, linking the transcontinental main line to the narrow-gauge Carson & Colorado Railroad and tapping the booming mining districts of Tonopah and Goldfield. A branch line to Fallon was built in 1906–1907. By 1906, the SP had constructed a large roundhouse and fine depot at Hazen. These facilities supported passenger and freight traffic, including ore shipments from southern Nevada mines. Hotels and eating houses catered to rail crews and travelers.
  • Newlands Project Construction Camp: In 1904, the U.S. Reclamation Service (USRS, now Bureau of Reclamation) moved its headquarters and established a commissary in Hazen to support construction of Derby Dam, the Truckee Canal, and (later) Lahontan Dam. Hundreds of laborers lived in tents and rudimentary housing, driving demand for saloons, brothels, stores, and services. The project aimed to irrigate the arid Carson-Truckee basin for agriculture, transforming desert land into farmland—a hallmark of Progressive Era federal reclamation.
  • Supporting Industries: Local ranching and farming supplied food to rail and construction crews. By the 1910s, the Western Ore Purchasing Company operated a sampling and assay plant in Hazen, processing ore samples from Nevada’s mining camps before smelting. A small school, churches, and businesses (including the original Hazen Store, ca. 1904) served the population, which peaked around several hundred during boom years.

Hazen earned a reputation as one of Nevada’s toughest towns. With no resident sheriff, crime (robberies, assaults, and vice) was common in the construction camps. On February 27–28, 1905, a mob of about 30 men broke into the small wooden jail (built in 1904 near Constable Judd Allen’s hotel) and lynched ex-convict William “Red” Wood (also called “Nevada Red”), a morphine addict and suspected murderer who had been arrested for robbing the depot. He was hanged from a telegraph pole roughly 30 feet away—the last recorded lynching in Nevada history. No arrests followed.

Decline/Abandonment

Hazen’s peak proved short-lived. A devastating fire on August 23, 1908, started in the rear of a mercantile store and destroyed nearly the entire business district (including the post office, multiple hotels, saloons, restaurants, and stores), with losses estimated at $100,000. Explosions of stored dynamite and gasoline complicated firefighting, though the depot was saved.

The USRS relocated its offices to Fallon in 1908 as work shifted to Lahontan Dam (completed 1915), ending the construction boom. Many families stayed temporarily due to Fallon’s housing shortage, but economic activity slowed. A 1908 rebuild (e.g., the brick Palace Hotel) provided temporary relief, and the Lincoln Highway (1913) brought some auto traffic through town.

Long-term decline accelerated with transportation changes:

  • 1944 highway realignment bypassed the original townsite, forcing businesses (including the Hazen Store and post office) to relocate south to the new alignment.
  • Completion of Interstate 80 in the 1960s rerouted most cross-state traffic onto a four-lane freeway, leaving Hazen on the quieter Alternate U.S. 50.
  • Railroad traffic diminished as mining booms faded and highways competed; the Tonopah line was truncated, and the Fallon branch saw only sporadic use.

The post office operated until June 25, 1979 (with a brief temporary closure in 1977) and never reopened. By the late 20th century, Hazen had shrunk to a handful of residents, mostly ranchers, with many historic structures abandoned or demolished.

Legacy/Current Status

Hazen survives as a quiet, sparsely populated community that preserves echoes of Nevada’s railroad and reclamation eras. It is not fully abandoned but qualifies as a semi-ghost town, with a small number of residents and active railroad use. The Hawthorne Army Depot remains connected to the national rail network via a 120-mile spur originating at Hazen.

Notable surviving features include:

  • The Hazen Store (ca. 1904, later relocated and stuccoed), listed on the National Register of Historic Places for its architectural and transportation significance.
  • Foundations of the roundhouse, depot, and substation.
  • A small cemetery (with at least one recorded burial from 1906).
  • Remnants of worker housing and the former Recreation Inn.

A Nevada State Historic Marker (No. 178) commemorates the town’s founding, railroad role, Newlands Project ties, and the 1905 lynching. In recent decades, limited geothermal exploration has occurred nearby, but the area retains its remote, historic character. Hazen stands as a testament to the boom-and-bust cycles driven by federal infrastructure projects and rail expansion in early 20th-century Nevada.

Town Summary

NameHazen, Nevada
Other NamesHazen Station.
LocationChurchill County, Nevada
Latitude, Longitude39.5653, -119.0464
GNIS864634
Population250
Post Office1904 – Current
Elevation4,000 Feet
NewspaperThe Harvest

Hazen Historic Events

William "Nevada Red" Wood, was Hung on February 27th, 1905 in Hazen, Nevada

The Hanging of William “Nevada Red” Wood

Hazen, a small railroad and construction-camp settlement in Churchill County, Nevada, established in 1903 along the Southern Pacific Railroad, became a hub for workers on…

References