Monte Cristo, Sierra County, California
Monte Cristo, California | |
---|---|
Coordinates: 39°35′47″N 120°51′27″W / 39.59639°N 120.85750°W | |
Country | United States |
State | California |
County | Sierra Nevada |
Time zone | UTC-8 (Pacific Standard Time) |
• Summer (DST) | UTC-7 (Pacific Daylight Time) |
Area code | 530 |
Monte Cristo was a mining camp in Sierra County in the U.S. state of California,[1] near California State Route 49 and Downieville. Monte Cristo can be reached by trails from Downieville. One of the main trails is at the ridge between Goodyears Creek and the North Fork of the North Yuba River. There are views of the Excelsior Mine on Goodyears Creek four miles northwest of Downieville near Monte Cristo. Goodyears Bar, California is nearby. The mines at Fir Cap, two miles from Monte Cristo, were once rich with gold.[2]
History
Monte Cristo was one of the richest mining camps from 1855 to 1860. In the 1859 election, almost one thousand votes were cast.[2] Monte Cristo produced from the 1850s hundreds of thousands dollar's worth of gold.[3]
In 1855, B. C. Stevens was the owner of a livery stable at Monte Cristo, Sierra county. He had a livery stable, which became insolvent. As a result, Isaac Stevens attempted to recover possession of horses, mules, hay, barley, and saddles, which the town sheriff levied upon.[4]
On April 22, 1859, the Sacramento Daily Union reported:
LAND SLIDE AT MONTE CRISTO, IN SIERRA COUNTY. Four Persons Burled Alive. By Freeman & Co.'s Express we received last night a copy of the Sierra Democrat extra, under date of April 19th, containing the following particulars of a sad casualty at Monte Cristo, in Sierra county.[5]
On September 29, 1859 there was a major fire in the town of Monte Cristo. The Sierra Democrat gave a description of the fire:
FIRE AT MONTE CRISTO, At about 2 o'clock of Monday afternoon, a fire was discovered in the dump house of the Swanto tunnel, supposed to have originated in the blacksmith shop. The wind was high, and before a sufficient number of men to do any good had been alarmed, the flames spread to the neighboring buildings, and passed all mastery. The upper part of the town was all inflames in a few minutes, and before half an hour elapsed, the whole village was a red ruin.[3]
On February 28, 1860, the Sacramento Daily Union reported delegates from Monte Cristo for the Democratic State Convention. Mining claims were made along the Goodyears Creek, as well as a half-dozen mining tunnels.[2]
There were several businesses in Monte Cristo, including a saloon, drug and variety store, an attorney's office, a physician and surgeon and a butcher shop, among others.[6][3]
Mining continued to be active through the 1860s into the 1870s at Monte Cristo. Placer mining was the most prevalent mining. There are reports of miners at Monte Cristo in the 1900s as well. In 1903, the White Bear channel was discovered that ran to Monte Cristo. The Monte Cristo Company worked the channel taking out $200,000 worth of gold. In 1911, the Monte Cristo Gravel Mines Company took out gold from the gravel they excavated.[3]
Geography
The former Monte Cristo Mine is located 5,280 feet (1,610 m) above sea level at 39°35′46″N 120°51′28″W / 39.59611°N 120.85778°W.[7]
The White Bear channel runs through Saddleback Mountain and Fir Cap, passing through Cooper Ranch under Monte Cristo. The characteristics of the gravel of this channel is a large amount of clean white quartz boulders.[8]
References
- ^ "Monte Cristo (historical)". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey, United States Department of the Interior. Retrieved March 11, 2020.
- ^ a b c The Auriferous Gravels of the Sierra Nevada of California, Josiah Dwight Whitney, Cambridge, Vol. 6, Massachusetts, 1880
- ^ a b c d History of Sierra County - Volume V "Over North" in Sierra County, James J. Sinnott
- ^ Appeal from the Seventeenth District Reports of Cases Determined in The Supreme Court of the State Of California, 1887
- ^ Sacramento Daily Union, Volume 17, Number 2518, 22 April 1859
- ^ Pen Portraits, Autobiographies of State Officers, R. R. Parkinson, 1878, page 55
- ^ "Monte Cristo Mine". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey, United States Department of the Interior. Retrieved March 11, 2020.
- ^ Gold placers of California. California Mining Bureau, Haley, C.S. (1923), Bulletin 92, 167, page 126.