Rochester, Nevada

Rochester, Nevada

Rochester, Nevada was a gold-mining town in Pershing County, Nevada, approximately 110 miles east of Reno. It is now a ghost town. Lower Rochester is still available to visitors; Upper Rochester has been buried under mine tailings of the more recent Coeur Rochester open pit mine.

History

Rochester is the collective name for three different sites: Rochester Heights, Upper Rochester, and Lower Rochester, spread out along a three-mile stretch of Rochester Canyon. When gold was discovered here in the 1860's by immigrants from Rochester, New York, there was only one camp, at the upper end of the canyon. Later this would become known as Rochester Heights (often, along with Upper Rochester, called “Old Town”). Exploration and mining was on a fairly small scale from the 1860’s, with the ore processed on a small scale, or shipped by wagon to larger towns for milling.

Although there was always a presence of sorts in Rochester from 1861 on, it wasn’t until a discovery by Joseph Nenzel of rich silver ore in 1912 that Rochester became a true boomtown. By November 1912, as word of the find spread, people streamed into the area. The town expanded, and Upper Rochester came into being, as well as the beginnings of what became known as Lower Rochester. Rochester Heights was soon lumped in with Upper Rochester, and those towns became collectively known as Old Town, with Lower Rochester being the new town. Rochester Canyon is a fairly narrow canyon, with steep slopes on either side of the narrow canyon floor, and so the camps tended to spread down the canyon, rather than outwards. As more and more people came to the area, the two camps soon boasted saloons, hotels, and other businesses. Upper and Lower Rochester became thriving mining sites, with a population exceeding 1,500. Most of the commercial district was in Upper Rochester, with Lower Rochester having the mill and other mining support facilities. The town boasted of having The Rochester Philharmonic Orchestra.

In 1914 the Nevada Short Line Railway extended its tracks from Orena, which was east of Rochester. The railway was then operating up into Limerick Canyon from Orena, but a spur was built which branched off into Rochester Canyon as far as Lower Rochester. In August 1915 the railway extended tracks up the canyon through Upper Rochester to reach the mine at the end of the canyon, with the intention that the ore could be hauled down to the milling operations in Lower Rochester. The operation of the railroad was undependable at best, however. Equipment difficulties (the railroad was using old second-hand locomotives), fires, accidents, along with the vagaries of the management of the railway (it went into receivership in late 1915, but was given one last chance by a District Court judge in Reno to be profitable), meant that the mines could never depend entirely on the railroad. The railway struggled to make a profit and operate on a reasonable schedule through 1915 and into 1916, but the mines were not happy about the service. Finally, having had enough, the mine announced in Sept. 1916 that it would build a tramway from the mines down to the mill in Lower Rochester. By mid-1917 the tramway was in operation, and the days of the Nevada Short Line were numbered. It again went into receivership in 1918, and finally by 1919 it was completely shut down, and the equipment sold off. The rails were ripped up and completely gone by 1920.

Transportation problems did not stop mining; the mine continued to operate until 1942, producing over $9 million dollars in silver and gold. Rochester as a town, however, began to wane slowly after 1922, and by 1926 the post office had closed, as had many businesses. After 1942 the mine was shuttered for long periods, operating only intermittently as silver and gold prices warranted. Most people had completely left the area by 1951, and at best there was “caretaker” status by a few resolute souls who lived on and off in the few remaining buildings.

In 1986 Coeur d'Alene Mines began large scale open pit mining operations on Nenzel Hill and beyond. This new operation (Coeur Rochester, and in 2003 the nearby Packard Mine) has buried nearly all of Upper Rochester under large mine tailing piles. Lower Rochester still has many foundations and some wooden structures, one of which is the remains of a large mill building. Additionally, the remains of the wood towers for the tramway can still be seen on the hillside, and the old rail bed of the Nevada Short Line can be followed much of the way through the canyon.

Location

The location of Rochester is approximately 110 miles east from Reno on US 80E; from there turn SE on dirt road for 10.2 miles to the location of Lower Rochester town site.Rochester was at coor dms|40|17|20|N|118|10|13|W|city, at an elevation of 5563 feet (1696m).

ee also

List of ghost towns in Nevada

References

Stanley W. Paher (1999) "The Nevada Ghost Towns and Mining Camps Illustrated Atlas, Volume 1: Northern Nevada: Reno, Austin, Ely and Points North" (Las Vegas: Nevada Publications).

David F. Myrick (1962) “Railroads of Nevada and Eastern California: Volume One - The Northern Roads” (Howell-North Books).

External links

* [http://www.forgottennevada.org/sites/rochester.html Rochester at Forgotten Nevada]
* [http://www.ghosttowns.com/states/nv/rochester.html Rochester at ghosttowns.com]
* [http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&hl=en&geocode=&q=Rochester,+NV&ie=UTF8&ll=40.288471,-118.166488&spn=0.003912,0.007231&t=k&z=17&iwloc=addr Rochester on Google Maps]


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать реферат

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Nevada Short Line Railway — Locale Oreana, Nevada Dates of operation 1913–1918 Track gauge narrow gauge The Nevada Short Line Railway (Silver Belt Railroad) was a 12.6 mi (20.3 km) railroad that ran east from Oreana (also known as Nenzel) to the silver mining area …   Wikipedia

  • Nevada State Route 400 — State Route 400 Unionville Road Route information Maintained by NDOT Length …   Wikipedia

  • Rochester International Airport — Infobox Airport name = Rochester International Airport nativename = nativename a = nativename r = image width = caption = IATA = RST ICAO = KRST type = Public owner = operator = City of Rochester city served = location = Rochester, Minnesota… …   Wikipedia

  • Nevada State Route 858 — State Route 858 Oreana Road Route information Maintained by NDOT Length …   Wikipedia

  • Silver mining in Nevada — Silver mining in Nevada, a state of the United States, began in 1858 with the discovery of the Comstock Lode, the first major silver mining district in the United States. Nevada calls itself The silver state . In 2006, Nevada was the nation s… …   Wikipedia

  • List of ghost towns in Nevada — This is an incomplete list of ghost towns in Nevada, listed by town name, and also by county. Most ghost towns in Nevada were mining towns abandoned when the mines closed.Listed by town name*Aurora *Belleville *Belmont *Beowawe *Berlin *Blair… …   Wikipedia

  • Interstate 80 in Nevada — This article is about the section of Interstate 80 in Nevada. For the entire length of the highway, see Interstate 80. Interstate 80 …   Wikipedia

  • Lovelock, Nevada —   incorporated city   A welcoming town …   Wikipedia

  • Dun Glen, Nevada — Dun Glen (later Chafey) is a ghost town in Pershing County, Nevada, United States, north of the present community of Mill City. Found in 1862, it was a silver mining community founded at a site then within Humboldt County. Contents 1 Dun Glenn 2… …   Wikipedia

  • North Rochester Congregational Church — U.S. National Register of Historic Places …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”