Wednesday, March 6, 2013

Custer County Idaho Gold

Custer County was so named for the gold mine that resides in the county. Custer County is named after the General Custer Mine that was discovered as early as 1876. The County is the third largest in the state of Idaho. Over 350,000 ounces of gold have came from the area.
Custer County Gold

Loon Creek District

One of the most popular and most well known districts in the county is the Loon Creek District. Scattered throughout the district are both lode and placer gold deposits. Try gold panning in and near Loon Creek. There is a gold mining ghost town known as Casto in the area just west of Challis, Idaho off of Highway 93. Near the townsite of Casto is a good place to find placer gold. The biggest and most productive mine the area was the Lost Packer Mine.

Lost Packer Mine The Lost Packer Mine and Mill

Yankee Fork District

Like many districts the Yankee Fork district was worked right up until World War II. Named after the Yankee Fork of the Salmon River, the Yankee Fork District was home to the Custer Mine, which produced over $8 million dollars of lode gold before 1900.  The mill and mine closed in 1905 because apparently the deposit was only rich at a shallow depth. Total gold production for the Yankee Fork District, through 1959 was about 266,600 ounces. Gold was first discovered in Jordan Creek. Jordan Creek was a very rich creek in it’s day giving up an estimated 50,000 ounces of placer gold. Other mines in the area worth mention are the Bonanza Mine and Lucky Boy Mine (Two generic names for mines, used in the day.)

Stanley Basin

Exceptional gold has been found in the Stanley Basin, including along the Salmon River. Every creek or stream in the area produces some amount of gold, especially near the headwaters of Clayton. The Clayton area is surrounded by many gold mines including the so-named Clayton Mine and the area may be the best chance for a weekend prospector to find color. The Stanley Basin is found in Townships 10 and 11 North and Range 12 and 13 East.  Other areas known for gold in the area are Stanley Creek, the area between Robinson Bar and Clayton.

More Areas:

The Nicholia district was mined in the early days. Many lead and silver mines produced a by product of gold.

In the Mackay Area the Copper mines produced a by product of gold in pyrite.

In Township 12 and 13 North and Range 18 East near Bayhorse the area copper and zinc mines produced a by product of gold.

Other Mines in Custer County were/are the Aztec Mine, Black Rock Mine, Buckskin Mine, Cal-Ida Mine, Champion Mine, Copper Basin Mine, Crater Mine, Darlington Shaft, Greenback Mine, Hermit Mine, Keystone Mine, Livingston Mine, Little Livingston Mine, Mountain King Mine, Mule Shoe Mine, Pacific Mine, Wildhorse Mines, Twin Apex Mine, Turtle Mine, Tango Mine, Sunbeam Mine, Star Hope Mine, Skylark Mine, Silverbell Mine, Silver Rute Mine, Seafoam Mine, Riverview Mine and many, many more.


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A Rich Strike at Rich Gulch

Cluggage and Poole Cluggage and Poole

Following the first discovery of gold in Oregon on Josephine Creek, in late December of 1851 or early January of 1852, packers John R. Poole and James Cluggage who owned a company called Jackass Freight, were packing supplies from the Willamette Valley to Sacramento, California. The two men decided to camp near the present site of Jacksonville, Oregon. Needing water for their animals, the two men headed up the gulch (a tributary of Daisy Creek) and choosing a likely looking place, began digging a hole in the hope that it would fill with enough water to give their mules a drink. Having moved a little bit of material, they spotted pieces of color in the hole that were large enough to be visible to the eye. The two men had accidentily stumbled into one of the largest gold strikes in Oregon history.

They called their find Rich Gulch and soon extended their search to nearby Jackson Creek, where they found extensive amounts of course placer gold throughout its gravels. With great foresight, the two men filed on the land adjoining their find, laid out a townsite and both became wealthy, influential men in the brand new community of Table Rock City, Oregon Territory. Today, we know the town that they founded by its current name: Jacksonville.

Rich Gulch Rich Gulch, January 2010

Miners flocked into the area and Jacksonville promptly grew into the largest community north of San Francisco, its size soon exceeding that of Oregon’s Territorial Capital of Salem. Jacksonville was named the county seat of Jackson County. Major gold strikes were made throughout the area surrounding Jacksonville, most notably on Jackson and Daisy Creeks and thousands of ounces of gold, in both nugget and dust form flowed into town, bringing instant wealth to both miners and merchants alike. One resident who became very wealthy indeed was local banker C.C. Beekman, who’s Beekman Bank held the distinction of being the only bank in United States that charged its clients for the privelage of banking and did not pay interest on accounts. It is said, that during their time, Beekman’s scales weighed over ten million dollars worth of gold.

At today’s gold prices, this would be nearly three-quarters of a billion dollars worth of gold!

~ Kerby Jackson, Josephine County, Oregon

102_26211Rich Gulch Plaque at Rich Gulch and sign


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Whitman County Washington Gold

Whitman County Washington Gold

There is not much gold in Whitman County, but there is some gold of the finer variety.

Penawawa

The area along the Snake River in section 15, T14N R41E, is the location of the Indian Bar Placer where you can find some fine gold.


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Lake County Oregon Gold

There is not a whole lot to list for Lake County, however, 15 miles south of Lakeview on US 395 in New Pine Creek, there were several small mines with overlap into Modoc County, California. Near Plush in T35S R23E there were many small, shallow prospect pits with some gold being found.

New Pine Creek, near the California and Nevada borders New Pine Creek, near the California and Nevada borders


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Gold-field bandits’ stolen loot still hasn’t been found

The Triskett Gang underestimated the citizens of Sailors’ Diggins, which became a fatal error when they went on a shooting spree downtown. But the $75,000 they stole has never been recovered.

Colt

After a former Oregon farmer found gold at Sutter’s Mill in 1848, people from Oregon raced southward to start grubbing it out of the ground. The next year, people from the East Coast raced westward with the same idea.

By the year after that, it was getting to be hard to find a good patch of “pay dirt” that didn’t already have a miner or two working it. New prospectors might spend years poking around little mountain creeks before finding one worth working, and prospecting was hard work.

Increasingly, people started to realize there were actually several different ways a fellow could work the diggin’s:

One could look for gold the old-fashioned way, of course. But one could also go into business selling stuff, at inflated prices, to prospectors; many Oregon farmers got very rich this way.

There was another way, too. One could simply make a five-dollar investment in one of those new-fangled .44-caliber Colt Dragoon revolvers, then go find a successful miner and rob him.

There was one particular group of frontier rowdies who opted to follow this path. They were known as the Triskett Gang. This name sounds a bit like a Disney movie from the late 1960s — maybe as a sequel to The Apple Dumpling Gang? — but in reality, these guys were anything but lovable. They were named not after a yet-to-be-invented Nabisco snack cracker, but rather after brothers Jack and Henry Triskett. In their little band were three other thugs: Fred Cooper, Miles Hearn and Chris Slover.

The story of the Triskett Gang’s last day is a bit fuzzy. I haven’t been able to track down a solid source for the details. A visit to the Josephine County Historical Society in Grants Pass would probably be very helpful in firming up the details. But here’s the gist of the story:

Waldo, Oregon

In early August of 1852, the Trisketteros were on the run. They’d robbed a few people in California, as guys like them are wont to do, and were heading north with some armed, angry citizens on their tails, trying to lose themselves in the wilderness for a while.

They arrived one afternoon in a little town called Sailors’ Diggins, which today is a ghost town known as Waldo. About five miles north of the border with California near the present-day town of Cave Junction, Sailors’ Diggins was essentially an overgrown mining camp, but it was booming; at a time when the entire state of Oregon had fewer than 10,000 occupants, Sailors’ Diggins was home to several thousand. The mountains nearby were especially rich, and on that particular day, almost every able-bodied man was out working them.

Waldo, Oregon 1950's Ghost town

The five bandits quickly found the saloon, went inside and started drinking their stolen gold. After a time, nicely sozzled, they wandered out onto the street. Probably they were contemplating the need to get out of Sailors’ Diggins immediately; a town that size would be the first place the posse would check when trying to get a fix on them.

Maybe it was this thought that made Fred Cooper snap. Bandits aren’t known for self-discipline. Maybe he wanted, more than anything, to hang around that saloon all afternoon, leisurely drinking and flirting and maybe hiring some female companionship for the evening — all those things that bad guys dream about doing with their ill-gotten gains. Maybe he was standing there outside that nice little saloon just getting madder and madder at having to leave, plunge into the woods and start poking around for a tree to sleep under.

Maybe. Nobody knows, really. What is known is that instead of heaving a heavy sigh and heading for the city limits, he pulled his pistol and, without a word, gunned down a random citizen who was walking down the street minding his own business.

Barn in Waldo, Oregon 1950's Ghost Town

The rest of the gang leaped into action, if that’s the right word. The five of them stormed down the street simply killing everyone they saw. At least two women were raped as well.

Then, as they were leaving town, they paused, hustled down to the assaying depot and cleaned it out — roughly $75,000 worth of freshly mined gold. This they loaded onto two stolen horses and left town.

Now, Sailors Diggins was right in the middle of the mining action. Many of the miners could hear the gunfire and knew something was very wrong. By the time the Triskett Gang was leaving town, they were starting to arrive, probably with loaded weapons in hand. The 17 dead bodies still bleeding in the streets were their wives, children and aged relatives. You can imagine how they reacted.

All it took was one well-hidden survivor to yell, “They went that-a-way!” and the posse was off.

Weighed down with almost 250 pounds of gold, the bandits weren’t moving very fast, and the posse soon caught them up. The gang members must have been surprised by how quickly the angry citizens got on their trail. After a short pursuit, the bad guys turned at bay on the top of a little hill just outside O’Brien.

I haven’t been able to learn much about the ensuing firefight. Presumably at least a few of the miners were killed; after all, the Triskett Gang were professional gunmen, and were able to pick the place where they made their final stand. I also don’t know if the bad guys tried to surrender. It’s certainly possible they didn’t; all they had to look forward to was humiliation and hanging.

In any case, when the shooting stopped, four gang members were dead, one was dying — and there was no sign anywhere of the 250 pounds of gold dust they’d hijacked from the depot.

To this day, that gold has never been recovered — or, rather, if it has, whoever found it was remarkably discreet about it. Treasure hunters still come to the O’Brien area to look for it. Most of them assume the gang hid it somewhere on the hill where they made their stand.

But it’s far more likely they squirreled it away earlier, when they first realized they were being pursued. It’s a lot harder to run from an angry posse when you’re leading a pack horse.

If that’s the case, it could be almost anywhere in the woods between Waldo and O’Brien, probably within a few dozen yards of the road. The stash would be worth about $5.5 million today.

(Sources: http://www.gwizit.com/treasures/oregon.php; http://www.josephinehistorical.org; Marsh, Carole. Oregon’s Unsolved Mysteries (and their “Solutions”). Peachtree City, GA: Carole Marsh Books, 1994; Friedman, Ralph. In Search of Western Oregon. Caldwell, ID: Caxton, 1990)


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Camas County Idaho Gold

Along Little Smoky Creek in Township 2 and 3 North, Range 14 and 15 East you can find some very rich placers. There were numerous mines in Township 4 and 5, Range 13 and 14 that produced lode gold. The town (not on most maps) lies in the east part of the county on Big and Little Smoky Creeks and was in the Rosetta district which consist of about 150 square miles, with many mines, most of which were abandoned prior to 1900. Total production in the district was around 10,000 ounces.

Big and Little Smoky-Rosetta district

The only gold-producing district in the area now included in Camas County is the Big and Little Smoky-Rosetta district was most active before Camas County was formed, and its production was credited largely to Blaine County, which was originally known as Alturas County, a large area covering many of the present counties.

The Big and Little Smoky-Rosetta district covers about 150 square miles near Carrietown in eastern Camas County. Ores rich in silver, lead, and zinc were discovered in this district in the early 1880’s. For about 10 years mining flourished, then it declined rapidly, and by 1900 most of the properties were abandoned.

From 1917 through 1942 gold production in the district was 8,249 ounces. The total gold production is not known, but the gross value of the ores, estimated at $1,200,000 by Ross, indicates that possibly as much as 10,000 ounces of gold was recovered as a byproduct.

The district is underlain mostly by granitic rock of the Idaho batholith and sedimentary rock of the Wood River Formation of Pennsylvanian age. The ore deposits are in impure quartzite and limestone in the Wood River Formation. Dikes of granophyre and porphyry cut both the granite and sedimentary rocks. Large areas in the southern part of the district are covered by the Challis Volcanics of Tertiary age.

Most of the ore deposits are replacement bodies in shear zones in the sedimentary rocks near the contacts with the granitic rock. A few are in the granitic rock. The dominant ore minerals are galena, sphalerite, pyrite, and tetrahedrite in a gangue of quartz, siderite, and altered country rock.


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