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Collection: Books and Periodicals > Mining & Scientific Press
Volume 12 (1866) (428 pages)

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Page: of 428

Tie Wining and Scientific Dress,
Bling Simary. *
a * CALIFORNIA.
. Trinvry.—The Journal is calling attention
to the undeveloped mines of Trinity, and says:
‘Only a short time since’some miners discov_ered acclaim opposite Junction City which pays
from $50 to $80 a day. And how was the
elaim found? Simply by disregarding the advice of “nld miners.” and working faithfully to.
npen a claim which had been deserted by men
who did not possess the same energy und
perseverance. ™) ; .
. We do rot hesitate to affirm that this county
nffers hundreds of just.such opportunities, if
we had the right kind of population and enough
of it to develop them. “No other ‘county offers
auch inducements to a large mining popnlation
ias Trinity. A county as large as the State of
Massachusetts, every foot of which is more or
léss auriferous, with uiitold Wealth in quartz,
yet, with not a single mill, or even arastra, and.
this extent of territory occupied hy some twelve
hundred miners.. Five thousand. could easily
find employment, independence :and riches
within our borders, and even then it would take
yeas to exhaust, the surface diggings.”
» Puomas.—The Quincy Gazette says: A
friend informs us that the region of country
around the Premium and Crescent ledge is lit4
erally covered with paper titles. sometimes two .
ur three deep. It is undoubtedly a rich section .
nf country, and those who locate should perfect their title ‘by labor and actual occupancy ; .
otherwise, they may have tn call in the aid of,
the law to decide ownership—and lawis an
expensive luxury now-a-days in this climate. —
The Yreka Jowrnal says: More Chinamen .
are heing employed this year in this county by .
white men than. ever before, from the desire to
get claims worked cheaper. Scott river, which
used to be agreat field forwhite lahor, is now
overrun with Chinaman, who work at sn low
rates that white men cannot compete.
Nevaps.— We ubderstand that several mines
in Grass Valley, and among others the Union,
have heen compelled, in part at least, to sus-.
pend operations for the present on account of.
the great influx of water fenm the late heavy!
rains. Their pumps were inadequate to the
‘task of keeping them free of water. Some of’
the mills are alsn running short of rock on accnunt of the impossibility of hauling by reason
-of the-bad condition of the roads.“ *
We6 would call the especial attention of our .
readers,to the summary of miniug news from.
this county, given.in another place, in to day’s .
issue, from our Nevada and Grass Valley!
correspondents. . ° <° > a)
Pracer.—We ‘learn that quite an improve.
ment in the placer mining prospects are beginning to, appear about, Yankee Jims and .
Sarahsville, by reason of the iutroductiou of .
machinery to work the cement ground, which .
it has heen found impossible to work by the
ordinary method of sluicing, Much of the
gravel fonnd here is of that peculiar cement,
character which itis necessary to work over
five nr six times, at great expense of hauling,
etc., allowing itto lay in the meantime through
one or more entire season to slack. Even
then a large amount of gold was lést.
Something overa year ago, Mr. C. H. Dewey,:
the conducting manager of one of the principal
mines uear Sarahsville, decided to put upacrushing-mill, eimilar to those employed in Nevada
county. After a year’s trial the plan has been
fonnd. to:sneceed well. Crushing the gravel
has heen found here, as elsewhere, decided
success. This mill employs twentystamps,
_driven by a 40-horse eugine, although but ten
stamps are employed at present. ‘These ten
stamps reduce from thirty to forty tons nf
cement every twenty-four hours.
* The Rough Gold company, near by, have also
erscted a mill which went. into operation about,
three months since; so late‘in the season, however, that the company have as yet scarcely
‘been enahled to“give’ the new process a fair.
test. No doubt, however,.is eutertained with
regard to its nltimate success. There are
numerons other claims in this vicinity, all of
“which feel a renewed conlidence since the
above-mentioned. mill experiments, and no
doubt is etertained hut that other mills will
soon be put up, 23 fast as the different claims,
are properly npened.
Caraverss.The San Andreas Register
says Messrs. Knapp, Wilcox & Co., have just;
comploted a mill of six stamps to crush the:
ditt from their claim, at Yaqui Camp, about a
mile and a half from that place. They have .
some very rich dirt, but it is a kind of cement, .
so hard that theyare unable to save all the .
gold hy the ordinary method of washing. . But.
by the use of* the stamps they will be able to’
make a good. thing. .
“Amanor.-The Dispatch saysthat an exten-'
sive cinnabar mine has lately been discovered
near the. Boston ranch; about ten miles from .
Jackson,.in this county, which is pronounced
very rich by those who profess to be judges of
the article ; and a company has heen organized
and will shortly.be incorporated for the purpose of working it. Should it turn out to be
as rich as it is supposed to be, it would he
dificult to estimate the value.it would be to
this section of the country. ;
TuowwmNe.—The editor of the Tuolumne
Courier recently visited the Bacon mine, at
Calder’s ranch, about ten miles. from Sonora,
owned by Messrs. Bacon & Leonard. This
claim is'‘a’ recent’ location, but considerable
money has already been spent in developing it.
A tunnel has beeu driven in 185 feet to the
length running all tho way up the vein, and.
disclosing a-large amountof rock. To this.
level five chutes have been opened from the .
surface downward, ahout 100 feet distant from .
each other, and connected by stopes at convenient intervals. An incline is being sunk
from the, northern drift, which is now «down j.
. about sixty-five feet. Over 400 tons of rock
have been extracted, which will now be crushed,
and an immense qudntity is also in sight. All
the work of opening, timbering and ventilating
is described-as having been done iu a superior
manner. Good results are confidently expected
from this mine. 1.. .
The same. paper, in speaking of the Sugar
Pine District, some eighteen miles from Sonora, says it has for several years been noted
for the number and wealth of its quartz ledges,
some of them haying yielded a vast amount of
gold, while many others in a legs forward state
of development give evidance of becoming quite
as productive. One of the most promising
claims in the district is the Mouut Moriah,
located in: November, 1862, and containing
. 2,400 feet, situated ahout half'a mile trom the
famons Excelsior, and about the same distance
from Uniontown: The vein hag heen prospected for the distance of 1,800 feet. Considerable quantities of rock have hecn crushed,
and proved to be rich, and more, of a still better quality, is being daily taken out. This
claim willno doubt prove a valuable one. A
mill will be put upon the ground in the spring,
or sooner, if roads and weather permit.
Gillis Bros, & Co., struck a pocket in the
decomposed slate about their ledge, near
‘Tuttletown, from which they have already
taken several hundred dollars. The stresk is
three nr four inches wide, aud yields from
twelve to forty dollars to the pan, and getting
richer. ‘Cheir-claim ison the “big lead,” aud
is being prospected with energy. The rock
presents a fine appearance, and samples taken
‘from any portion of the ledge show free gold,
beiug almost: precisely like the quartz from the
Raw Hide-Ranch lode.One-half of the Shanghae quartz mine, near
Yankee Hill, Tuolumne county, has been sold
toa San Francisco party for $25,000. Gen. .
Morgan and J.-B. Douglass, of Columbia, were
amoug the owners.
Amapor.—The Jacksonville Sentinel says:
A few days ago, Sam and John Jaylor commenced to prospect a bar on Applegate, a
short distance ‘below the Fowler quartz ledge,
by cutting a race from the creek. ‘hey cut
through the rim rock, aud in so doing took’
out about fifteen ounces of coarse gold, varying
from the size of a wheat grain to an ounce in
weight. They ohly worked four days.
W.B. Floyd has sold his quartz vein and.
millin Hnnter's Valleyto a San Francisco
company for the nice little sum of $24,500.
The vein has been paying very well and is considered good property.
A correspondent of the Mree Press writing
from Hunter's Valley ‘says that there are a
great many influential men of capital from San
Francisco among us, who seem to take an
interest. in the mines of that region. The
“La Victoire” mine looks well, as does the
“Blue Lead.” ‘The latter, you will hear of in
a-short time. Mr. Wilson of San Francisco,
has purchased the Floyd vein and all the machiuery, tools, etc., connected therewith. ‘The
Superintendent of the La Victoire, is afloat,
through the hills and ravines, negotiating for
. Wilson & Co. Itis to be hoped he will sue: .
ceed iu his endeavors to bring to a successful .
issue what it has taken months to bring down .
to so lowa figure. The Potts, atthe Jemisal, .
looks well, and also the Barrett vein. In
fact our Valley is full of mineral and all it
needs is thorough development. ‘
in VIRGINIA CITY AND VICINITY.
It has long beeu a a pretty generally conceded fact that a large amount of loss attended
the.working of the mills in Gold Hill; but.we
were scarcely prepared for: anything ‘like the
following, which we clip from the Gold Hill
News of the 27th ult :
Last night we were shown about an ounce
of soft amalgam which wastaken trom one pan
of the tailings caught in the Dayton reservoir.
‘Mr. Andrews is principal owner, we believe,
and McLaughlin -& Root own one-fourth. This
reservoir wis put ‘in for the putpose of catching the tailings that flow down Gold Cafion,
and the amalgam we saw was taken from one
pau of .the tailings in this reservoir, by Mr.
Root himself. He states that they have
already accumulated several hundred tons of
those tailings,which are: equally rich with
those from which the prospect we saw was
taken. There is’ but little doubt that thousands of dollars pass dowu Gold Canon every
‘mouth, and ‘wé “cinnot see why the owners of mills do not catch their own tailings and
save them; for in time the tailings that pass
down Gold’ Canon’ will be worth more than
what is extracted from the ore at the present
working. .
The Granite mill, Gold Hill, has heen closed
up, the owners having suuk some $20,000 in
cash, aside from their own labor and attention,
The News, after stating that the proprictors
had struggled imanfully to make the mill pay,
intimates that there must he a screw loose
somewhere in the mill, for it isso conveniently
located that its profits should be much largor
than those located remotely. ,
It is said that there are about 1,700 inen
engaged in the mines of Gold Hill proper, extracting about 950 tons of ore per day, which,
at 430 per,ton, would give a yield of $28,500
per day, or $855,000 per month. ;
Oursine Mines.—The Enierpriseisinformed
by Hon. Felix O'Neil, of the Assembly, that
the mines in the Peavine district, uear the
Truckee, bid fair to prove of no inconsiderable
importance in the mining interests of Nevada.
There are in that district five principai claims
known as the Great Eastern, Develhymer’
American Eugle, Enterprise and Metropolitan,
which are being worked .steadily by the Me.
tropolitan Tunnel and Miuing company. The
first of these wines located was the Develhymer, in the spring of 1862, by Mr. O'Neil
and his associates, and the others are a series
of parallel ledges. No work of any account
was doue on these ledges until last August,
after the return of Mr. O'Neil from Austin,
wheu the Metropolitan Tunnel company, in
running for the Devethymer, struck the ledge
now known as the Great Eastern, which, on
being stripped 40 feet hy 250 feet, at a depth
of 25 feet, disclosed a large body of ‘sulphuret
ore, intermingled with desulphurized ore. From
this ledge the company are now furnishing the
English Mill company, on the Truckee river,
with ore which yields from 80 to 108 ounces of
bullion tothe ton. The mine is but seyen
miles from the mill, and keeps the latter
steadily employed in working its ore.
The Clan Alpine district is about 130 miles
east of Virginia and 45 miles west of Austin.
It is four miles west of the Overland Mail
route. It isa bold, rugged, and mountainous
district, but fortunately well wooded and watered—advantages which niany other districts
do not possess. Until recently but little work
has been done in.this district. Now, however,
New York capital is beginning to make itself
seen and felt. ‘The Silver Lode Mining company are sivking w’shalt ou the McGregor
ledge. They are now down 185 feet, and find
a ledge between seven and ten feet in thickness, which assays all the way from $80 to
$160 per ton. Such rock as‘ ‘this, at such a
depth, is certainly encouraging. They cau probably sink 100 to 150 feet turther before the
water level is reached. ‘This company have
also a mill in progess of construction. It is a
suhstantial stone building, large enough for
twenty stamps. But ten stamps will be put in
at the preseut time. ‘The mine and mill arc
under the supervision of Mr. J. Ingalls, and
will be in running order early in the spring.
There are several other companies which will
commence operations there in the spring.
REESE RIVER.
A mammoth mining association, known as
the Consolidated Silver Mining company, has
recently been organized under the laws of the
State of New York, to carry on the business of
silver mining chiefly in the Reese River dis.
trict and vicinity. ‘he compauy already own
thirty-six ledges, a larger majority of which are
located within three miles of the city of Austin. It is the intention of the company to have,
at least, four mills running by the first of July
next, each with a capacity of reducing twentyfive tons of rock per day. ‘They propose to
have two other mills in operation by the first
of November next. The capital stock’ of the
company is fixed at $8,000,000, divided into
80,000 shares, of $100 each. Their principal
office will be at 73 Broadway, New, York. with
branch offices in Boston, Philadetphia, Chicago,
and Austin. The officers and directors of the
company are said to include some of the most
substantial men of Boston, Philadelphia, and
New York. The most able metallurgical and
scientific talent will be employed in directing
the works. We should judge, from all accounts,
that the association: has been» started upon o
substantial basis. We trust that future eveuts
may prove that such is the fact. ;
We have been able of late to obtain hut few
items of intcrest from the mines in the immediate viciuity of Austin. Favorahle accounts
continue to come in from the ontside districts,
which appear to be seattered, at intervals, over
an immense tract of country, indicating that
the mincral resources of that part of the State,
when they hecome properly developed, and
provided with roads, facilities of communication, etc., must prove of incalcnlable extent
and importance. We shall endeavor, at some
future time,{to give sone connected and intelligible description of thesc outside districts—
their localities. their degree of mineral development, mill facilities, ete., ete. yn
ESMERALDA,
The Visalia Delia, of arecent date, reports
Mr. Wn. Fleniing, Superintendent of the Oro
Fino Co., of New York, as having lately passed
throngh town, en rowe to Owen’s Raver. A
8-stamp inilland provisions for forty men for
six months is ou the way in their own teams.
‘They expect to commence operatious in the
beginning of April next. .
fhe Esmeralda Union. is informed by parties
lately returned Irom the Hot Springs District,
that there have heen several large aud auriferous ledecs discovered in that vicinity. ‘hero
is a great deal of work being done in that section, and from the loads of bullion they bring
up quite often, we should judge that companies
there were well remunerated for their labor.
HUMBOLDT.
According to the Register the Arabia mines
have been sluggish, of late, the boys heing
somewhat pinched by the extreme cold weather.
The ledges, however, have suffered no pinch.
‘Times will he lively as soou as the wiuter lets
up a little. :
The last working of Montezuma ore, eighty
tons, shows an average yield of $96.04 to the ton.
By smelting process, an improvement of about
seventy-five per cent. on this rate will be made.
Between the lower drift and theone next
above, a large mass of their best millable ore
has been exposed.
The owners of the “ Bald Hornet” (!) have
resnmed work, and the ledge looks well.
Jersey and Daisy have both struck for better
weather.
Under the head of Bullion from Oreana,”
the Register says that Webber & Co., shipped,
by Moyer's express, on the 15th inst., 428.27
ounces, value $371.51.
Montezuma Co., sent, by same, 8,078.28
ounces, value $7,683.40. ' :
A favorable report is made with regard to
the, progress of work on the Monticello tuunel ;
the foreman, Mr. J. F. Cole, is reported to
have given excellent proof of his ability to
conduct a work of that kind.
Muinino Prospects 1n Anisona.—Coulter &
Tyson’s quartz mill, at Wickenhurg, crushed
thirty tous of rock’ from the Vulture lode the
first week in December, aud cleaned up $2,700.
The mill of Bowers Bros., on Lynx creek, is
doing well. They are crnshing -rock.of the
Accidental lode, which pays about $80 per tou.
Everybody is in good spirits at the prospects
of the mines. Every indication of richness is
showu by the many-quartz odes that ure,tried.
New lodes are being discovered every week,
and all show well. :
The rich mineral districts, as yet but partially prospected ,»re the Big Bug, Lynx Creel,
Turkey Creek, Hassayamp and Quartz Mountain. Iu all these there’ are rich gold and
silver mines; but, with very few exceptions,
work has been suspended in these districts,
and many are now waiting for the time when
they can pursue their labor with safety. That
there are millions in treasure in those: localities
there is no doubt, and itis the opinion of all
who know anything of mining that superior
natural facilities exist here for working the
mines to great advantage.