Nortons Landing, Arizona

Norton's Landing [2] or Norton's,[3]:116 was a steamboat landing on the Colorado River, in what was then Yuma County, Arizona Territory. Today it is in La Paz County, Arizona. Nortons Landing is 52 miles upriver from Yuma, Arizona 4 miles above Picacho, California and 18 miles below the Clip, Arizona landing.[4] :168 It lays on a rocky point of land next to the river at 215 feet of elevation just east of Red Cloud Wash and Black Rock Wash, where roads to the district mines in the mountains, met the Colorado River.[2]

Nortons Landing, Arizona
Former settlement
Nortons Landing
Location within the state of Arizona
Nortons Landing
Nortons Landing (the United States)
Coordinates: 33°03′02″N 114°38′39″W
CountryUnited States
StateArizona
CountyLa Paz
Elevation213 ft (5 m)
Time zoneUTC-7 (Mountain (MST))
  Summer (DST)UTC-7 (MST)
Area code(s)928
GNIS feature ID24540

History

Nortons Landing was developed for the Red Cloud Mine and other nearby mines of the Silver Mining District in the Trigo Mountains. The Silver District became active in 1879 when George Sills, Neils Johnson, George W. Norton, and Gus Crawford relocated many silver claims abandoned following the death of Jacob Snively in 1871.[5]:138

The landing and settlement was named for George W. Norton who owned the Red Cloud Mine and its smelter at the landing, and had been the engineer in charge of constructing the first railroad bridge across the Colorado River, at Yuma, Arizona in 1877.[6]:746–747 The landing also had general store, and a post office called Norton's from June 4, 1883 to August 24, 1888 when it was discontinued, mail being sent to Yuma. It again had a post office from September 3, 1891 to March 13, 1894 when it was again discontinued and the town died.[3]:116. Norton's Landing continued until April, 1897. The Arizona Sentinel, Yuma, AZ, on 17 April 1897: The famous and well-known silver district mining town, Norton’s Landing, is completely deserted, on account of the low price of silver and the mines closing down. The inhabitants have all removed to that flourishing mining camp, Picacho.[7]

The Site Today

The site is now a ghost town in La Paz County, Arizona. Only a few foundations, mining equipment, and slag from the reduction works remain.[8]

References

8 newspapers.com, The Arizona Sentinel, Yuma, AZ, 17 April 1897; https://www.newspapers.com/image/42265735/?terms=norton%27s%2Blanding

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