Pine Grove, Nevada

Pine Grove is a ghost town in Lyon County, Nevada, United States.[1]

Pine Grove, Nevada
Pine Grove, Nevada
Pine Grove
Pine Grove
Coordinates: 38°40′42″N 119°07′27″W
CountryUnited States
StateNevada
CountyLyon
Elevation
6,716 ft (2,047 m)
Time zoneUTC-8 (Pacific (PST))
  Summer (DST)UTC-7 (PDT)

History

In 1866, gold-bearing rock was discovered in the area by William Wilson. The Wheeler Mine was established in the next year.[2] Early settlers named the camp after the nearby Pine Grove Hills.[3]

By 1868, a post office had opened, along with a weekly newspaper. The population at the time was 200. Two steam-powered stamp mills were built along with three arrastras, which processed silver and gold ore. The camp reached its peak in population in the early 1870s with 600 residents.[4][5]

The settlement, at its height, was divided into five sections and was spread out for a mile. It offered five saloons, three hotels, multiple stores, blacksmith shops, a dance hall, barber shops, a school, livery stable and two doctors' offices. Pine Grove was a regional supply center. Two mill expansions were made in 1882, and mining was robust in the 1880s. After the economic depression in the U.S. in 1893, mine production was slowly abandoned.[5]

Work started again in the mines between 1900 and 1910, but production never reached the activity of the 1870s and 1880s. There was limited prospecting in the area in the early 1900s, but all mining had ceased by 1918. The remaining town residents left Pine Grove by the 1930s.[2]

gollark: Why specifically *those*?
gollark: If you just define anything which happens as being part of the balance retroactively, then it is not meaningful to complain about it.
gollark: Well, it's a thing which happens in nature.
gollark: There was an experiment which wanted to demonstrate group selection. They put flies that in an environment with limited resources which could only support so many fly children. If nature was nice and kind, they would magically turn down their breeding. As is quite obvious in retrospect, evolutionary processes would *never do this* and they cannibalized each other's young.
gollark: There are nasty things like those various parasitic wasps.

See also

References

  1. "Pine Grove, Nevada". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey.
  2. "Pine Grove History". Western Mining History. Retrieved 27 September 2018.
  3. "Pine Grove, NV".
  4. "PINE GROVE".
  5. Paher, Stanley W (1970). Nevada Ghost Towns and Mining Camps. Howell North. p. 81-85.
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