Sharing photos, videos, vintage images I've discovered, and -- occasionally -- commentary and thoughts from retired life and travels.

parks

Custer, Idaho

December 9, 2010

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Searching a hillside across the Yankee Fork, three prospectors stumbled upon what would become the most famous mine on the Yankee Fork.  Named after the popular military general, George Armstrong Custer, the General Custer Mine was a rich vein of ore, exposed by a snowslide.  The discovery of the Custer Mine in 1876 transformed this small mining camp into a lively community and the site of the region’s most significant mining activity.

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Founded in 1879, Custer flourished and what began as a tent community rapidly became a town of over 100 building lining both sides of it’s narrow main street.  For 30 years, Custer experienced frenzied activity and growth as well as periods of uncertainty and decline until its final bust in 1911.

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Charles Alexander Pfeiffer purchased this family home after his marriage to Ellen Louise Olson in 1890.  Charles managed the Pfeiffer Store for his uncle and later worked as a gold and cleanup man at the General Custer Mill.  As the family increased in size, a kitchen and bedroom were added to the family home.  The roof shingles are made of flattened cans.  Families in Custer were not an oddity, but certainly weren’t the norm either, as most miners and the supporting merchants were single men.

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Old bottles

December 6, 2010

These vintage bottles were in the windows of an old school house in the ghost town of Custer, Idaho.  The building now serves as a museum.

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A Gold Dredge

December 3, 2010

I am returning to “working” through the images from our summer trip.

The Yankee Fork gold dredge is one of the mining attractions along Idaho’s Yankee Fork River, between Bonanza City and Custer.  When we first visited the area in the 1970s, it was a closed relic.  Today, it has been restored to the point that tours are available for those who are interested.

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Beginning in 1872, the valley floor of the Yankee Fork River was hand placered in the search for gold. Years later, tests showed that gold still remained in the deep gravels of the stream bed.  In 1939, a gold dredge was purchased by the Snake River Mining Company and hauled to the Yankee Fork for assembly.  Before it was shutdown in 1952, the dredge recovered more than $1,200,000 in gold from about 6,000,000 cubic yards of gravel.

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2010 07 28 079sateliteToday, the dredge still sits where it stopped operation after all of the claims owned by the company had been dredged.  The path taken by the dredge up the stream bed left large piles of gravel on which little grows.  In a satellite image  showing the dredge, the piles form rows where the dredge’s stacker belt deposited the gravel after processing.

2010 07 28 085cropIn operation, small particles of gold and silver from naturally disintegrated ore were scooped up by the bucketline (see image on left for scale).

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The dredge has a chain of 71 buckets, each wighing just over a ton.  Each pin holding the chain together weighs 195 lbs.  The bucket mechanism can be raised and lowered and moved left and right.  It can dig 37 feet deep.

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A visit to a cemetery

November 1, 2010

Bonanza, Idaho

Yankee Fork Historic District, July 28, 2010

Alice Davenport, Age 7, Jan 2, 1928 to September 2, 1935, Bonanza Cemetery, Idaho

The Bonanza Cemetery provides an example of the many ethnic groups attracted to the Yankee Fork.  Despite the harsh living conditions, the promise of good times and prosperity brought immigrants from many countries.  Cornish people, referred to as “cousin jacks,” worked for the English owners of the Custer mine.  Austrian crews built roads and many Italians lived at Bayhorse.  The Custer County census of 1890 indicates sizable populations of Canadian, German, English, Irish, Italian, and Swedish residents.  The largest single ethnic group found in the Yankee Fork Mining District came from China.  Though prejudice kept the Chinese from working at most mines, they worked unwanted placer claims, operated laundries, or worked as cooks…. most Chinese initially buried here were later disinterred by relatives and friends and returned to their homeland.

from sign at cemetery

Bonanza Cemetery

Sego Lily, Calochortus nuttallii, the state flower of Utah.

Sego Lily, Calochortus nuttallii, the state flower of Utah. Storm cloud Sego Lily, Calochortus nuttallii, the state flower of Utah.

Insect getting nectar from wild rose.

Insect getting nectar from wild rose.

Lizzie King and her husbands on Boothill

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Lizzie and Richard King lived in Bonanza where Richard worked in real estate.  A heated argument with a business partner left Richard dead and Lizzie alone.

Lizzie and close friend Charles Franklin purchased the gravesite for Richard and two more next to it, presumably for themselves.  Soon, Charles and Lizzie began courting and a wedding seemed eminent.

To everyone’s surprise, Lizzie married Robert Hawthorne, a newcomer to Bonanza.  Six days later, both were found shot to death.  Soon after, Franklin left the area for a secluded cabin near Stanley where, years later, he was discovered dead.  Clutched in his hand was a locket which held the picture of Lizzie King.

Due to the mysterious circumstances surrounding the death of Lizzie King, Bonanza residents chose to bury their loved ones elsewhere, leaving Lizzie and her husbands alone on Boothill.

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According to a report on abc15.com, Arizona weighs privatization for state parks, operation of a couple of Arizona may be turned over to private operators

abc15.com, Arizona weighs privatization for state parks,

Arizona officials might turn over management of two small state parks to private operators so they can reopen the sites that were closed because of budget trouble.

The 28-park state system already uses concessionaires to provide some services but now may go further by turning to the private sector for the actual operation.

The parks system has requested proposals due Sept. 23 for operation of Oracle State Park in southeastern Pinal County and is considering whether to issue a request for proposal for Lyman Lake in southern Apache County.

See abc15.com, Arizona weighs privatization for state parks, for more.

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Gunnison Point

May 27, 2010

Gunnison Point, Black Canyon of the Gunnison National Park


Gallery: South Rim – September 9, 2009, Black Canyon of the Gunnison National Park, Colorado

(click on image for larger version)


See more of our Image Galleries at Haw Creek.


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