Distance: 12 miles Northeast of Carson City on SR-341
About a mile north of Silver City is Gold Hill, a former mining town
that shares a similar history with Virginia City. In the late 1850s, both were
the location of gold and silver discoveries that became part of the fabulous
Comstock Lode. Historians believe the community of Gold Hill formed in about
1859, initially as little more than a few dozen miners camping under trees, in
tents, and in crude shacks. But within a few years, Gold Hill rivaled Virginia
City in size and population.
By the early 1870s, the town claimed 8,000 residents as well as one of the
most well known newspapers in the state, The Gold Hill News. It had
schools, several fire companies, banks, churches, a post office, a town hall,
and was an important stop on the V & T Railroad line, which, at that time,
stretched from Virginia City to Reno.
As with Virginia City, Gold Hill’s decline began in the late 1870s when
the mines were played out. By 1882, the newspaper had closed (it moved on to
Idaho), and the people gradually drifted away. By 1943, Gold Hill couldn’t
support a post office.
While much of Gold Hill has disappeared over the years—the buildings
were generally victims of fires, neglect, and removal—enough remains to
offer an interesting historic walking tour of this once-thriving mining town.
The old V & T Depot, for example, still sits on a flat near the north
end of the canyon. The wooden board and batten frame building, constructed in
1872, was used until the Virginia City portion of the V & T ceased operating
in 1936. In recent years, the depot has been restored and serves as the ticket
office for the revived V & T Railroad.
Down the canyon from the V & T Depot is the former Bank of California
building, which dates back to 1862. The red brick and stone structure is one
of the few surviving commercial buildings from Gold Hill’s early days.
The bank building was originally the home of the Gold Hill Bank, then became
part of the Bank of California empire, when purchased in 1873 by William Sharon.
In 1879, the Bank of California moved to Virginia City and the building housed
a variety of businesses including a pool hall and art gallery.
Next door to the bank is the Gold Hill Hotel, the oldest operating hotel in
the state. The original stone structure—the front part of the building—was
constructed in 1859. The two-story wooden section, to the rear, is a newer addition
built about a decade ago.
Up the hill from the hotel are the picturesque remains of the Yellow Jacket
Mine incline shaft and headframe, built in 1937. The warped, wooden chutes leading
down the hill once carried ore from the headframe at the shaft at the top.
Adjacent to the hotel is the Crown Point Mill, constructed when the area's
mines were reworked in the 1930s. Built in 1935, the mill processed ore from
the Yellow Jacket and Crown Point mines. The main buildings have been maintained
over the years.
Across State Route 341 from the Crown Point Mill are the Lynch House, a white
Victorian on the highway, and the Pink House, a very pink-colored Victorian on
the hillside above, which was once a very fashionable neighborhood in Gold Hill.
The Lynch home was built in 1869 by a state legislator while the Pink House
was constructed in the 1860s for a nephew of U.S. Senator John P. Jones, who
served as Nevada’s Congressional representative from 1873 to 1903. Both
have remained private residences. Next door to the Lynch place are the green-colored
stone foundations of the Rhode Island Mill. Dating to 1862, the mill was one
of the first stamp mills in Gold Hill.
Of course, throughout Gold Hill you can still find a handful of long-abandoned
mining shacks and ruins, which provide an idea of the modest existences of most
of the town’s miner-residents.
Two significant head frames mark the southern boundary of Gold Hill. The first,
an impressive metal skeleton on the hill above the road (there is a mine shaft
at the base of the hill) is part of the New York Mine and was built in 1913.
The other, located about a quarter-mile south, is the Keystone head frame.
This wooden structure, surrounded by a metal fence, was built in the late 19th
century and is considered one of the best remaining examples of the type of mining
equipment once common throughout the Comstock.
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