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Camelita Mining Claim

78 acre lode claim for Sale

Location: Arizona, USA
Commodities: Gold, Silver
Available Terms: For Sale
Price: $55,000
SOLD

Summary

The Carmelita Mines and Mill site is a Gold mining camp that was last recorded as being worked in the early 1930s. The mines and the region have a long and detailed history dating back to the 1840s. Native gold has been broken from ledges and exposed veins and crushed using crude arrastras. The Mines are named for Carmelita Campbell who owned and operated the mines for nearly 40-odd years employing some 250 Mexicans and Indians from 1870 to 1914. The Carmelita Mining Claim also includes the Alaska Mines, which are also noted for gold and some platinum production. There are various outcrops and ledges in the low sage around the mines that show the same coarse gold that has been worked in the area for almost 200 years. The property was originally known as the Yuma Mine. The mines are evidenced to have been worked in or around 1840 by Spanish miners. As the Spanish and Mexican miners were pushed south, the mine was taken over and renamed as the Harqua Hala Mine. It was worked and expanded for primarily gold but with some returns in silver. Assays and historical reports state that values in the mine and on the ledges averages from 1.5 to 2.5 ounces of gold per ton. The Mine operated profitably until 1914 when JA Marr attempted to “claim jump” Carmelita Campbell and overtake the mines. Going to the extremes of having Carmelita confined in an asylum in Phoenix. Mr. Marrs coup of the mine failed when Carmelita’s old employees, still loyal, sabotaged the mining operations, also ambushing the miners hired to work the site. Mr. Marr was bankrupted by 1921, but the damage was done, and Carmelita died despondent and alone in her second home in San Francisco, California. The mines still have extensive worth and gold values are self-evident with an examination of the property. The “main shaft” of the Carmelita was inaccessible due to degradation of cribbing and infrastructure around the mines. It will require some clean up and work to be put into work ready condition. The “Alaska” mines are known for rich, wire gold produced from wide quartz ledges, the Alaska was originally a part of the Carmelita group but was explored and some work done in the 1950s and the name was changed.
Property Sold

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