Tibbetts Mining District History:
Its hard to make an accurate assessment of mines and mining claims today. The history, the books and the documents change over time. Universities and Agencies seem to write and release documentation designed to deter the average miner.
GRE employs a field and research Geologist, we examine each mine, and determine its actual potential. This is based on documented and verifiable history, as well as field observations and mapping of the sites. This helps us thoroughly and accurately describe our claims, as well as help you make informed decisions regarding the purchasing of a mining claim. In addition, the geological and historical information provided gives claim owners the tools to know where to look. After all, the gold, precious metals and minerals are out there, and there is a lot of it, you just have to know where to look. If you need more information, please feel free to contact our office and set an appointment to discuss your desired property.
Inyo County Overview:
Mexicans in the 1800?s are credited with the first discovery of many of the deposits located on the lower slopes of the Inyo Mountains. It is likely that the amount of production was small. In 1851, the Russ mining district was established, located southeast of Independence, Calif., but the first important discovery was not made until 1862 at the San Carlos mine. Several other important gold-silver-copper deposits were discovered, mainly within a 12-mi radius of Kearsarge Station, including the Black Eagle mine, Alice Quartz mine, and the Custer (Baxter) mine. By 1890, stamp mills in Owens Valley at Chrysopolis, Willow Spring, the Reward mine, and the Montezuma mine, had or were processing local ores. A smelter at Elna Station, near Big Pine, Calif., processed ore from the Montezuma mine. Smaller amounts of gold were also recovered from arrastras located near springs. Most of the ore that did not contain free-milling gold was shipped by rail to various smelters in California and Nevada.
With few exceptions, most lead and silver properties were discovered at a later date. The more important properties showed production from 1880 to 1950. The three largest producers in the area were the Montezuma mine, Blake mine, and Custer (Baxter) mine. Approximately 8,000 claims have been located in the northern part of the Inyo Mountains since 1862. The number of workings are several times less than 8,000 indicating that many of the properties have been relocated numerous times. Five properties have a record of leasing, and currently 40 lode and 10 placer claims in the areas are active. The Eureka Consolidated Quartz mine and the Senator were the only properties patented.
Mining districts were important in Inyo County from 1860 until about 1920 and were used as a means of general claim location. With the increased availability of topographic maps, location by section, township, and range became standard. At least 105 district names were used in Inyo County, but only 61 gained wide acceptance. Often smaller districts or sub-districts were developed within the larger districts which helped define locations more clearly. The Tibbetts and Kearsarge Districts were sub-districts of the Independence District in the Inyo Mountains.
Independence Mining Town
Independence takes its name from Camp Independence, a military outpost established on Oak Creek, July 4, 1862. In the early 1860?s many of the miners en route to the gold rush town of Aurora stayed to try their luck in the Owens Valley. By 1865 water diverted from the Owens River worked stamp mills in the Inyo Mts. and “arrastras” crushed the ore of rich veins from mines at 12,000 feet in the High Sierra. In 1873, the town of Independence was already twelve years old and had become the County Seat of the newly organized County of Inyo. The town was rebuilding after the terrible earthquake of 1872. The second Courthouse was built and lumber was now used in most of the houses instead of the old adobe bricks that had been the case before the earthquake. The creek, now known as Independence Creek, ran through the town, flowing down across the present courthouse yard. There were several small branches of the creek, and during wet weather the town was marshy, its streets a sea of mud churned up by the sixteen and twenty-four mule teams pulling the large ore wagons.
Tibbetts Mining District:
The Tibbetts District is in the Inyo Range, about 10 miles northeast of Independence. Bend City and San Carlos were the mining towns that served the Tibbetts District. Bend City was located a few miles East of what is now know as Independence and was one of the first mining towns to be established in the Eastern Sierra. It was also the site of the first bridge in Inyo County to span the Owens River. In the early 1860s Bend City and its rival, San Carlos three miles to the north, were prosperous mining towns. In 1864 Bend City boasted 60 houses, five mercantile stores, two hotels with dining rooms, two blacksmiths, a shoe shop, tailor shop and laundry. Today, all that remains of Bend City is piles of melted adobe bricks that served as building materials for the homes and businesses of its residents. Visitors can see large scattered stones, glass fragments and heavy nails and bars forged from iron.
During its prime, Bend City and neighboring towns joined together to establish a new California county, named “Coso.” The county was never formally recognized due to late filing of legal paperwork. The people of Bend City began leaving town, seeking the more fertile land on the west side of the Owens Valley. Pauite Indian disturbances, the loss of their opportunity to create a separately identified government, and finally the devastation caused by the 1872 Lone Pine earthquake led to Bend City vanishing from the landscape. Damage from the quake was so severe, it changed the course of the Owens River, creating no further need for the bridge crossing. The Adobe brick homes toppled during the earthquake. The Bend City No. 299 California Historical Landmark is located along Mazourka Canyon Road, 4.6 miles outside of Independence.
Marzourka Canyon heads North East into the Inyo Mountains. Both lode and placer mining claims have been worked in Mazourka Canyon for over 100 years. Tunnels and shafts are found throughout the canyon. Bonanza Gulch, a side canyon to the south about 13 miles along the route, and Santa Rita Flat to the north, boomed after a cloudburst in 1894: torrents of water-uncovered gold ranging in size from ten-cent to ten-dollar nuggets.