Leadfield, California

Leadfield
Unincorporated community

Leadfield Building 1
Leadfield

Location in California

Coordinates: 36°50′48″N 117°03′33″W / 36.84667°N 117.05917°W / 36.84667; -117.05917Coordinates: 36°50′48″N 117°03′33″W / 36.84667°N 117.05917°W / 36.84667; -117.05917
Country United States
State California
County Inyo County
Elevation[1] 4,058 ft (1,237 m)
Leadfield
Location Death Valley National Park on Titus Canyon Road, Death Valley, California
Built 1925
NRHP Reference # 75000221
Added to NRHP June 10, 1975[2]

Leadfield was an unincorporated community, and historic mining town in Inyo County, California.[1] It is now a ghost town. It is located in Titus Canyon in the Grapevine Mountains, east of Death Valley in Death Valley National Park. Leadfield lies at an elevation of 4,058 ft (1,237 m).[1] It is on the National Register of Historic Places.

History

Leadfield, California

Ore was being exploited in Titus Canyon as early as 1905, but the townsite of Leadfield at the head of the canyon dates to the years 1925 and 1926. The product of extensive and fraudulent advertising by the Western Lead Mine Company and C.C. Julian, the town boomed in 1925. His advertising posters showed steamboats navigating the Amargosa River to Leadfield, ignoring the fact that the Amargosa River is dry much of the time and does not run within 20 miles of Leadfield.

Fifteen miles of road were built up the canyon to connect with the road to Beatty, Nevada, a concrete foundation for a stamp mill was poured, and the beginning of a series of power poles for electric lines were installed.

Historic photographs show some frame and corrugated metal buildings and there is evidence of a few dugouts, but the majority of the denizens of Leadfield lived in tents of varying sizes and construction. The population peaked at around 300 in 1926, with a post office opening in August of that year. However, by February 1927, the post office closed down and the town died.

Julian disappeared and the inhabitants soon became disillusioned and quickly drifted away. The significance of the site lies in the fact it was an example of one of the get-rich-quick schemes of the wild 1920s.[3]

Visiting

The remains of the town include a few rusted metal sheds and two locked, abandoned mine shafts, as of 2005. The town is reachable by one-way Titus Canyon Road at the eastern end of Titus Canyon, near Beatty, Nevada.

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Leadfield, California
  2. National Park Service (2008-04-15). "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service.
  3. "Leadfield Building No. 1". List of Classified Structures. National Park Service. 2008-11-17.
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