Mining
El Dorado – The Greenwood Mining District
© 2005 by Anthony M. Belli
For those 48ers who arrived a year before
the tsunami of 49ers to man the California Gold Rush, Long Valley
was the name they gave to modern day Greenwood. Just who first found
gold at Long Valley isn't clear and probably not all that important,
the fact is the locale sits over the northwest portion of the Mother
Lode so it wasn't long after the 48ers started arriving in the American
River mining region that someone found gold here.
By the spring of 1849 hundreds of men in
small mining camps were mining everywhere along the Middle Fork
of the American River. By the end of summer that number would easily
rise in to the thousands. During this time Long Valley had grown
into a small village that took on the name Louisville in honor of
the first white child born in camp whose name was Louis.
With the approach of fall that same year
most mining camps still consisted of shanty lean-tos constructed
from tree limbs and cloth, which made up most domiciles. For lack
of winter lodging plenty of the new arrivals didn't want to risk
their first winter in the mountains, many left the river opting
to winter at a lower elevation. For those who had a canvas tent
or perhaps a roughly hewn log cabin, these structures represented
the Taj Mahals of the mining camps. Most who were prepared for the
winter were 48ers, for them the chilly mornings and shorter days
seemed less ominous. At nearby Murderer’s Bar just five men
choose to winter in camp that first year.
These five 49ers, William Harris, Elisha
Hardin, James Hardin, Freeman Eldridge and James Lee each pick out
a cabin site high up on the hill overlooking the Middle Fork where
they erected their winter quarters. The arraignment seemed to work
well up until the 1st of December when the river rose over 60 feet
in a single day and removed all five crudely built cabins from the
face of the earth.
Lucky enough they escaped with their lives;
one recalled running out of his home as water suddenly rushed in.
After running up hill for his very life he was glad to find his
four neighbors alive further up and waiting on dry land. They all
watched from a safe distance as all five cabins vanished from view
in the rising waters. Records indicate that the water did not begin
to recede until the 9th of January 1850. The five homeless men from
Murderer’s Bar walked to the nearest village located 5 miles
east at Louisville.
At Louisville the men talked it up to the
locals about the hazards of placer mining along the Middle Fork
during winter months, but not one of them was going to give up his
claim. They’d picked up plenty of free gold, which then was
still easy to find so there was no problem getting re-outfitted
at Louisville. Determined to resume mining the five bought enough
provisions to get them through the winter and headed right back
to their inundated camp at Murderer’s Bar. This time however
wisdom had taught them well to re-build on higher ground, which
is just what they did.
It was during this time (late 48 –
early 49) when John Greenwood opened up his trading post at Louisville,
followed by a general store, and a butchers shop. The camp was now
the only re-supply destination for miners in the mountains working
the Middle Fork from African Bar west to Louisiana Bar at the confluence
with the North Fork. In 1852 a post office was established and the
town changed its name to Greenwood as the name Louisville was already
in use by another mining town in El Dorado County just south of
Spanish Flat. That Louisville had previously established their post
office a year earlier in 1851.
The name Greenwood not only identified the
town site, but the vast valley to the west was known as Greenwood
Valley. This area quickly became the Greenwood Mining District and
once extended to the North Fork of the American River. In the years
to come the Greenwood Mining District was developed into one of
the richest gold producing regions in California. And while industrialized
mining in this area lasted strongly into the 20th century, during
the early days of the Gold Rush people remained transient when mining
was any man’s game, and anyone could stake a claim.
Greenwood developed into a mining boomtown
by 1851 housing two theatres, a number of restaurants, fourteen
stores, a brewery, with several hotels, and blacksmiths. Mining
towns were famous for providing the miners with a wide variety of
the entertainment of that era, which somehow centered on 3 things…
booze, gambling and the ladies. Of course hangings always brought
a crowd into town, and Greenwood had its favorite tree. It was proven
sturdy on many occasions.
In contrast to the explosive expansion of
the town in 1851, just one year later J.D. Borthwick passed through
here during the summer of 1852 and wrote…
“For several miles I traveled down
this [Greenwood] valley: the bed of the creek which flowed through
it, and all the ravines, had been dug up, and numbers of cabins
stood on the hillsides: but at this season the creek was completely
dry, and consequently no mining operations could be carried on.
The cabins were all tenantless, and the place looked more desolate
than if its solitude had never been disturbed by man.”
Unlike the deserted wasteland Borthwick
describes passing through to arrive in the town of Greenwood, once
here he finds accommodations quit suitable. After checking into
his hotel Borthwick noted he was pleased to find… “recent
copies of the Illustrated News and the New York Herald..”
Extensive quartz veins and free gold was
found throughout the district. Hard rock and seam mining were the
only methods during the early period of the Gold Rush. As time passed
and mining became more industrialized the district saw much hydraulic
mining. Around five million in gold was mined from the Greenwood
District, of which half is said to have come from the Sliger Mine
alone.

The Fricot Specimen was pulled
from the Grit Mine in the Greenwood Mining District. [Image
courtesy of the California State Parks] |
Other big producing mines were the Nagler
or French Mine, which during the 1880s was still in operation reporting
two million in gold harvested. The Taylor and The Rosecrans Mines
were major hard rock mines, Spanish Dry Diggings, The Black Oak
Mine, and The Rosecrans all produced millions. Most mining in the
Greenwood Mining District was geologically restricted to the Greenwood
Seam Belt and the Mariposa Belt.
The Fricot specimen is one of the
grandest finds from the days of the California Gold Rush. Weighing
in at an impressive 201.40 troy oz. (about 13 lbs.) miner William
Russell Davis found this incredible specimen in August, 1865 on
the Grit Claim in the Greenwood Mining District at Spanish Dry Diggings.
The specimen was on display at the Paris Exposition in 1878 and
today can be seen at the California State Mining and Mineral Museum
in Mariposa, California.
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Source:
This story has been publish unedited. All credits and research were
done by the Author, Anthony Belli, 2005
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