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Delamar, Nevada

Delamar, Nevada
Ghost town
Delamar is located in Nevada
Delamar
Delamar
Location within the state of Nevada
Coordinates: 37°27′29″N 114°46′12″W / 37.45806°N 114.77000°W / 37.45806; -114.77000Coordinates: 37°27′29″N 114°46′12″W / 37.45806°N 114.77000°W / 37.45806; -114.77000
Country United States
State Nevada
County Lincoln
Time zone Pacific (PST) (UTC-8)
 • Summer (DST) PDT (UTC-7)
Official name Delamar "The Widow Maker" (1893-1909)
Reference no. 90

Delamar, Nevada, nicknamed The Widowmaker, is a ghost town in central eastern Nevada, USA along the east side of the Delamar Valley. During its heyday, primarily between 1895 and 1900, it produced $13.5 million in gold.

In 1889, prospectors John Ferguson and Joseph Sharp discovered gold around Monkeywrench Wash. A mining camp was then born west of the Monkeywrench Mine. It was called Ferguson.

In April 1894, Captain Joseph Raphael De Lamar bought most of the important mines in the area and renamed the Ferguson camp as Delamar. In the same year, a newspaper called the Delamar Lode began publication and a post office was opened.

Soon, the new settlement boasted more than 1,500 residents, a hospital, an opera house, churches, a school, several businesses and saloons. Most buildings were made of native rock.

By 1896, the Delamar mill was handling up to 260 tons of ore daily. Water for the camp was pumped from a well in Meadow Valley Wash, some twelve miles away. Supplies and materials traveled even further, by mule team over mountainous terrain from the railroad head at Milford, Utah, which was 150 miles from Delamar.

The gold in the Delamar mines was embedded in quartzite, which created a fine dust when crushed. Miners breathing the dust often developed silicosis and the town became known as a "widow-maker."

Many ruins now stand semi-intact in the Delamar ghost town region. Foundations can easily be seen from adjacent hills. There are two graveyards, which have been vandalized. The area is honeycombed with mines and mine shafts, but in recent years the main shaft has been blasted closed.

Wild horses roam the area. The nearby dry lake is known to pilots as Texas Lake, because its outline resembles the state of Texas.

James W. Hulse: The History of a Mining Region, 1864-1909. Reno: University of Nevada Press, 1971.


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