Alpha, California

Last updated
Alpha
Former settlement
California Locator Map with US.PNG
Red pog.svg
Alpha
Location in California
Coordinates: 39°19′50″N120°46′53″W / 39.33056°N 120.78139°W / 39.33056; -120.78139
Country Flag of the United States.svg  United States
State Flag of California.svg  California
County Nevada County
Elevation
[1]
4,120 ft (1,260 m)
Time zone UTC-8 (Pacific (PST))
  Summer (DST) UTC-7 (PDT)

Alpha was a gold mining town in Nevada County, located about 2 miles southeast of the town of Washington, California and about 15 miles northeast of Nevada City, California. It lay at an elevation of 4120 feet, about 2 miles below the South Yuba River and just west of Scotchman Creek. [2]

Contents

Early history

Miners begin to explore the area around Alpha in 1850 but the town began in 1852 when Charles Phelps and a Mr. McVey "struck it rich on what became the townsite itself." [3] Supposedly originally named “Hell-out-for-noon,” the name was soon changed to Alpha, the first letter in the Greek alphabet. [4] The origin of the original name does not appear to be known, but Alpha was believed to be the start of a rich channel of gold which stretched a mile or so to the east and ended in the town of Omega, [5] the last letter in the Greek alphabet. [6] The Alpha Diggings, as the area was commonly called, was routinely described as having very rich gold deposits. As one newspaper observed: "There is no doubt but that the miners of this section are doing, on average, as well as any other part of the country.... We have no doubt that Alpha will yet prove one of the richest mining sections of the country." A year later, that paper announced that "Alpha contains one of the richest auriferous deposits to be found." [7]

The area quickly attracted many miners and its heyday is generally reckoned to have been in the mid-1850s. During that period, it developed a reputation as "one of the liveliest mining towns in the county." [8] It had several hundred inhabitants, at least two hotels, saloons, gambling houses, a clothing store and a blacksmith shop. [9] It had its share of traveling entertainments and balls. [10] It had an election precinct, with votes generally cast at the Alpha Hotel or at Wixom's Hotel. [11] In 1860, 66 votes were cast, 26 for Lincoln, 21 for Douglas and 19 for Breckenridge. [12]

A post office was established at Alpha in 1855. Andrew J. Alston, a sawmill owner, was the first postmaster. The post office closed in 1862 and residents had to get their mail in Washington. [13] Alpha had a Masonic Lodge, Dibble No. 109 which opened in 1856, as well as a Sons of Temperance center. [14] It was connected by stage to Washington, which ran daily, [15] and to Nevada City. [16] During winter, when the snow could reach 9 feet deep, passengers often had to shift to horse-drawn sleighs for the last part of their journey. [17] And it had a telegraph line. [18] It did not have a school for children, though it had a whistling school, a singing school and a dancing school. [19] Nor did it have a church, though there are reports of occasional services at the temperance hall by traveling ministers. [20] Alpha also experienced what seems like an above average amount of robberies and murders. [21]

Mining

Contemporary accounts agree that Alpha was the site of a rich gold mining field. At times, miners could regularly make $20–50 a day. [22] An early problem was a scarcity of water during the summer. This meant that the area was busy and populated during the winter but largely deserted during the summer. That gradually changed with the arrival of ditches and canals. The Buckeye Ditch was first, bringing water from nearby Scotchman Creek. It was followed by the Virginia Ditch, owned by Harbin and Cuthbertson, which brought water from the South Yuba, and the Omega Ditch. [23] Finally, in January 1858, the South Yuba Canal arrived, bringing a substantial supply of water through an extensive and expensive series of flumes and ditches. [24] With a reliable source of water, hydraulic mining soon blossomed. However, the mines quickly became depleted and by the mid-1860s, only Captain Merriman's mine was still operating. [25] In the 1870s and early 1880s, some mining continued. Many of the sites were being worked by Chinese miners who were sifting through the tailing deposits to reclaim gold that had been missed. At the same time, the Alpha Hydraulic Mining Company, which had bought all the mining land around Alpha, continued hydraulic mining. That pretty much ended after the Woodruff v. North Bloomfield Gravel Mining Company court decision prohibited the discharge of mining debris into the South Yuba River or its tributaries. [26] Some illegal mining continued, often by Chinese miners who were periodically arrested and fined for violating the Sawyer injunction. [27]

Lumbering

The other important industry around Alpha was lumbering. In the 1850s, it had at least three sawmills: McWorthey's, [28] Skillman's and Murdock's. Skillman's was located about 1 mile west of Alpha and burned in 1858 with a loss of 300,000 feet of lumber. Murdock's mill burned in 1859. It is not clear whether either mill was rebuilt. The sawmills provided Alpha with a readily source of lumber for home building which meant that unlike many gold rush towns, it was not full of canvas stores and buildings. As one historian put it, "board was cheaper than canvas." [29] Later, the Towle Bros. built a narrow gauge railroad which ran from their base north of Alta to their sawmill about 2 miles south of Alpha. [30] This gave Alpha an additional advantage, allowing supplies to be brought by rail from Alta, rather than by wagon from Nevada City. Lumbering operations continued well into the 20th century.

The Wixom Family

One of the leading families in Alpha was that of Dr. William and Marie Wixom. In addition to practicing medicine, William Wixom was elected justice of the peace for Washington Township, operated the Wixom hotel, and served as agent for the Langton Express Company. He was a member of the Dibble Masonic lodge. In 1859, their daughter Emma was born at Alpha. In the 1860s, Dr. Wixom and his family moved first to Omega and then to Austin, Nevada, where Emma gained fame for her singing, earning the sobriquet "the Alpha Nightingale." [31] She moved on to perform in Europe then in America under the stage name Emma Nevada. [32]

Decline

As the mines declined and people left, Alpha quickly became essentially a ghost town. A resident wrote in his diary on November 6, 1863, that there were "only a few people left in Alpha." [33] Many residents moved one mile east to Omega, which continued to flourish for many years. The Masonic Lodge was moved to Omega. [34] Other residents followed new strikes in Nevada. In 1864, only 19 people voted in the presidential election. [35] Gradually, empty buildings were torn down and they would be used for firewood or to build in Omega. [36] By 1880, an historian noted that "Alpha is now worked out and abandoned." [37] During its brief period, it is estimated that $2 million in gold was produced in the Alpha diggings. In 1924, an historian observed that "Alpha and Omega have long since passed into oblivion, save as a memory of the thriving settlements of the early 50s and 60s." [38]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Graniteville, California</span> Unincorporated community in California, United States

Graniteville is a small, unincorporated community and census-designated place (CDP) located in Nevada County, California, United States. The town sits on the San Juan ridge separating the Middle and South Forks of the Yuba River, approximately 26 miles (42 km) northeast of Nevada City. The elevation of Graniteville is 4,977 feet (1,517 m) above sea level.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">North Bloomfield Mining and Gravel Company</span> Historic site in North Bloomfield, California

The North Bloomfield Mining and Gravel Company of North Bloomfield, California, was established in 1866 and operated a hydraulic gold-mining operation at the Malakoff Mine subsequent to the California Gold Rush. In its day, no other company's operations matched North Bloomfield Mining and Gravel Company in size or expense. The company operated until 1910. In the years prior, its profits and procedures had been reduced due to the landmark ruling of Woodruff v. North Bloomfield Gravel Mining Company.

Lake City is an unincorporated community in Nevada County, California. It lies at an elevation of 3300 ft. about 10 miles northeast of Nevada City as the crow flies, and about three miles southeast of North Columbia, and three miles southwest of North Bloomfield. It is located at the junction of modern day North Bloomfield, Back Bone and Lake City Roads. It was an important mining and transportation center in the second half of the 19th century.

Moore's Flat was a historic mining town located on the San Juan Ridge about 19 miles northeast of Nevada City, California and about 5 miles northeast of North Bloomfield, California. The town was about 1 mile south of the Middle Yuba at an elevation of about 4200 ft. On either side of it, lay the mining towns of Orleans Flat and Woolsey's Flat, each about I mile apart. All three were settled around 1851 and their histories frequently intertwine. Collectively, they are sometimes referred to as "The Flats." All three were part of Eureka Township.

Orleans Flat was a historic mining town located on the San Juan Ridge about 20 miles northeast of Nevada City, California and about 5 miles northeast of North Bloomfield, California. The town was about 1 mile south of the Middle Yuba River at an elevation of about 4200 ft. To the west lay the mining towns of Moore's Flat and Woolsey's Flat, each about I mile apart. All three were settled around 1851 and their histories frequently intertwine. Collectively, they are sometimes referred to as "The Flats." All three were part of Eureka Township.


Woolsey's Flat was a historic mining town located on the San Juan Ridge, located about 17 miles northeast of Nevada City and about 3 miles northeast of North Bloomfield. The town was about 1 mile south of the Middle Yuba at an elevation of about 4200 ft. To the east lay the mining towns of Moore's Flat and Orleans Flat, each about I mile apart. All three were settled in 1851 and their histories frequently intertwine. Collectively, they are sometimes referred to as "The Flats. All three were part of Eureka Township.

Snow Point was a historic mining town in Nevada County, California on the San Juan Ridge about 2 miles east of Moore's Flat and about 6 miles west of Graniteville. It was located at an elevation of 4321 ft just off present day German Bar Road about midway between that road's intersections with present day Moore's Flat Road and Hagerty Road.

Snow Tent was a historic settlement in Nevada County, California. The name derives from a tent set up by the first resident in 1850. Snow Tent grew into a gold mining and lumbering center, then vanished sometime after 1880.

Maybert was a mining town in Nevada County, California. It was located on the south side of the South Yuba River, about 6 miles east of the town of Washington, at an elevation of 3,245 ft (989 m). Fall Creek empties into the South Yuba slightly to the northwest of the town site.

Badger Hill is the name of two historic mining areas in Nevada County. The first to be established, in August 1849, was located just east of Grass Valley, approximately where the narrow gauge railroad's Grass Valley station was later located. It appears to have been quickly incorporated into Grass Valley. The second was established around 1853, about 15 miles northeast of Grass Valley, 1 mile north of Cherokee and just south of the Middle Yuba River. It adopted its own mining laws in March 1854. Hydraulic mining predominated with the arrival of ditch water. It had a number of successful mines, some of which operated into the 20th century. The English Company and the Badger Hill Gold Mining Company were among the principal mines. The mines abutted those of Cherokee to the south, and Cherokee seems to have served the Badger Hill miners as a commercial and social center.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Blue Tent, California</span> Mining community in California, United States

Blue Tent is a historic 19th century gold mining community located about six miles northeast of Nevada City, California.

Cherokee is a former gold mining community in Nevada County, California. As explained below, it has also been known as Patterson, Melrose and Tyler. It is located on the San Juan Ridge about 4 miles east of North San Juan. Its elevation is 2,516 ft (767 m) above sea level.

Little York is the name of one of the first gold mining towns established in Nevada County, California as well as the name of the township in which it was situated. The town was located on the Lowell Ridge between Steephollow Creek and the Bear River, about 13 miles east of Nevada City, California and about 1 mile southwest of Dutch Flat, California at an elevation of about 2800 feet.

Gaston is the site of a former mining community in Nevada County, California. Gaston lies at an elevation of 5062 feet on the Gaston Ridge. The Gaston Ridge historically, was often referred to as God's Country, because of its wild and somewhat inaccessible beauty. Gaston is located 3.25 miles (5.2 km) south of Graniteville and about 4 miles northeast of the town of Washington. It is near the intersection of what are now Gaston and Hoosier Roads, in the Tahoe National Forest.

Mooney Flat was an important mining and transportation hub in western Nevada County, California, just east of the Yuba County line. It was situated on modern Mooney Flat Road, about 1 mile north of modern Highway 20, at an elevation of about 800 ft.

Chalk Bluff is the name of the ridge which lies between Greenhorn and Steephollow Creeks in Nevada County, California. It runs in a northeasterly direction for about 10 miles, and sits atop a "lead" of auriferous gravel, which intersects the fabled "Blue Lead" which runs from the San Juan Ridge through Red Dog and You Bet towards Placer County. It was also briefly the name for the mining camp that grew into the important town of Red Dog, then the name for a mining camp east of Red Dog. It received its name from the prominent chalk bluffs on the Ridge.

Remington Hill is a historic mining camp in Nevada County, California which prospered in the second half of the 19th century. It was named for Caleb Remington, a prominent local miner who lived mostly in neighboring Little York, where he died in 1865. It lay at an elevation of 4052 feet. It was situated around present Chalk Bluff Road about one mile south of Highway 20 and about 5.5 miles southeast of the town of Washington and 6 miles northeast of Dutch Flat, as the crow flies.

Sebastopol was a historic mining community located on the San Juan Ridge, about 13 miles north of Nevada City. It lay midway between Sweetland and North San Juan, around the intersection of modern Sweetland and School Roads, at an elevation of about 2000 feet.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Independence Trail</span>

The Independence Trail is located approximately 7 miles from downtown Nevada City within the South Yuba River State Park in the Sierra Nevada foothills within Nevada County, in Northern California. The trail is the former Excelsior Ditch, which was found and repaired by John Olmsted and a large group of local volunteers. It is notable for being the first ADA approved wheelchair nature trail. It topped the list of "favorite trails for 2013" in The Sacramento Bee newspaper.

Ormonde was a gold mining community located about 3 1/2 miles east of the town of Washington on present day Maybert Road on the north side of the South Yuba River. The Ormonde townsite is best accessed with a four-wheel drive vehicle with good clearance.

References

  1. U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Alpha, California
  2. Several sources report that the exact location of Alpha is not known. See e.g. Slyter, Robert I., Nevada County Historical Society Bulletin, Vol. 34, No. 4 (October 1980) (hereafter Slyter) p. 24. Probably the most accurate location is that depicted on the 1891 or 1898 Colfax quadrangle maps.
  3. Skaar, Sven, Nevada County Historical Society Bulletin, Vol. 12, No. 3 (August 1958) (hereafter Skaar) p. 2.
  4. Gudde, Erwin G., (1998, 4th ed.) California Place Names, p. 8. Durham gives the original name as Hell Out for High Noon City. Durham, David L. (1998). California's Geographic Names: A Gazetteer of Historic and Modern Names of the State. p. 442.
  5. The channel probably extends a few miles further west to Relief Hill. MacBoyle, Errol (1918) Mines and Mineral Resources of Nevada County, p. 47.
  6. At that time, the phrase from Alpha and Omega was used much like the phrase from A-to-Z today, to connote the beginning and end of something, and everything contained within.
  7. Alta California, May 7, 1855, June 7, 1856; Slyter, p. 23.
  8. Bean, Edwin F. (1867) History and Directory of Nevada County (hereafter Bean) pp. 378–9.
  9. Slyter, p. 24.
  10. Slyter, p. 26; Nevada Democrat, June 17, 1857, March 24, 1858.
  11. Nevada Journal, December 30, 1853; Nevada Democrat August 25, 1858.
  12. Nevada Democrat, November 10, 1860
  13. Janicot, Michel (1994) A History of Nevada County Post Offices (hereafter Janicot), p. 9.
  14. Thompson, Thomas H. and West, Albert A. (1970 ed.) History of Nevada County-1880 (hereafter Thompson and West), pp. 156–7, 162.
  15. Grass Valley Union, September 10, 1856.
  16. Hydraulic Press, November 19, 1859; Grass Valley Union, February 28, 1866.
  17. Nevada Democrat, December 3, 1856.
  18. Slyter, page 25.
  19. Slyter, page 24.
  20. Slyter, Page 25.
  21. See e.g., Daily National Gazette, July 6, 1854, October 9, 1855; Nevada Democrat, March 18, 1857; Sacramento Union, May 4, 1855, October 14, 1857, March 11, 1858.
  22. Slyter, p. 26; Sacramento Union, February 27, 1854.
  23. Slyter, p.26; Sacramento Union, November 28, 1857, January 19, 1858.
  24. Sacramento Union, January 19, 1858.
  25. Bean, pp. 378-9.
  26. Slyter, p. 26.
  27. Slyter, pp. 26-7.
  28. Sacramento Union, August 23, 1855.
  29. Slyter, p. 25.
  30. Placer Republican, May 27, 1885; Slyter, p. 23.
  31. Skaar, p. 3.
  32. Comstock, Davis A., Lives of Nevada County Pioneers; Kent, Genevieve, Nevada County Historical Society Bulletin, Vol. 5, No.2 5(July, 1951) pp. 2-4.
  33. quoting
  34. Slyter, pp. 25-6.
  35. Nevada Gazette, November 11, 1864.
  36. Slyter, pp. 25–26.
  37. Thompson, Thomas H. and West, Albert A. (1970 ed.) History of Nevada County-1880, p. 167. page 92
  38. Lardner, W.B. and Brock, M.J. (1924) History of Placer and Nevada Counties California, p. 326.