Spenceville, California

Last updated
Spenceville
Former settlement
USA California location map.svg
Red pog.svg
Spenceville
Location in California
Coordinates: 39°06′53″N121°16′06″W / 39.11472°N 121.26833°W / 39.11472; -121.26833
Country United States
State California
County Nevada County
Time zone UTC-8 (Pacific (PST))
  Summer (DST) UTC-7 (PDT)

Spenceville was a ranching, farming and mining community located in the southwestern part of Nevada County, California, on Spenceville Road just east of Waldo Road, about 17 miles from Grass Valley. Its elevation was about 400 feet. The former townsite is now part of the Spenceville Wildlife Area.

Contents

Early history

The area was long occupied by Nisenan Indians, and evidence of their habitation, such as grinding rocks, can be found in the area. White settlers and prospectors begin to arrive in the 1840s. The Nisenan were removed from the area by a series on treaties beginning in 1850, which the Congress never ratified. [1]

Spenceville was never a major gold producing area, in part because the very rich auriferous channel that runs down the San Juan Ridge turns west a few miles north of Spenceville, towards Smartsville and Timbuctoo. The early settlers were farmers and ranchers. In the early 1860s, copper ore was found while digging a well on Purtyman's Ranch. [2] The Well Lead (or Lode), later known as the Well Copper Mine, and its surrounding ranch, soon became the town of Spenceville, [3] named for Edward Spence, a druggist and property owner in Nevada City with interests in the Well Copper Mine. [4] Spence also donated the lumber for a new school house built in 1868. [5]

Copper mining

Copper mining at Spenceville expanded with the discovery of the Last Chance Mine, so called because James Downey had just about given up mining when he found a promising spot and proclaimed "this is the last chance - if I don't strike it here I'll give it up". [6] Still, copper mining initially was not very profitable. Much of the ore was low grade and the early processes for extracting the copper from the ore were not very efficient. [7] Generally ore had to be transported to a distant processing facility such as a smelter. There are even reports of copper ore being sent to Wales for processing. [8] A fall in the price of copper following the Civil War caused a slump in the Spenceville copper mines.

In the mid-1870s, a number of the copper mines around Spenceville were consolidated into the San Francisco Copper Company. [9] The Company substantially improved the roasting and leaching method for processing the copper and operated successfully for a number of years. In 1880, the engineering works, located above the mine, caved in. [10] The mine continued to operate until 1887, falling victim to declining copper prices. In 1890, the Imperial Paint and Copper Company acquired the property. It did not mine but worked the refuse from earlier mining to manufacture a brown paint which was touted as fire and water proof and "superior to any of the metallic paints imported from the East or from Europe." [11] Unfortunately, it was soon discovered that during rain, the sulphur in the paint produced sulphuric acid which ate into the heads of the nails holding down wood shingles and siding. [12] In 1897, the property was acquired by the Spence Mineral Company for the purpose of manufacturing sulphuric acid. [13] A fire in 1915 ended that enterprise. [14]

World War I saw an increase in demand for copper and a revival of some of the Spenceville copper mines. Once the war ended in 1918, copper mining around Spenceville was largely shut down. [15] Over $1 million of copper had been mined. [16] The dark side of copper mining was that it created a lot of pollution and environmental contamination. Contemporary news articles report on the fumes from the copper smelter killing the greenery, including trees, in the area. [17]

The town's heyday

During the 1870s, the town had a post office, three general stores, a hotel and was home to about four hundred people. [18] A school was established; it had 48 students in 1867. [19] A new schoolhouse was built in 1868 on land where the Spenceville Copper Mine buildings were later built. The schoolhouse was then moved further up the road. [20] Spenceville also had a Methodist Church and a Templar Lodge, organized in 1865. [21] A Sunday school had 42 pupils in 1864. [22] The town had a popular baseball team, the White Stockings. [23] A Spenceville election district was established in 1862. 50 people voted in the 1864 presidential election, 33 for Lincoln. The election district was discontinued as copper mining declined but reestablished in 1879. [24] Spenceville was connected by stage to Wheatland, Smartsville and Grass Valley. [25] In the early 1900s, there was considerable talk about a railroad being built to connect points in the Sacramento Valley with Grass Valley and Nevada City, running through Spenceville. It was promoted in part as expediting the shipment of copper ore from Spenceville, but the railroad never materialized. [26]

Ranching and farming

Apart from mining, ranching and farming were prominent. As one historian noted, “Citrus fruits and all kinds of deciduous fruits grow here to perfection.” [27] Just west of Spenceville, enterprising black farmers grew cabbages, which provided Vitamin C for miners to treat scurvy, giving rise to the town of Cabbage Patch, later Waldo. [28] Sheep and cattle were pastured, wherever alfalfa and other grains were not grown. [29]

The Kneebones and Bitners

One of the prominent Spenceville families was the Kneebones. Joseph Kneebone, Sr. came from Cornwall, England in 1867, and purchased a ranch near Spenceville. He started a successful teaming business transporting merchandise from Wheatland to North San Juan and as far east as Virginia City. He and his wife Mary had seven children. In a family cemetery overlooking the Kneebone Ranch are buried five family members, including Joseph Sr. and Jr.. murdered about 20 years apart. [30]

Another prominent family was the Bitners. Cyrus and Mary Bitner, and their two daughters, moved to Spenceville from Iowa in 1873. A Civil War veteran, Captain Bitner owned interests in a number of the copper mines around Spenceville as well as in gold mines throughout Nevada County. He served as Spenceville's justice of the peace. [31]

Modern times

With the collapse of copper mining following World War I, Spenceville began a rapid decline. The school district lapsed in 1920. [32] The post office closed in 1932. [33] During World War II, the United States acquired by eminent domain much of the area around Spenceville and established a training facility. The town site, renamed Spenceburg, was used to simulate a German town. In 1964, the United States sold part of the land, and retained the part that became Beale Air Force Base. California acquired some of the land and created the Spenceville Wildlife Area. A lengthy and expensive effort to clean up the environmental contamination was completed by 2013. The Spenceville Wildlife Area has become a popular site for hiking and recreation. There are few traces left of the old town and mine. [34]

See also

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Gold Country</span> Historic gold-mining region in Northern California

The Gold Country is a historic region in the northern portion of the U.S. state of California, that is primarily on the western slope of the Sierra Nevada. It is famed for the mineral deposits and gold mines that attracted waves of immigrants, known as the 49ers, during the 1849 California Gold Rush.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Empire Mine State Historic Park</span> State-protected site in California

Empire Mine State Historic Park is a state-protected mine and park in the Sierra Nevada mountains in Grass Valley, California, U.S. The Empire Mine is on the National Register of Historic Places, a federal Historic District, and a California Historical Landmark. Since 1975 California State Parks has administered and maintained the mine as a historic site. The Empire Mine is "one of the oldest, largest, deepest, longest and richest gold mines in California". Between 1850 and its closure in 1956, the Empire Mine produced 5.8 million ounces of gold, extracted from 367 miles (591 km) of underground passages.

You Bet is a small unincorporated community in Nevada County, California. You Bet is located in the Sierra Nevada foothills, 7 miles (11.3 km) east of Grass Valley and 5.5 miles (8.9 km) northeast of Chicago Park.

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 Flat or 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.

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.

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.

<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. The community 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.

Poeville, also known as Peavine until 1863, is the site of a historical mining town, established in 1864. John Poe, a professional promoter from Michigan allegedly related to Edgar Allan Poe, discovered rich gold and silver veins in 1862 on the slopes of Peavine Mountain. After the discovery of ore, Poe announced that the veins comprised the next Comstock Lode; he presented extracted ore at the state fair of 1864 as rich in content. As a result, the former mining camp, called Poe City (Poeville) or Podunk (Poedunk), grew to 200 people by 1864. Ore production in the mining district and population peaked around 1873-1874 with several hundred people living in town, supported by three hotels and a post office. The post office, named "Poeville", operated between September 1, 1874, and March 24, 1878. As of 2010 the population of the community is 0.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Meadow Lake, Nevada County, California</span> Former settlement in California, United States

Meadow Lake was a historic mining town in Nevada County, California. It was located on the southwest shore of Meadow Lake, about 18 miles northwest of Truckee as the crow flies. Situated at an elevation of 7,290 ft (2,220 m) above sea level, the reservoir of the same name is one of the highest lakes in elevation within the Tahoe National Forest.

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.

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.

Kentucky Flat is a former settlement in Nevada County, California. Dating to 1850, it was first mined by settlers from the U.S. state of Kentucky. Several valuable quartz leads were discovered in the area, and the diggings were worked with significant profit. In that year, it was considered to be a settlement of importance, crowded with miners, along with Rich Flat, Randolph Flat, Texas Flat, Newtown, Bridgeport, Indian Flat, Anthony House, Gass Flat, and Lander's Bar. The Kentucky Flat Schoolhouse might be the "oldest continuously used one-room schoolhouse in California".

Round Tent is a former settlement in Yuba County, California. It was located 1.25 miles (2.0 km) east-southeast of Waldo Junction.

References

  1. Meals, H., The Spenceville Wildlife Area: Rolling Hills Under A Big Sky, posted Dec. 28, 2018, (hereafter Meals). Viewed at http://yubatreadhead.blogspot.com/2018/12/the-spenceville-wildlife-area-rolling.html on April 2, 2023.
  2. Bean, Edwin F. (1867) History and Directory of Nevada County (hereafter Bean), p. 355.
  3. The name Spenceville appears in newspaper reports in early 1864. See e.g. Nevada Transcript, March 31, 1864; Marysville Daily Appeal, April 1, 1864.
  4. < Spence, who held several political offices in Nevada County including County Treasurer, later moved to Southern California, entered banking, and was elected Mayor of Los Angeles in 1885. Comstock, David A, Lives of Nevada County Pioneers, available from Comstock Bonanza Press. Sacramento Union, October 31, 1915.
  5. Gudde, Erwin G., (1998, 4th ed.) California Place Names, p. 372;
  6. Bean, p. 355; Lampkin, Bedford, The Spenceville Copper Mines, Nevada County Historical Society Bulletin, Vol. 53, No.2 (April 1999) p. 1.
  7. An in-depth discussion of copper ore processing at Spenceville is posted on the Western Mining History website. See Russell, Daniel E., The Spenceville Copper Mine, at https://westernmininghistory.com/library/5577/page1/ viewed April 5, 2023.
  8. Bean, p. 366.
  9. Lampkin, supra fn. 2, p. 2.
  10. Placer Herald, August 21, 1880.
  11. Poingdestre J. E., (1895) Nevada County Directory, p.125.
  12. Lampkin, supra fn. 2, p. 4.
  13. Lampkin, supra fn. 2, p. 4.
  14. Sacramento Union, October 31, 1915.
  15. Meals, supra fn. 1.
  16. California State Mining Bureau (1902) Copper Resources of California, Bulletin # 23, p. 163.
  17. Grass Valley Union, December 1, 1878.
  18. Thompson, Thomas H. and West, Albert A., ( 1970 ed.), History of Nevada County 1880, p. 91.
  19. Nevada Transcript, April 10, 1867.
  20. Weeks, Clara A., Early Schools of Nevada County, Nevada County Historical Society Bulletin, Vol. 10, No.2 (April 1956) p. 2.
  21. Bean, p. 363.
  22. Nevada Transcript, May 19, 1864.
  23. Bal, Peggy, (1993) Pebbles in the Stream, p. 33.
  24. Grass Valley Union, July 29, 1879.
  25. Placer Herald, July 3, 1880.
  26. Grass Valley Union, June 6, 1897;Sacramento daily Union, October 31, 1906; July 5, 1907.
  27. Lardner, W.B. and Brock, M.J. (1924) History of Placer and Nevada Counties California, p. 434.
  28. Meals, supra fn. 1.
  29. Meals, supra fn. 1.
  30. Lardner, W.B. and Brock, M.J. (1924) History of Placer and Nevada Counties California, pp. 976-8; Bal, Peggy, (1993) Pebbles in the Stream, p. 23.
  31. Grass Valley Union, August 8, 1917; Brower, M.E., Spenceville: Mines and more, Grass Valley Union, March 16, 2002.
  32. Sacramento Union, June 20, 1920.; Grass Valley Union, August 4, 1920.
  33. Janicot, Michel, (1994), A History of Nevada County Post Offices, pp. 35-6.
  34. Meals, supra fn. 1.