We had heard about a ghost town just outside of the park toward Beatty, Nevada, so we took off for a day of exploring (and cooling off since we’d be at a higher elevation).
Rhyolite is the largest ghost town in Death Valley, boasting a population of nearly 10,000 people during its peak between 1905 – 1911. We so enjoyed walking around the ruins and imagining. Please walk with us.
Time line:
1904 – gold found
1905 – town established and town-site platted; it was well laid out main street with stores on both sides, a Nob Hill for fancy homes, and many streets
1906 – San Francisco earthquake destroys California financial district, jeopardizing funding for Nevada mines
1907 – financial panic in the East negatively impacts Nevada mines
1908 – estimated population is 5000 – 8000; mines’ production levels fall
1910 – people begin to leave; gold production drops!
1919 – post office closes
1920 – population is estimated at 14
Now for some buildings
2-room building erected in 1905. Although originally built as a residence, was thought to have been a brothel—probably why it lasted in such good shape.
view of the town toward main street
ruins of a house with a basement in tact
Barney found some ruins outside of town; by its size and being next to a road, we think it was a tavern. See the stairs leading up from the road to the building?
See the entrance to a mine just left of where the 2 roads meet? A gold mine.
growth of the town
1905
Rhyolite became a modern city in 1906 with indoor plumbing, electricity, and other luxuries.
Rhyolite in 1907
1908
Tom Kelly’s Bottle House
erected in 1906. Tom Kelly built this 3-room bottle house to raffle off. It served as a residence to the winning family for many years and was then a curio shop. The bottles provided insulation so cooler in summer and warmer in winter. It was filled in with adobe and then covered with plaster.
corner of porch
close up of bottles
shows the bottles that are no longer covered by plaster
side of house showing bottles covered over at the bottom
new look at Last Supper
full-size figures; see the next picture for a description of this scene; this art was just at the entrance of Rhyolite
artist had other figures at this site
Fascinating place with the ghost town and the art. One more blog on Death Valley to go!