Nevadaville
It was also known in the 1860s and 1870s as Nevada. The post office at Nevadaville was called the Bald Mountain post office, to avoid confusion with other Nevadavilles.
Nevadaville started in 1859, soon after John H. Gregory found the first lode gold in what is now Colorado. At the time, the townsite was in western Kansas Territory. The town grew to house the miners working the Burroughs lode and the Kansas lode. The population was predominantly Irish.
The town was one of the most important mining settlements in the area. A masonic lodge was organized in 1859. Nevadaville rebuilt after fire destroyed part of the town in November 1861. A more serious threat to the town was the fact that the near-surface oxidized portions of the veins were worked out in the early 1860s. The rudimentary ore mills had trouble recovering gold from the deeper sulfide ores. The continued prosperity of Nevadaville was assured by the construction of successful ore smelters in nearby Black Hawk.
Nevadaville prospered until about 1900, after which the population declined sharply.
|