Inscription
Fairview 1905 – 1917. Fairview was part of the renewed interest in mining, triggered by the strikes in Tonopah and Goldfield. Discoveries in 1905 of a rich silver float led to a boom that lasted through 1906 1907. A substantial town that boasted 27 saloons, hotels, banks, assay offices, a newspaper, a post office, and a miner’s union hall soon came into being.
By 1908, the boom had passed and production leveled out. During 1911, the Nevada Hills Mining Company began an era of profitable milling that lasted until 1917. Production amounted to 3.8 million dollars in silver values.George Wingfield and George Nixon, prominent Nevada mining promoters of the time, bought some of the first claims in Fairview to give impetus to a boom.
Location
Sources
More markers in Churchill
Pony Express Route 1860 Sesquicentennial 2010.
Fallon, NV
Pony Express Route 1860 Sesquicentennial 2010.
Oats Park School.
Fallon, NV
Oats Park School. The Oats Park School was designed in 1914 by Frederick J. DeLongchamps, Nevada’s pre-eminent architect of the period.
Lahontan Dam.
Fallon, NV
Lahontan Dam. Lahontan Dam, completed in 1915, is the key feature of the Newlands irrigation project that turned Lahontan Valley into one...
Wonder.
Fairview, NV
Wonder. Located 13 miles to the north is the camp of Wonder, a major mining center in the early years of the 20th Century.
Brushed metal plaque № 48961
Hazen, NV
Hazen. Hazen was named for William Babcock Hazen, who served under General Sherman in his “march to the sea.
