Inscription
Columbus. The remnants of Columbus are located on the edge of the Columbus salt marsh, five miles to the southwest.The town was initially settled in 1865, when a quartz mill was erected at the site. This was a favorable location for a mill, because it was the only spot for several miles around where water was in sufficient quantity for operation.
The full importance of Columbus was not recognized until 1871, when William Troop discovered borax in the locality. Shortly thereafter, four borax companies were actively engaged in working the deposits on the marsh.Columbus probably enjoyed its most prosperous time in about 1875, when the population was reported to have reached 1,000.
That year, the town had many kinds of business establishments, including a post office and a newspaper, The Borax Miner.In 1881, about 100 people were left after the borax operations had practically ceased. All mining and milling stopped entirely shortly after that time.
Location
Sources
More markers in Esmeralda
Blair.
Silver Peak, NV
Blair. The Pittsburgh-Silver Peak Gold Mining Company bought the major mines in the area in 1906.
Palmetto.
Sylvania, NV
Palmetto. Thinking that local Joshua trees were related to palm trees, the 1866 prospectors named the mining camp Palmetto.
Lida.
Lida, NV
Lida. Known as a gathering point for Shoshone and Northern Paiute Indians, Lida Valley was the site of early prospecting in the 1860s.
Brushed metal plaque № 48939
Coaldale, NV
Silver Peak. Silver Peak is one of the oldest mining areas in Nevada.
Fish Lake Valley.
Dyer, NV
Fish Lake Valley. This valley was settled when the palmetto mining district was discovered in 1866.
