Inscription
Tonopah. Jim Butler, District Attorney of Nye County, is credited with the turn-of-century discovery, which ended a twenty-year slump in Nevada’s economy. American Indians originally used the name Tonopah for a small spring in the nearby San Antonio Mountains, long before Butler camped in this area in May 1900.
Tonopah became the richest silver producer in the nation and replaced Belmont as the Nye County county seat in 1905. The mines spawned a railroad, several huge mills, and a bustling population of approximately 10,000.The mines faltered in the 1920s, but Tonopah achieved long-lasting fame because of the prominent financial and political leaders it produced.
Many camps and communities followed in the wake of Tonopah’s boom, most of which have become ghost towns.
Location
Sources
More markers in Nye
Tate’s Stage Station 1886 1901.
Carvers, NV
Tate’s Stage Station 1886 1901.
Brushed metal plaque № 48956
Beatty, NV
Beatty. Beatty was the center of three short-lived, so-called “gold” railroads that were spawned by early 1900s strikes in Tonopah,...
Tybo
Tonopah, NV
Tybo (Silver — Lead — Zinc Camp).
Brushed metal plaque № 48954
Pahrump, NV
Chief Tecopa Peacemaker Of The Paiutes.
Brushed metal plaque № 48948
Mercury, NV
Nevada Test Site. Tests of devices for defense and for peaceful uses of nuclear explosives have been conducted here since the 1950s.
