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NEVADA
LEGENDS
The Lost Breyfogle Mine |
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Joining
the thousands of “49ers” rushing into
California
were brothers, Charles and Joshua Breyfogle. Hailing from Lockhart, New
York, the pair headed west with a train of
saddle and draft horses and two wagons in the spring of 1849. They soon teamed up with other pioneers in
Columbus,
Ohio and continued their long journey to the
California
goldfields.
After many
trials and tribulations through the Indian ridden plains, steep mountains,
and harsh desert, they finally reached Sacramento on August, 14, 1849.
About a month later the
Breyfogles began searching for their fortunes in the promising areas of
Butte Creek and the
Chico River. Having
no success, they had moved on to the
Yuba
River,
some 12 miles above the
California
gold rush tent city of Marysville, in January, 1850.
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Many believe the lost Breyfogle Mine is in Nye
County,
Nevada.
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Again disappointed, they moved upstream a month later to Goodhues,
where they began to work on a new claim. This time their efforts paid
off, as they began to find gold in the river bottom and along the
banks above the river.
By December, 1850, Charles Breyfogle returned to
New York
with some $20,000, leaving his brother Joshua to work the claim. A year later, Charles returned to
California,
settling in Oakland where he was elected county assessor in 1854 and
treasurer in 1859. When he couldn’t account for $6500 in county fund,
he was thrown in jail. Though he was soon exonerated and
released, he evidently had had his fill of politics and decided to
return to prospecting.
Following the new silver strike in
Nevada,
he went to Virginia City where the buzz was about the new finds near
Austin,
Nevada
in 1862. More stories were circulating about gold in the
Big Smoky Valley
and seeing opportunity, Breyfogle opened a real estate office in a
hotel at the mining camp of Geneva. Unfortunately, by the time
Charles arrived the Geneva veins were already dwindling and he was
once again looking for opportunities.
In 1863, he heard three men at the hotel discussing a crude map. Sure that they were discussing the legendary
Lost Gunsight Mine of
Death Valley, he decided to follow them when they left the next day. Trailing them across
Nevada
,
he caught up with them between Tonopah and
Goldfield,
where he was surprised to find that the men were not looking for the
lost
Gunsight
lode, but rather were on their way to Texas to join the Confederate
army. The men were on their way to join a wagon train on the
Los
Angeles
trail and Breyfogle decided to ride with them for a couple of days.
Three days later, the men were encamped south of Ash Meadows in the
Mohave Desert’s
Amargosa River
Valley. Laying his bedroll out apart from the others, he awoke in the
middle of the night to see
Indians
attacking the other three men. Grabbing his bedroll and boot, he
fled in the darkness.
Without provisions or weapons he wandered in the desert for several
days until he finally found a spring. Resting there he found
gold in a deposit of quartz and took with him several samples, vying
to return if he could ever find his way out of the desert. Heading south, he eventually came upon wagon tracks which he followed
to Stump Spring in the
Pahrump
Valley,
in
Nevada's
eastern Mohave desert. |
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Deciding to wait at the spring for a wagon train to show up, he was
instead found by
Indians
first. Taking him captive, they worked him as a slave for months. Finally a Mormon wagon train came upon the Indian village and freed him
with a ransom. Taking him to a ranch at Manse Spring in southern
Nevada
, he was cared for by the wife’s owner, Mrs. Yount. Grateful, he told the family about his gold discovery, showing them the
samples he had held onto.
After Breyfogle had fully
recovered he settled in
Austin,
Nevada,
where he would organize search parties for the next 26 years. Concentrating on the region northeast of
Death Valley, the men would search in vain, never finding that lost
outcropping. But Breyfogle never stopped looking, becoming so
obsessed with the search that he once said,
"I shall
come back a rich man or leave my bones in Death Valley."
Through the years, many theorized as to where Breyfogle had found the
gold, believing it to be located near
Las Vegas,
Salt Spring or Daylight Pass. However, many believed that the very
same rich quartz that Charles had discovered ended up becoming the Johnnie
Mine, north of Pahrump,
Nevada. The rich lodes of the Johnnie District were first discovered in 1891 by a
man named George Montgomery who was searching for the famous Lost Breyfogle Mine. Yet others believe the mine to be in
California
in the Armargosa River Valley. Though the vast majority believe that
Breyfogle’s find was in the Johnnie Mining District, not all researchers
and hobbyists are convinced, as they continue to search for Breyfogle’s
lost gold.
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Many researchers and hobbyists believe the
Lost
Breyfogle Mine to yet unfound in the Armagosa
River
Valley of
California,
photo courtesy University of California - Santa Barbara Department of
Geography
More Treasure
Tales Next Page
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The Johnnie District is in
Nye County, in southwestern
Nevada. On the north end of the Pahrump Valley, most of the placer activity was
conducted in the washes below the Congress Mine, but also to the northeast
of Johnnie on the west slope of the Spring Mountains, and other
surrounding areas. To get there, travel south from
Las Vegas
on Interstate 15 to the junction of State Route 16, then follow northwest
past Pahrump for approximately 70 miles to reach the Johnnie District. Here, mines and placers can be seen on both sides of the highway and on
the slopes of Mount Schader and Montgomery.
© May, 2006
Kathy Weiser/Legends
of America
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