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Camera - Vintage Photos IconIMAGES OF THE AMERICAN WEST

Elizabethtown, NM Vintage Photographs

 

 

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Eleanor Sunk in this Meadow and Remains There Today

Eleanor dredge, Elizabethtown, New Mexico

Kathy Weiser, May, 2004

 

 

By the late 1800's Elizabethtown was nearly deserted as placer mining had pretty much "panned out." However, dredges revived the town in 1900, bringing new life to the community. In 1901, the Oro Dredging Company began the work of erecting a monstrous dredge, fondly christened "Eleanor." The enormous piece of equipment, born of the machine era, posed numerous challenges in its transportation through the mountain passes to E-town. Piece by piece, the dredge was hauled from the railhead at Springer via mountain roads and water.  The dredging company built a dam three miles from E-town and hauled the biggest pieces on a large boat.  By August, 1901 the dredge began production and handled up to four thousand cubic yards of dirt a day. In its first year of operation, the Eleanor paid for herself and cleared $100,000, mining a remarkable one-quarter of all the gold found in New Mexico that year.

 

However, tragedy struck E-town in 1903 when a devastating fire destroyed most of the town. At about the same time, the owner of the dredge mortgaged Eleanor to get money to finance a similar venture in Colorado. Unfortunately, the next year was unprofitable for Eleanor, and the owner ended up having to take bankruptcy. The dredging operation finally died in 1905 and Eleanor was left to rust and sink into the sands of Moreno Creek. The buried remains of Eleanor remain there but no trace of her can be seen now.

 

 

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