Storey County, Nevada (NV), United States, North America
Latitude
unknown
Longitude
unknown
Comstock Lode
, richest known U.S. silver deposit, Storey co., W
Nevada, at Mt. Davidson in the Virginia Range. It is said to have been
discovered in 1857 by Ethan Allen Grosh and Hosea Ballou Grosh, sons of
a Pa. minister and veterans of the Calif. gold fields who died under
tragic circumstances before their claims were recorded. Henry T. P.
Comstock, known as Old Pancake, was a sheepherder and prospector who
took possession of the brothers' cabin and tried to find their old
sites. He and others searching for gold laid claim to sections of the
Comstock (1859) but soon sold them for insignificant sums. The lode did
not become really profitable until its bluish sand was assayed as
silver. Yielded gold 1859-1865; 2d rush 1873-1882; declined after
much lower levels were flooded. Peak years were 1876-1878, $36,000,000
annually. Ultimately yielded one billion dollars' worth of silver and
gold. News of the discovery spread rapidly, attracting promoters and
traders as well as miners, and the lode was the scene of feverish
activity. Among early arrivals was William Morris Stewart, who later
became one of Nev.'s first senators. Camps and trading posts in the
area became important supply centers, and Virginia City, a mining camp
on the mt., was for several decades the capital of the lode and a
center of fabulous luxury. Great fortunes were made by the silver
kings, John W. Mackay, James Graham Fair, James C. Flood, and
William S. O'Brien, and by Adolph Sutro, George Hearst, and Eilley
Orrum Bowers. Silver determined the economy and development of Nev.
until exhaustion of the mines by wasteful methods of mining and the
demonetization of silver started a decline in the 1870s. By 1898 the
Comstock was virtually abandoned.
Capital city or county seat is shown by the symbol
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