Pine Grove Nevada – Lyon County Ghost Town
Pine Grove is a classic Nevada ghost town located in Lyon County, in the Pine Grove Hills on the eastern slopes of the Pine Grove Canyon. Situated at an elevation of approximately 6,716 feet, the site lies south of Smith Valley and Mason Valley, near modern-day Yerington. Established in 1866 as a gold-mining camp, Pine Grove quickly grew into a bustling regional supply center before following the typical boom-and-bust pattern of Nevada’s 19th-century mining towns. Today, it stands largely abandoned, with well-preserved ruins that offer a window into the state’s mining heritag

Discovery and Founding (1866–1868)
Gold was discovered in June 1866 by William Wilson, a prospector from nearby Mason Valley, in the canyon of the Pine Grove Hills. According to some accounts, Wilson was guided to the outcroppings by a local Native American. The initial settlement was named Wilsonville in his honor. Within months, a rush brought miners and settlers, and the camp was renamed Pine Grove—either after the surrounding Pine Grove Hills or a nearby grove of piñon (pinyon) trees traditionally harvested by Indigenous people for nuts.
By 1868, the town had formalized with a post office (established September 7, 1868) and a weekly newspaper, the Pine Grove Chronicle. The population reached about 200. Two steam-powered stamp mills and three arrastras (primitive ore-grinding mills) were constructed to process gold and silver ore from the Wilson Mine (the original discovery) and the nearby Wheeler Mine. Freight lines connected the camp to Sacramento, California, and a stagecoach route linked it to Wellington in Smith Valley. The first road into the canyon was a spur off the Wellington-Pine Grove Wagon Road.

Decline and Abandonment (1880s–1930s)
Like many Nevada mining camps, Pine Grove’s fortunes declined as easily accessible ore dwindled. Production began to taper in the 1880s. The Panic of 1893 and the subsequent demonetization of silver (following the repeal of the Sherman Silver Purchase Act) delivered a severe blow, making many operations unprofitable.
A brief revival occurred between 1900 and 1910, with some renewed mining and the construction of a new access road from the east around 1904. However, output never matched earlier levels. All major mining activity ceased by 1918, though sporadic prospecting and tailings reworking continued into the mid-20th century. The last full-time residents departed by the 1930s, leaving Pine Grove a true ghost town.
Legacy and Present-Day Status
Pine Grove’s ruins remain remarkably intact compared to many Nevada ghost towns. Visible structures include the remains of a five-stamp mill (manufactured by Joshua Hendy Iron Works of San Francisco) adjacent to the one-room schoolhouse, the old Pine Grove Hotel (a two-story wooden building that once may have housed a dance hall), rock walls from stores and other buildings, and scattered mining equipment. A cemetery on a hilltop overlooking Mason Valley contains graves marked by rocks, wooden posts, and a few engraved headstones, including that of 15-year-old Alice Maria Robinson.
The site is divided into three main sections along the canyon, with additional mines and pits in the surrounding hills. Access is via dirt roads (including a narrow shelf road to the cemetery), making it popular with off-road enthusiasts and historians. Preservation efforts, including cleanups by groups like Nevada Backroads and the Friends of Pine Grove Ghost Town, have removed trash and protected the cemetery. Occasional modern exploration and minor prospecting continue, but no active mining occurs. Nearby Rockland, discovered shortly after Pine Grove in 1868, shares a similar history but has fewer standing structures.
Conclusion
Pine Grove’s story mirrors the broader history of Nevada’s Comstock-era mining boom: rapid growth fueled by precious metals, followed by economic realities and resource depletion. From a remote 1866 prospector’s camp to a thriving community of 600, and finally to a quiet collection of ruins, it stands as a testament to the resilience of early settlers and the fleeting nature of mineral wealth. The site continues to attract visitors seeking authentic glimpses of the Old West, reminding us of the human stories behind Nevada’s ghost towns.
Pine Grove Town Summary
| Name | Pine Grove |
| Location | Lyon County, Nevada |
| Post Office | Sept 1868-Oct 1869 Nov 1869-Nov 1912 |
| Newspaper | The Pine Grove Chronicle ( 1872-1872 ) |
Pine Grove Trail Map
Resources
- Nevada Ghost Towns and Mining Camps, Stanley W Paher
- Wikipedia
Columbus Nevada – Esmeralda County Ghost Town
Columbus was a short-lived mining boomtown and ghost town in Esmeralda County, Nevada, situated on the edge of the Columbus Salt Marsh (approximate coordinates 38°06′37″N 118°01′09″W). Its remnants lie roughly five miles southwest of the original site marker area along what is now accessible via dirt roads off U.S. Route 95 in a remote desert region between Hawthorne and Tonopah. The town’s history exemplifies the classic Nevada mining cycle of rapid discovery, prosperity, and abandonment driven by silver, gold, and especially borax extraction. It is officially recognized by Nevada Historical Marker No. 20.

Early Discovery and Founding (1863–1866)
Spanish prospectors first discovered silver in the region in 1863, sparking initial interest in the Candelaria Mining District to the north. American settlers formally established the Columbus mining camp in 1865. The location proved ideal for milling because it was the only spot for miles with sufficient water to operate machinery. A quartz (stamp) mill was erected on site in 1865, and another was relocated from the nearby town of Aurora in 1866. By the end of 1866, the settlement had grown to approximately 200 residents and functioned primarily as an early milling center for gold and silver ores from surrounding mines. Three mills with a combined 28 stamps eventually processed ore from the Candelaria district.

Borax Boom and Industrial Growth (1871–1875)
The town’s fortunes expanded dramatically in 1871 when William Troop discovered rich borax deposits in the alkali flat (Columbus Salt Marsh) immediately south of the camp. Salt had already been noted as abundant in the same marsh, but borax became the dominant resource. By 1873, four borax companies operated in the area, with the prominent Pacific Borax Company beginning large-scale work in September 1872 and constructing facilities about five miles south of town. Borax processing plants ran continuously day and night for eight months each year.
Infrastructure and amenities quickly developed to support the boom. Columbus gained a post office (which operated from April 2, 1866, to February 15, 1871, then reopened April 5, 1871, until its final closure on March 2, 1899), an adobe school, an iron foundry, multiple stores, and the weekly newspaper The Borax Miner. Stagecoach lines connected the town to Fish Lake Valley, Lida, and Candelaria, while freight teams hauled silver ore and borax 125 miles north to the nearest railroad depot at Wadsworth. By summer 1875, 28 freight teams were active on this route.
Peak Prosperity (circa 1875)
Columbus reached its zenith around 1875. Official state records report a peak population of about 1,000 residents, though other contemporary accounts describe several hundred. The town served as a vital regional hub for ore processing and borax shipping, with bustling commercial activity and even recreational developments such as a horse-racing track and grandstand built by the Columbus Jockey Club on the nearby flat. It was one of the few places in the isolated desert with reliable water, making it a logical center for milling and transport.
Decline and Transition to Ghost Town (1875–1890s)
The boom proved unsustainable. In 1875, the Pacific Borax Company constructed a larger and more efficient plant at Fish Lake Valley, approximately 30 miles south, shifting operations away from Columbus. Borax production declined sharply, and most mining and milling activities ceased by the mid-1880s. Population dropped to roughly 100 by 1881, with only a dozen businesses remaining. Minor revival attempts included a soap factory in 1881 and later horse racing, but these could not reverse the downturn. Sporadic mining continued into the early 20th century, including operations at nearby Calmville (with its own short-lived post office from 1893–1895). In the 1950s, an unsuccessful flotation mill and a cyanide plant operated briefly east of the townsite, leaving additional foundations and tanks, but the core settlement never recovered. The post office closed permanently in 1899, and Columbus became a true ghost town.
Legacy and Current Status
Today, Columbus exists only as scattered ruins—foundations, mill remnants, and debris—on the edge of the salt marsh. It stands as a classic example of Nevada’s 19th-century boom-and-bust mining history, tied to the broader silver rushes and the unique borax industry that later fueled operations at places like Death Valley. The site is marked by Nevada Historical Marker No. 20 and is occasionally visited by historians, off-road enthusiasts, and ghost-town explorers. No permanent population remains, and the area is remote, requiring four-wheel-drive access.
Columbus’s story highlights how resource-dependent towns in the American West rose and fell with mineral prices, technological shifts, and competition from newer deposits. Its brief but intense prosperity contributed to the economic development of Esmeralda County and the early infrastructure of central Nevada.
Town Summary
| Name | Columbus |
| Location | Esmeralda County, Nevada |
| Latitude, Longitude | 38.110278, -118.019167 |
| Population | 1000 |
| Elevation | 4560 |
| Newspaper | Borax Miner Oct 18, 1873; Feb 20, 1875 – Sept 15, 1877 (missing: Aug 14, Sept 11, Dec 24, 1875; May 27, Sept 23, Dec 9, 1876; Feb 10, Mar 17, Apr 1, 21, 28, May 5, 1877) |
| Post Office |
Columbus Trail Map
Resources
Blair Nevada – Esmeralda County Ghost Town
Blair, Nevada, is a classic mining ghost town in Esmeralda County, located approximately three miles north of Silver Peak at an elevation of 4,616 feet (1,407 meters). Established during the early 20th-century gold rush that radiated from the famous Tonopah boom, Blair experienced a brief but intense period of growth as a company-built mining camp. It is now largely abandoned, with only stone building remnants and mill foundations marking its short-lived existence. The town is commemorated by Nevada Historical Marker No. 174.

Founding and Boom Period (1906–1910s)
Blair owes its creation to the Pittsburgh-Silver Peak Gold Mining Company (sometimes spelled Pittsburg). In 1906, as the company began acquiring major gold mines in the Silver Peak district amid the Tonopah mining hysteria, land speculators in nearby Silver Peak quickly bought up property and drove prices to exorbitant levels. Rather than pay the inflated costs for a mill site in Silver Peak, the company secretly surveyed and developed a new townsite about three miles north. They named the settlement Blair after John Insley Blair, a prominent East Coast banker and financier involved in the project.
The town grew rapidly. By the end of 1906, it boasted a population of around 700 residents, supported by saloons, a two-story hotel (one notable establishment, Patty Flannery’s saloon and hotel, reportedly had a brewery in the basement), general stores, a mercantile, and even a Chinese laundry. A post office opened on November 8, 1906 (operating until December 8, 1916), and the weekly Blair Press newspaper began publication in November 1906 (with some interruptions, it ran intermittently until 1910). Additional papers, such as a relocated Silver Peak Post briefly renamed the Blair Booster, also appeared but folded quickly.

Infrastructure and Economy
The economic heart of Blair was the company’s massive stamp mill, completed in 1907 and described at the time as Nevada’s largest (initially 100 stamps, later enlarged by 20 more). Ore from the Mary Tunnel was delivered to the mill via a 14,000-foot aerial tramway. The Pittsburgh-Silver Peak Gold Mining Company also built the 17.5-mile Silver Peak Railroad in 1906 to connect Blair to the Tonopah & Goldfield Railroad, enabling efficient transport of ore and supplies.
Over its operating life, the mill processed more than $6 million worth of gold ore. Mining and milling activities supported the town’s businesses and workers through the peak boom years
Decline and Abandonment (1915–1920)
Blair’s prosperity proved short-lived. By October 1915, the ore had become too low-grade to mine profitably at prevailing costs. The mill shut down, followed by the railroad. Machinery was dismantled and shipped to California. Reports vary slightly on exact closure dates (some cite continued operations into 1916–1917), but by 1920 Blair was essentially a ghost town. The rapid decline mirrored many Nevada mining camps of the era, where boomtowns faded once high-grade deposits played out.
Legacy and Current Status
Today, Blair stands as a quiet reminder of Nevada’s mining heritage. Scattered stone and concrete building ruins, along with the prominent foundations of the old stamp mill, are the primary visible remnants. The site is accessible via State Route 265 north of Silver Peak and is popular with ghost-town enthusiasts and historians. No permanent population remains, and the area is characterized by desert landscape and scattered mining artifacts.
Blair’s story highlights the volatile nature of Nevada’s early 20th-century mining economy—driven by speculation, corporate strategy, and the relentless search for profitable ore. While it never achieved the fame of Tonopah or Goldfield, its quick rise and fall exemplify the “greed was good” dynamics that shaped many short-lived desert towns.
Town Summary
| Name | Blair Nevada |
| Location | Esmeralda County, Nevada |
| Latitude, Longitude | 37.7929865, -117.6492601 |
| Elevation | 1407 meters / 4616 feet |
| GNIS | 855970 |
| Newspaper | The Blair Press – November 1906 to July, 1909 |
| Population | 700 |
Blair Nevada Trail Map
Nevada State Historic Marker Text
The Pittsburgh-Silver Peak Gold Mining Company bought the major mines in the area in 1906. Land speculators at nearby Silver Peak bought up the land. As a result, the mining company surveyed a new townsite north of Silver Peak and named it Blair. The company built a 100-stamp mill in 1907. The company also constructed the 17 ½ mile Silver Peak railroad from Blair Junction to the Tonopah & Goldfield main line.
By 1920, Blair was all but deserted. The remnants of stone buildings and mill foundations are the only survivors of the once thriving, but short-lived, mining town.
STATE HISTORICAL MARKER No. 174
STATE HISTORIC PRESERVATION OFFICE
HAROLD C. HENDERSEN
Nevada State Historic Marker Summary
| Name | Blair |
| Location | Esmeralda County, Nevada |
| Nevada State Historic Marker | 174 |
| Latitude, Longitude | 37.7811, -117.6345 |
Resources
White Tidy Tips (Layia glandulosa)
The White Tidy Tips (Layia glandulosa), also known as whitedaisy tidytips or white layia, is a charming annual wildflower in the sunflower family (Asteraceae) native to the arid and semi-arid regions of western North America, stretching from central Washington south to Baja California and eastward into Utah and Arizona. This low-growing, branched herb, typically reaching 4 to 24 inches in height, features hairy, glandular stems and linear to lobed leaves that give off a subtle fragrance. Its showy daisy-like flower heads bloom from March to June, especially following adequate winter rains, boasting pure white, three-lobed ray florets that encircle a bright yellow disk of central florets—creating a crisp, tidy contrast that evokes its common name—while the rays may occasionally fade to a delicate rose-purple. Thriving in sandy or open soils across desert scrub, grasslands, and coastal habitats, it adds bursts of ethereal beauty to spring landscapes, supports pollinators like butterflies, and provides seeds for birds, embodying the resilient grace of Western wildflowers.

Biological Classification
White Tidy Tips, also known as Whitedaisy Tidytips or White Layia, belongs to the following taxonomic hierarchy:
- Kingdom: Plantae (Plants)
- Clade: Tracheophytes (Vascular plants)
- Clade: Angiosperms (Flowering plants)
- Clade: Eudicots
- Clade: Asterids
- Order: Asterales
- Family: Asteraceae (Sunflower or Aster family)
- Genus: Layia
- Species: Layia glandulosa (Hook.) Hook. & Arn. (described in 1833; the specific epithet glandulosa refers to its glandular hairs)
It is an annual herb in the tarweed tribe (Heliantheae) within the Asteraceae family. The genus Layia is almost entirely restricted to western North America, with 14 species native to the region (12 of which are found in California).
Description of the Plant and Flower
Plant: Layia glandulosa is a low-growing, branched, pubescent annual herb typically reaching 4–24 inches (10–60 cm) tall (occasionally up to about 2 feet). The stems are erect, green to purple-streaked, and covered in soft glandular hairs that can feel sticky and sometimes produce a mild spicy or scented aroma. Leaves are thin, linear to oval-shaped, up to 4 inches (10 cm) long; the lower (basal) leaves are often lobed or pinnatifid, while upper leaves tend to be entire.
Flower: The inflorescences are showy, daisy-like flower heads approximately 1.5 inches (4 cm) across, borne on glandular stalks. Each head features 3–14 (typically 5–8) broad, white ray florets that are often 3-lobed at the tips; these pure white rays surround a central disk of numerous bright yellow disk florets. The involucre (base of the flower head) consists of green, hairy, glandular phyllaries. The rays may fade to rose-purple with age. After flowering, the plant produces hairy achenes (cypselae) with a pappus of stiff white hairs for seed dispersal.
The plant is rapid-growing and blooms primarily in spring, with flowering triggered by adequate winter rainfall; it may not bloom in dry years
Habitat
White Tidy Tips thrives in dry, open environments with well-drained, sandy or gravelly soils. It is commonly found on dry slopes, mesas, grasslands, meadows, desert uplands, and open clearings. It tolerates a range of conditions from lower to upper desert habitats and can occur in chaparral, coastal scrub, valley grasslands, and pinyon-juniper woodlands. Lean, nutrient-poor soils promote compact growth and abundant flowering, while richer soils may cause plants to become leggy.
Range and Distribution
Layia glandulosa is native to western North America. Its range extends from central Washington (and southern British Columbia) south through Oregon, Idaho, California, Nevada, Utah, Arizona, and New Mexico, reaching as far south as Baja California, Mexico. It is particularly common in the southwestern United States, with the largest populations reported in Nevada, Arizona, California, and Oregon. In the U.S., it occurs in the following states: AZ, CA, ID, NM, NV, OR, UT, WA.
Elevation ranges from near sea level up to about 5,000–7,500 feet (1,524–2,286 m), depending on local conditions.
Ecology and Additional Notes
As an annual, Layia glandulosa germinates with winter rains and completes its life cycle quickly in spring. It provides important resources for pollinators, especially native bees, and its seeds are consumed by birds and small mammals. Indigenous groups in the southwestern U.S., such as the Cahuilla and Luiseno peoples, traditionally used the seeds as food (ground into flour or porridge).
The species is drought-tolerant once established and is valued in native plant gardening and restoration for its cheerful blooms and ability to thrive in poor soils. It is not considered invasive and is a native component of western ecosystems.
This report is based on data from botanical authorities including the USDA Plants Database, Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center, and regional floras. Population sizes can vary greatly year-to-year depending on rainfall.
Desert Gold Poppy (Eschscholzia glyptosperma)
The Desert Gold Poppy, also known as the Desert Golden Poppy or Mojave Poppy, is a striking annual wildflower native to the arid regions of the southwestern United States. It is a member of the poppy family and a smaller, desert-adapted relative of the more widespread California Poppy (Eschscholzia californica). This species is particularly notable for its vibrant blooms during spring “superbloom” events following adequate winter rainfall, when it can carpet desert washes and flats in golden hues.

Taxonomic Classification
- Kingdom: Plantae
- Clade: Tracheophytes (vascular plants)
- Clade: Angiosperms (flowering plants)
- Clade: Eudicots
- Order: Ranunculales
- Family: Papaveraceae (Poppy family)
- Genus: Eschscholzia
- Species: Eschscholzia glyptosperma Greene (described by botanist Edward Lee Greene)
The binomial name Eschscholzia glyptosperma reflects the genus honoring Estonian botanist Johann Friedrich von Eschscholtz and the species epithet referring to its sculptured or “engraved” seeds (glyptosperma). It is a strictly annual herb.
Plant and Flower Description
Eschscholzia glyptosperma is a small, scapose (mostly leafless-stemmed) annual herb. It grows from a basal rosette of finely dissected, pointed, grayish-green leaves that are 1–4 times pinnately divided into narrow, pointed segments— an adaptation that reduces water loss in harsh desert conditions. The plant typically reaches 5–25 cm (2–10 inches) in height, with one or more erect, slender stems arising from the base. Each stem bears a single flower atop a long peduncle.
Flower Morphology: The flowers are bright yellow (occasionally with a subtle orange tint), solitary, and actinomorphic (radially symmetrical). They feature four broad, satiny petals, each measuring approximately 1–2.5 cm (⅜–1 inch) long, giving the bloom a cup- or saucer-like appearance when fully open in sunlight. The petals are silky-textured and close at night or in cloudy/cold conditions (nyctinasty). There are typically two (sometimes three) sepals that are glabrous (smooth), often glaucous (waxy blue-green), and shed soon after the flower opens. The center displays numerous yellow stamens surrounding a single superior ovary. Flowers bloom primarily from February to May, peaking in March–April depending on rainfall and elevation.
The fruit is a slender, cylindrical capsule (4–8 cm long) that dehisces (splits) from the base when dry, explosively releasing numerous tiny, rounded, tan-to-brown seeds.
Range and Distribution

The Desert Gold Poppy is endemic to the Mojave and Sonoran Deserts of the southwestern United States. Its distribution includes:
- California (widespread in desert regions)
- Southern Nevada
- Western Arizona (primarily central and western portions)
- Southwestern Utah
It occurs at elevations from near sea level (30 m / 98 ft) to approximately 1,600 m (5,249 ft). In suitable years, it contributes to spectacular desert wildflower displays.
Habitat and Ecology
This species thrives in desert washes, alluvial fans, dry streambeds, open flats, and gentle slopes within creosote bush scrub and Joshua tree woodland plant communities. It prefers well-drained, sandy or gravelly soils and sheltered microhabitats that protect against wind and extreme desiccation. As an annual, its population fluctuates dramatically with winter precipitation; it is a key component of “superbloom” events. The flowers provide nectar and pollen for native bees, butterflies, and other pollinators, while the foliage supports various caterpillars and the seeds are consumed by birds.
In summary, Eschscholzia glyptosperma exemplifies elegant desert adaptation—compact size, efficient water use, and brilliant, ephemeral blooms that signal the brief bounty of spring in the arid Southwest. Its presence in southern Nevada (including areas near Las Vegas) makes it a locally observable and ecologically important wildflower.

