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Miners Consumnes & Deer Creek Water & Mining Co. Promissory Note, Prairie City 1854 [193632]

Currency:USD Category:Collectibles / Mining Start Price:350.00 USD Estimated At:700.00 - 1,500.00 USD
Miners Consumnes & Deer Creek Water & Mining Co. Promissory Note, Prairie City  1854 [193632]
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A promissory note from the Miners' Cosumnes and Deer Creek Water and Mining Company, issued in 1854 to D.D. Munger. No. 17 issued. Note promises to pay Munger $893.73 with an interest rate of 3% per month. Signed by president J.E. Meacham and secretary Turner. Folds, some other light wear. 2.75x8.25 inches.
The company was headquartered at Prairie City, California, a mining community located about 2 miles south of Folsom on the Alder creek. The camp was started in 1853, with a population of about 150 in 1855 -- a population that more than quadrupled by 1859, reaching 1000 people. At its height, it had 15 stores, 10 boarding houses, hotels, and 2 stage lines operating daily. It was expected to become a population center, but the number of residents began to decline shortly after 1859, and today all that remains of the town has been covered in river rocks by nearby dredging operations.
Miners' Cosumnes and Deer Creek Water and Mining Company intended to create and operate a canal network between Deer Creek, the major creek upon which Nevada City is located, and the Cosumnes River. The land between these rivers is lucrative gold country, and the company intended to use this canal network to conduct transport between mines. Despite the company's aggressive undertaking, they were ultimately unable to create this network, and today the only path from Deer Creek to the Cosumnes River is a 76 mile journey by road. This note is an artifact of a fascinating -- if unsuccessful -- chapter in California's storied mining history.
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Date:
Country(if not USA):
State: California
City: Prairie City
Provenance: