2551

Photographs of Georgia Slide Mine, California

Currency:USD Category:Collectibles / Photographic Images - Antique Start Price:350.00 USD Estimated At:700.00 - 1,400.00 USD
Photographs of Georgia Slide Mine, California
SHIPPING & HANDLING: Shipping and Handling cannot be estimated prior to invoicing, based on the size and weight of your purchase. All shipping is subject to a minimum charge of $19.00. If additional shipping and handling costs are required, the buyer will be reinvoiced for the balance due. Items are not shipped until the invoice is completely paid. Many buyers purchase a number of lots. Every effort will be made to include all lots in a single shipping charge calculated to cover the weight and size of the package(s). NOTE: Some shipments (of unusual size, dimension, or weight) may require sp...
Two Photographs of Georgia Slide Mine, California – The first is a 4½ x 7¾“ by L. Reinhard showing a group of eight miners at the mine location, ca 1870’s.” L. Reinhard, Georgia Slide” is stamped on the reverse. The second is 4½ x 7¼“. Showing a number of women and children by a flume used by the mine. is by George D. Stewart, a photographer located in Sacramento during the 1890’s. Stewart’s company stamp is on the reverse. The seam deposits at Georgia Slide were mined on a large scale by hydraulic mining from 1853 to about 1895 yielding some $6M. The mine is located in the Georgetown district is in northwestern El Dorado County at the north end of the northeast segment of the Mother Lode belt. It extends from just north of Garden Valley north through Georgetown and the Georgia Slide area to the Middle Fork of the American River and is both a lode- and placer-mining district. Georgia Slide was also the name of a mining town lost to history and is located close to Georgetown. Hydraulic mining was the main method of extraction from 1853 to about 1895.

Mining began here in 1849 by a party of placer miners from Oregon. The site was first known as Growlersburg, however, it was soon changed to Georgetown. The placers were highly productive during the 1850s. The seam deposit at Georgia Slide was 1000 feet long and 500 feet wide. Usually the milling ore yielded from 1/7 to 1/5 ounce to the ton, but many high-grade pockets were encountered. As the Georgia Slide Mine has been worked and paid dividends uninterruptedly ever since 1853, it has the honor of being the oldest continuously operated mine in the county, if not in the State. It rises 300 feet above Canyon Creek and has a working face 200 feet in height. The characteristics of this ore-body indicate that it extends downward to unknown depths, like an immense chimney, and that, while there will always be free gold, a large percentage of the values will be found in the sulphurets below the limit of surface action. Sulphurets obtained from cleaning up the sluices have gone $700 per ton. There are upwards of 10,000,000 tons, above the level of Canyon Creek, which can reasonably be expected to yield a net profit, over and above all expenses, of 25 cents per ton.

Date: Location: El Dorado County, California HWAC# 60865