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Location DB > United States > California > Badwater Basin > Ashford Mill Ruins
 Name
Ashford Mill Ruins
 Viewing Options
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 Database Info
created by EPOCH6 on 12/9/2017 12:25 AM
last modified by EPOCH6 on 12/9/2017 12:47 AM
 Viewability
Publically Viewable Publically Viewable
This location has been labeled by its creator as Public, and therefore can be viewed by anyone.
 Overview
 Description
The Ashford Mill ruins are located a short distance south of Badwater Rd in Death Valley, California. Only the concrete foundations remain at the mill site. The Ashford Mine and access road is visible on the mountainside to the south.
 Basic Information
Type: Building
Status: Abandoned
Accessibility: Easy
Recommendation: check it out if you're nearby
 Physical Information
Address

Badwater Basin, California
United States
Owner: Crown Land
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  •  Hazards
     Interesting Features
    - Concrete ruins
    - Abandoned mine
     Security Measures
  • Crown land, no security.
  •  Historical Dates
    Built: 1914
    Closed: 1941
     Required Equipment
     Recommended Equipment

     History
    Ashford Mill is a former mining settlement in Inyo County, California. It is located in Death Valley at an elevation of 121 feet (37 m) below sea level.

    "In January, 1907 a man named Harold Ashford wandered into the Death Valley region, and attracted by the gold strikes at the Desert Hound Mine, prospected in that vicinity. Within a few months, he discovered that the Keys Gold Mining Company had failed to do the required assessment work on several of its claims, and Ashford relocated them and started to work on his own. It took the Keys Gold Mining Company almost two years to discover that someone else was working their former claims, and when Ashford refused to vacate, the company took him to court In January, 1910; however, the judge found in favor of Ashford and he retained title to his claims. He might have been better off if he had lost.

    Harold Ashford and his brothers, Henry and Lewis, worked the mine off and on between 1910 and 1914, without good results. In November, 1914, they leased the mine to B. W. McCausland and his son, Ross.

    The McCauslands started to work on a large scale, and within a year had driven a tunnel 180 feet into the side of the mountain. At the height of their operation, the McCauslands employed 28 men, had invested over $125,000 in capital improvements, and had completed 2,000 feet of total workings. In addition, a mill had been built on the floor of Death Valley, five miles and 3,500 feet below the mine, where the ore from the mine was trucked for preliminary treating. The mill included a jaw-crusher, a ten-foot Lane mill, a Wilfley table and a Diester slime table. The McCauslands were described by the Inyo Register as being wealthy residents of Los Angeles, and in late August they announced that their 40-ton capacity mill was in operation, and they had plans to increase its capacity to 150 tons.

    However, despite taking out an estimated $100,000 worth of ore, the McCauslands soon discovered that the ores from the mine were not rich enough to justify their capital expenditures, and they ceased operations in September, 1915. In order to cut their losses, the McCauslands didn't pay the Ashfords for the year's lease on the mine. Though the Ashfords took them to court, they never received payment.

    The mine and mill then set idle for more than a decade until 1926, when four men were working the mine, but it soon closed down again. The mine was leased again by the Ashfords in 1935 to Golden Treasure Mines, Inc. The new company reopened the mine but minding the old mill inadequate to treat its ores, shipped their rock out to Shoshone where it was loaded upon the Tonopah & Tidewater Railroad. The long truck hauls, however, proved very expensive, and after searching for other ways to reduce costs, the company settled down to taking out only the highest grade of ore available. They continued to work on the mine until 1938 when they gave up. Total shipments by the Golden Treasure company amounted to no more than $18,000 during their tenure.

    Following the departure of their lessees, the Ashfords again began working the mine and in August, 1938 made a 38-ton shipment. By this time the mine was described as comprising twenty-six claims, and had a 320-foot shaft with a crosscut, a 215-foot tunnel, and a 200-foot drift. Equipment at the site included a portable Ingersoll-Rand compressor and various camp buildings. Three men were working, probably the three Ashford brothers.

    After working the mine themselves for a short period, the Ashford's leased it again, this time to the Bernard Granville and Associates of Los Angeles. That company immediately went to work, employing ten men, and soon installed a short aerial tramway, to facilitate the task of consolidating the ore from the scattered shafts and tunnels to one central point for trucking down the mountain. Operations continued until sometime in 1941, when the new lessees gave up. No record of any shipments being made by Granville and Associates can be found.

    The Ashfords continued to hold title to their mine following the departure of their last lessees, although they apparently never returned to work it themselves. In perhaps the best summary of the spotted history of the Ashford Mine, C. B. Glasscock wrote that it was able to produce just enough gold to keep the Ashfords in groceries and lawsuits for more than a third of a century.

    Today there are a number of structures that continue to stand at the Ashford Mine, although not many of them could be classified as historic. The main mine site itself is situated high on the west side of the Black Mountains, overlooking Death Valley, and the old road to the site has been washed out for many years. Access is only possible via an arduous hike about one mile from the end of the road up to the mine site. Structures at the main complex consist of a collapsed shack, an outhouse, a large office and cookhouse building, two wooden bunkhouses, a tin shed, a head frame and ore bin, and the tramway towers and terminal. All of these structures date from the 1930-1940 period of mining.

    Just around the knoll from the main mining site--towards the east--are the ruins of an older mining effort, undoubtedly the remnants of the McCausland's work in 1914-15. Here may be found several older adits and dumps, the ruins of a collapsed shack and half a dozen level sites, the former homes of a small tent community. This site has better integrity than the former, since it was relatively undisturbed in later mining years, but still does not possess historic significance.

    The ruins of Ashford Mill stand on the floor of Death Valley. Structures here consist of the crumbling walls of a concrete office building, and the ruins of the mill itself. Not much is left of the mill, with the exception of the large concrete foundations and a very limited amount of debris. The ruins of the mill foundation and the office building are rather interesting, and according to local legend, are due to the fact that a double load of cement was shipped to the McCauslands when construction was in progress. Rather than send it back, which would have entailed further transportation expenses, the extra cement was used in construction of the mill and office building, which largely accounts for their still standing today."
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    Ashford Mill Ruins - 12/3/2017
    Sun, Dec 3rd, 2017
    posted by EPOCH6
    5 pictures
     


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     Web Links
    https://www.legend...a-ashfordmine.html
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     Validation
    This location's validation is current. It was last validated by Explorer Zero on 12/9/2017 1:36 PM.

     Latest Changes
  • on Dec 9 17 at 13:36, Explorer Zero validated this location
  • on Dec 9 17 at 0:47, EPOCH6 made this location available
  • on Dec 9 17 at 0:47, EPOCH6 changed the following: City, Publically Viewable
  • on Dec 9 17 at 0:46, EPOCH6 added some pictures to a gallery
  • on Dec 9 17 at 0:45, EPOCH6 updated gallery Ashford Mill Ruins - 12/3/2017
  • on Dec 9 17 at 0:45, EPOCH6 updated gallery Ashford Mill Ruins - 12/3/2017
  • on Dec 9 17 at 0:45, EPOCH6 created a new gallery
  • on Dec 9 17 at 0:44, EPOCH6 changed the following: Notes for Mods, Owner, Type, Province / State (please use full name), Country, Latitude, Longitude, Co-ordinate Accuracy, Prefer Satellite, History, Year Built, Year Closed, Status, Accessibility, Interesting Features, Recommendation, Security Measures, Media Coverage, Future Plans, Description, Web Links
  • on Dec 9 17 at 0:25, EPOCH6 updated the main picture
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