| The
Osceola Ditch Story
In 1872, prospectors James Matteson and Frank Heck discovered gold three
miles west of what is now Great Basin National Park. Over the next six
years some 100 claims were staked in the quartz veins of the new Osceola
mining district. The production of lodes, however, was not enough to operate
the mines at a profit.
In 1877 placer gold was discovered by John Versan. The placers were located
between Wet Gulch and Dry Gulch. Three hundred claims were placed and
mining began to flourish. By 1882 the town of Osceola grew to a population
of more than 1500 people. The community included several stores, a butcher
and blacksmith shop, a Chinese restaurant and two stages running regularly
to Ward. Uncovered here was almost two million dollars worth of gold,
including a nugget weighing 24 pounds which would be worth almost a quarter
million dollars at today's prices. Though unimaginable wealth lay buried
in the gravel of Dry Gulch, too little water made large scale operations
impossible.
In 1884-85 the Osceola Gravel Mining Company constructed a 16 mile ditch,
known as the West Ditch, to carry the water from six creeks on the west
side of the Snake Range to their placer operations. It did not meet the
company's needs, however, and on September 12, 1885 the White Pine
News reported that the hydraulic mines were "running very slow at
present on account of the scarcity of water, only averaging about 2 hours
a day."
The Osceola Gravel Mining Company began surveys in 1885 for a second
waterway on the east side to be called the East Ditch. In September 1889
construction began on this 18 mile ditch to collect water from Lehman
Creek and its tributaries on the east side of the range. Water rights
were purchased from Absalom Lehman, who had recently discovered Lehman
Cave. Several hundred men using hand tools, wagons, horses, and mules
labored ten months to complete the ditch. Local sawmills produced lumber
for 2.2 miles of wooden flumes, and the support beams for the 633 foot
long tunnel which was blasted through a ridge near Strawberry Creek.
The Osceola Ditch was completed on July 4, 1890 at a cost of $108,223,
an expensive gamble in a business where profitable yields were not guaranteed.
In 1891 both ditches were being used in operations, and by June 17 the
mine was running twenty-four hours a day. The early success of the ditches
did not last long, and gold production did not meet expectations. The
gross yield of the Osceola Mining Company in 1890 was only $16,191, and
in 1891 only $20,223. Beginning in 1892 placer mining was further hampered
by water shortages caused by mild, dry winters. Water theft, leaky wood
flumes, and the legal battles over water rights reduced the water supply
even more. Over the next few years mining activity fluctuated and finally
by 1905 mining activity at Osceola came to a virtual standstill.
Mining continued sporadically at Osceola over the next several decades.
Production was renewed from 1936 to 1942, and again following World War
II. Even today numerous claims remain at the site, many of them re-working
the tailings left by prior mining efforts. All told, Osceola has produced
$3 ½ million worth of gold.
August 7, 2002 |