About
the same time the logging industry was taking off on
the west end of the San Bernardino Mountains; a "gold
rush" was started on the east end, near Big Bear Lake.
Credit
for this "gold rush" is given to a
man named Bill Holcomb. It was in the
spring of 1860; Holcomb had been prospecting
for gold in the Big Bear Valley. After
a long winter he hiked up Van Dusen
Canyon while hunting for bear. Upon
crossing over the ridge he discovered "gold" in
a lush green valley that would eventually
bear his name. Within two months, work
of Holcomb's discovery got out, and
miners from all over invaded "Holcomb's" valley.
By September, a small settlement called "Belleville" with
over 1,000 men literally popped into
existance. At the same time in other
parts of Holcomb Valley, "Clapboard
Town" & "Union Town" went up almost
over night. The population grew so
fast that the Holcomb Valley residents
soon outnumbered the rest of San Bernardino
County. In
fact, during the 1860 elections, to
determine the new county seat would
be located, the city of San Bernardino
barely won the honor; beating out "Belleville" by
only two votes. But, within the first
year, excitement began to subside with
the realization that placer mining
was not producing gold in profitable
amounts. By the end of the 2nd year,
most miners had given up and gone elsewhere.
Fifteen years later, San Francisco multimillionaire, Elias
J. "Lucky" Baldwin started another "gold rush" when he constructed
a large 40 stamp mill at the base of "Gold Mountain" in 1874.
By the time his stamp mill roared to life in March of 1875,
a new mining town called Bairdstown, with 2 saloons, a butcher
shop, and 2 boarding houses had sprung into existance at
the northeast end of Baldwin Lake. However, the amount of
gold recovered from Gold Mountain fell way below expectations,
and a disappointed "Lucky" Baldwin shut the mill down after
only seven months of operation. Bairdstown quickly became
a ghost town. The stamp mill sat idle until August of 1876,
when it mysteriously caught fire and burned to the ground.
In
1899, Baldwin struck a deal with a man named "Captain" J.R.
DeLaMar to build a new 40 stamp on the hill above the original
Baldwin mill. DeLaMar wanted to use a new cyanide process
that would dramatically increase the amount of gold recovered
from the low grade ore. By September of 1900, the new stamp
mill was running at full capacity, and recovering over $4,000
a week in modest profit. In 1903, DeLaMar shut down the mill.
The real "pay dirt" in the San Bernardino mountains was found
in a place called Round Valley, just east of Big Bear Valley.
Originally filed as the "Homestake Mine" in 1887, it eventually
became known as the "Rose Mine". Betwen 1898 and 1906, its
operators consistently recovered as much as 100 times more
gold per ton of ore mined than Lucky Baldwin's much publicized "Gold
Mountain".
On to The Rock Dam at Big Bear Lake
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