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Gold Hill,NV - Storey County - c1868 - Mining Works Stereoview Card :

Currency:USD Category:Collectibles / Photographic Images Start Price:200.00 USD Estimated At:400.00 - 800.00 USD
Gold Hill,NV - Storey County - c1868 - Mining Works Stereoview Card :
A rare view of several mining works at Gold Hill. Stereocard, 3 x 3", mounted on heavy orange cardstock. Focus good and contrast medium on both images, but slightly better on left than on right. Edges and corners slightly worn on mounting board with several small spots on the photographs, otherwise very fine. "Nevada." in ornate lettering and "By Thomas Houseworth & Co., San Francisco" printed along left border, "739. Empire, Imperial, Challenge, and other Mining Works, at Gold Hill," printed on lower right border. "Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1866, by Lawrence & Houseworth, in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United States, for the Northern District of California." printed along the right border. The print on the reverse details Houseworth's award from the "Paris International Exhibition 1867, The Highest Prize, A Bronze Medal, Awarded to Thomas Houseworth & Co. 317 & 319 Montgomery Street, San Francisco, for the Superiority of their Stereoscopic and Mammoth Photographic Views of Scenery on the Pacific Coast. Catalogues sent free of postage." To the left of the print is an image of a coin with a picture and "Napoleon III, Empereur," and printed on image of the coin to the right is "Exposition Universelle De MDCCCLXVII a Paris Recompenses, Thomas Houseworth & Co." Also written on reverse, after card was purchased, is "William C. Darrah Coll." Thomas Houseworth, photographer. While placer miners were slowly making their way up Gold Canyon in the mid 1850's, a short warm-spell in January of 1859 brought the discovery of Gold Hill. Located only a mile south of Virginia City, Gold Hill became a community in its own right. The photo includes al least three mines: the Empire, Challenge, and the Imperial. Millions in ore was taken from these and other mines in town, while the city also acted as a supply depot for other areas after construction of the V & T R.R. (Ref: McDonald, Virginia City)