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Belmont may just be one of Nevada's greatest ghost towns it definitely resides within the top ten in the silver state. Most people know it for its monolithic courthouse which overlooks the town below while others may recognize it for its original name "Transylvania".  
Back in the day people called this place Beaumont which is French for Beautiful Mountain. With all the springs farmers were able to grow crops and raise livestock which could provide food for the local miners who came here in Monitor Valley. The town boomed around 1865 and produced about 15 million dollars in silver and lead ore before it met its demise. It was also the Nye County seat and had a Music Hall where many controversial stars back in the day would come to perform and entertain. The place was called the Cosmopolitan which today is in ruins but its easy to close your eyes and try to imagine what life was like in this semi ghost town in the heart of Nevada as stamps were crushing ore and you could hear a beautiful woman sing like an angel downtown. Belmont's Cosmopolitan Saloon was a two story dance hall and water hole where miners came together after a hard days of work to relax. It also was a place where the hurdy gurdy girls would go to entertain lonely miners. As a matter in fact this saloon stayed open till the 1930's and by the 1980's vandals destroyed it. While the Cosmopolitan came to an end many other saloons are open certain times of the year during the 4th of July which boast a biker event such as Dirty Dicks who may just have the strongest Bloody Mary in all of Nevada. If you decide to take on Belmont please note that their really are no services you may get lucky find the cafe or one of the saloons open but generally only on major holidays which is a complete reversal to the towns boom years which were loud and bustling.

Belmont did not begin as a town though more or less it was a tent camp after some Native Americans found some silver here which led to the Highbridge Mine. The town actually grew into two separate sites Eastern and Western Belmont. Between the two I read that around this time 4000 folks poured on in which led to the town being the county seat in February of 1867 and it would hold this title till about 1905. The Italianate courthouse that you see in many of our photos would not be finished till 1875 just in time for the 4th of July and at the time cost $5,570 with 25k bricks that were fired right on site which stayed operable till about 1920. The post office did not arrive till 1867 either but around that same time also came the Highbridge Hotel, San Francisco Restaurant, National Bank, Cosmopolitan Saloon and about a hundred other businesses. As a matter in fact the town boasted two saloons, red light district, Chinatown, race track, hospital, five restaurants, whiskey shops, main general store, four stores, livery stable, assay office, bank, school, three newspapers (Belmont Courier, Mountain Champion & Silver Bend Reporter), blacksmith shop, telegraph office, hotels, dance hall, post office, two cemeteries and a church. More or less Belmont was a small City even by the late 1800's it still was the second largest silver mining town. But by 1889 most of the 150 residents here were county employees afterall once mining died the locals would have to turn to other kinds of employment to be able to survive the off beaten path.

The first mining claim in Belmont was filed by an Antoine Borquez who was a Mexican Prospector so you can imagine once he boasted then other merchants, miners, ranchers, bankers, saloon keepers, hotel owners and pioneers came to the area. The settlers who came to this area more then likely rushed from Ione and Austin just to establish some sort of residency. Often the miners would refer to this location as Silver Bend, The Philadelphia and even more so Transylvania. The Belmont name would stick however over the years as eventually the town maintained a county seat. Like most towns in the west people were transients so they started off pitching tents if the strike lasted they would build structures made of wood and brick. The first agricultural settlement near Belmont was formed by the Steinnger brothers who settled in the valley one year after silver was discovered here an example of one of the earliest ranches in the region is The Hess Ranch which is a mere shell of its former glory. But when other ranchers came to the area corn, wheat, rye, apples, peaches, berries, apricots and alfalfa were growing in Monitor Valley. Some of the crops, poultry and livestock was set aside for the good people of Belmont while some of it was traded to local Mormon Ranchers who exchanged such goods for cookery, cutlery, hardware, dry goods and other supplies. Not to far from the courthouse is a small fruit grove with some old wooden cabins. Some of the locals tried to grow fruit trees and some of them can still be seen today. The springs found within the valley kept the land fertile thus this is a forested high desert rather then a dry one. Therefore fruit trees and other crops could be easily grown here which was really necessary for the townsfolk since everything had to be exported via mule or horse wagon on in.


This was a big mining town while they made profits off of Silver and Lead they also mined for copper and perhaps some gold as well as antimony here. As a matter in fact the town had a total of five mills the first one was a ten stamp mill built in 1866 and ran till about 1869. A twenty-stamp mill was built in 1867 and did not last long as a matter in fact they disassembled it then moved it down to Esmeralda County in the 1880's. The largest and best known mill was the 40-stamp Combination Mill built in 1868 which really also was the most profitable it also had a 100' stack. If your willing to explore Belmont today you will come across some of its ruins or at least what little is left. There also was a 30-stamp mill named the Monitor-Belmont Mill owned by the Belmont Silver Mining Co. which both mills  had quartz stamps. The now known New Highbridge Mill (Cameron) was built from the bricks of the old Combination Mill and later the old Highbridge around 1915. On my first expedition I seen a couple of the mills in Belmont and despite seeing the old smelter stacks not much remains but ruins. The locals and miners never wasted good construction material they would just use remnants from one mill to build another. Unfortunately in 1887 many of the mines closed and this also led to mills shutting down. By 1905 the Nye County seat was relocated from Belmont to Tonopah Nevada. At the turn of the century some of the dump piles near the mines were reworked but little profit was made. In actuality Belmont's boom days were really in the 1870's when as many as 15 thousand residents lived between the Toquima and Monitor Range. 

The first successful miner that arrived in Belmont was really Colonel David Buel who bought a claim here without really sampling the ore. During the summer of 1868 he hired miners to open and expose a twenty-foot trench along the claim he bought while he moved a small 10-stamp mill from Austin to process the ore. The better ore of course was send to Austin and Clifton for processing. That mill produced over 12k in Silver just in a two week time span. Buel would end up creating the Combination Silver Mining Company of New York. He convinved thousands of stockholders to invest large sums of money for the sole purpose of exploring ore and the massive Combination Mill which had 40 stamps. It took 14 freight teams that had 10 mules each to haul in the machinery from California. But in 1868 this claim had produced 1.5 million dollars in renvue which almost all went into the construction cost for the mill.  Buel had sold his original claim to the Belmont Company remaining as a managing over it while using his original 10-stamp mill. But Buel was a business man so in 1869 he merely seen some decline in the mines selling off his property holdings moving onto Eureka which is another semi ghost town ill do an extensive project with in the future.


Just like any boom town Belmont had its fair share of lawlessness, lynching's, murders and historical figures. Perhaps this is why this ghost town is such a magnet for ghost hunters because like any ghost town gun fights occurred here and hangings. Today plenty of the people who perished in Belmont tend to also haunt it so if you can talk to some of the locals or even other paranormal groups their are some good ghost stories associated with this semi ghost town. Which reminds me to mention a story that took place in 1874 when two strangers Jack Walker and Charlie McIntyre drifted into town. Both of the men had gotten into an altercation with a local residents H.H. Sutherland which ended up wounding him in a gunfight. The strangers were arrested then jailed only to escape and be recaptured two days later. Later that night a group of vigilantes had arrived where this mob had tied up the sheriff and his deputy. They then proceeded to lynch both Walk and McIntyre in the basement of the jail. Since the town did not have a jail or courthouse they used I believe the banks basement as an area to incarcerate criminals downtown. The next day the two men's bodies were taken to a spot near the cemetery on the road to San Antone and buried in a unmarked grave.  Do these two men still haunt the bank ruins downtown where they were lynched? I like to think so living in the wild west was adventurous, dramatic and prosperous for some but not all. Some outlaws were given wild western justice the moment they entered Belmont the townsfolk here did not play games.

Really by 1889 Belmont was on the borderline of becoming a ghost town as most of the mills were relocated or mining equipment some believe this is due to the Meager Mines closing. People begin to clear out and many businesses had simply just shut down. As a matter in fact in March of 1901 the newspaper known as the Belmont Courier ceased its last publication. I think by the turn of the century  or up until 1945 about 45 folks lived up here though today quite a few people are building new homes up here. As a matter in fact I believe more people live in Belmont today then in the mid 1900's mainly folks who came down here from Tonopah or the greater Las Vegas area. Food and gasoline are hard to come by up here and the road on in is a long ways from civilization. During the winter its not hard to understand why some snowfalls lead to 6' of white powder. This ghost town is remote in the heart of the Nevadan wilderness so it had it all flooding, snowstorms, intense heat during the summer etc. which is probably why so very little remains today. But their is still much to see and it probably would take most people a couple trips to see everything here. But the towns most amazing site really is the impressive courthouse which over the years has been renovated by those who volunteer their time and energy to help on out. I know other paranormal groups who get permission to investigate its halls if they are willing to volunteer some aid in restoring it. The same rules apply with the beautiful stone walled Belmont Historic Inn which offers free lodging if your willing to offer a little help. The B&B at one time was the former offices for the Combination Silver Mining Company but prior to that it was a stage stop in the 1880's which had stables, troughs for horses, rooms to bunk down for the night and other amenities for those traversing the frontier. In the mid 1900's many folks would stay at the old Mining Office Building to caretake Belmont and watch over it to prevent vandals from further destroying its history.

Belmont also seen some small booms in 1914 and 1922 but honestly it just was not enough as a matter in fact the Post Office moved out of the area in 1911 so that spelled trouble in itself. When a mill once again was in full operation they reopened the post office once again from 1915 till 1922. I believe if mining continued to be a success here that today Belmont could have been a major bustling town or city. It just never had gotten to that point. You have to consider the town resides at about 7,433' nestled in the southern portion of Monitor Valley. It resides within the Humboldt-Toiyabe National Forest so its not completely out in the middle of the desert. Their are plenty of trees that you can sit under for shade here and the views are simply breathtaking. Besides the beautiful historic courthouse you also have remnants of 150 year old mill sites, cemetery and supposedly a school which I found in ruins. The church which overlooks the town is an exact replica of the original 1872 church. Also on the recorders office found within the courthouse one can see Charlie Manson's name etched into one of the door frames.  Relics of the past are also found everywhere around town old mining equipment, wagons, wheels, old fire trucks and bottles everywhere you look. In reality the entire town is one giant historic site so please if you decide to visit treat this place with respect so that others can enjoy this ghost town many years from now. The entire reason behind this project is to raise preservation efforts the more people that can enjoy this place on our site are surely going to enjoy and take care of it in person.

Earlier I mentioned the Cameron Mill which was located in East Belmont which is often mislabeled on maps and in many Nevada Books. I know because in my book it labels it as the Highbridge Mill. However, the Highbridge Mill was dissembled and moved to Gold Mountain in 1880. The Cameron Mill was built using bricks salvaged from the Combination Mill which was torn down in 1914 leaving behind only a couple walls and its huge stack behind. So when the Monitor-Belmont Mining Company in 1914 started a mining revival by purchasing all the old mines around Belmont by 1915 they built the Cameron Mill to process the ore from their twenty-one claims. This mill had 1,600 pound stamps with a 150-ton oil flotation system used to extract silver from the ore. The mill was used to rework some of the old tailings from previous successful mines. It was named the Cameron Mill for the company's superintendent Donald C. Cameron and when the mill shut down in 1917 it would truly be the last stamps to ever be heard crushing ore in Belmont. In a sense I wish this town never died it sometimes really makes me wonder what if instead it became a major city in Nevada. Its a part of Nevada so very few of you ever get to see its very remote, offbeat and because of the lack of services so very few have the courage to even go up here to explore this place. This may be one of Nevada's best kept secrets and despite the mills no longer being in operation history lurks around every corner when it comes to Belmont. When the mills were in operation you could smell sulphur in the air that is why at least three of the mills had smelters or stacks to divert the pollutants in the air. Sulphur Dioxide and Mercury along with salt were added to the Silver Ore to process it into silver bars. The locals would often complain for quite a few years about the smell which may have attributed to some of the locals moving out of Belmont.

A Rancher named Jim Butler lived in Belmont who would end up discovering high quality silver which led to the founding of Tonopah once served as the prosecuting attorney in Belmont even though he was not a lawyer.  I guess you can say many of the towns residents were colorful characters. For example one of those individuals would be Jack Longstreet who was a gunslinger, miner, store owner, saloon keeper, gambler, pioneer and a family man who married a local Paiute woman. He spent sometime in Belmont prior to that he home steaded in Armagosa Valley at Ash Meadows where he became a well respected Indian Advocate and was respected by the Paiute Tribe. He was one of the most feared men in NW Arizona and in South central Nevada at the turn of the century. He would drink at the Belmont Saloons and play high stakes poker who lived his life how he pleased. He ended up dying at the age of 94 when he accidentally shot himself and since he did not tend to the wound it became infected where he died at a Tonopah hospital which really is Belmont's sister town. But sadly it was not the gun shot that killed him entirely it was a stroke which finally had did him in. If you look around the Belmont Cemetery you will come across his grave he is buried here. Also Tasker Oddie a 12th Governor and Senator of Nevada who lived in one of the larger homes found in Belmont on a hill overlooking downtown lived here for some time. Then you had George Ernst who lived in Belmont over 20 years grew fruit trees around his cabin was a senator but also a surveyor who worked on the Sutro Tunnel in Virginia City Nevada and is buried at Mountain View Cemetery in Oakland California. In fact some residents loved Belmont so much that a couple known as the Leone's celebrated their Silver Wedding Anniversary here and they ended up living out there entire lives becoming elderly passing away in this town years after its boom. Also a Doctor James Riddle lived across from the Combination Superintendents office was one of the founders of Masonic Order in Belmont calling it Oasis Eleven and was a state Senator of Nevada in the 1860s treated some of the townsfolk for any ailments. These are just six more historic figures that added to Belmont's colorful history which made it all the more historically significant. Many of the first pioneers who came to Belmont later served the Nevadan government but first made lives here before moving on to bigger and better things.


When the courthouse fell into disrepair a wall was broken to pull out the old jail cells which were taken to Gabbs during WWII. Later those cells would be returned in the early 1990's and left outside behind the old brick courthouse. I read that the cells were taken to Gabbs because many of the workers had gotten drunk who worked for the Basic Magnesium Inc. Therefore many of the miners went on drinking binges after getting paid not showing up for work for several days. Since workers were hard to find during the war they used the cells to keep them there until they sobered up. Once a new Sheriff sub-station was built the cells would be returned.  Eventually they want to move the jail cells back inside the courthouse when this will happen I do not know. I heard the county spent a half of million dollars alone to try to renovate the courthouse. Nye County had given the courthouse to the state of Nevada which turned it into a State Park. So it is currently being maintained and really I cannot wait till the project is fully complete.  This probably was one of the finest courthouses in the west the roof had a cupola and six chimneys for wood stoves. The upstairs was used for a jury room and judges chambers while the bottom floor was for county offices. The courthouse really was the towns Mecca where folks gathered for example on the 4th of July Belmont's Independence Ball was held and on July 9th Reverend Allen spoke at a public meeting talking about the necessity of guarding the public schools and religious influences. As a matter in fact this was the first public meeting to be held in this kiln-dried brick building. It also is one of the most haunted sites in Belmont and numerous paranormal groups have captured the strange here. I have talked to a few groups who have investigated the courthouse and it just seems to be a focal point within the town for disembodied voices, shadows and apparitions.

Life was boring in Belmont most of what you had is plenty of people playing poker and spending there days drinking. Sure you had other towns nearby this probably is what also led to Belmont's demise. Towns such as Tonopah which were about 45 miles away while Berlin, GrantsvilleStar City, Ione, Kingston, Eureka, Clifton and Austin Nevada were located at least 100 miles to the north. The tiny town of Manhattan was twenty miles away but today so very little remains as far as services go. So in actuality Belmont is rather isolated and prior to it ever becoming a Silver Town this place was in the heart of Shoshone Territory not far from a petroglyph site known as Toquima Cave which is an ancient site. So before pioneers came to settle these small boom towns for thousands of years the Natives hunted, fished and gathered food here including where Belmont resides today. The Indians mainly hunted rabbits in this valley but they also utilized its Springs before the white man had arrived to put down roots. Since ancient times this valley has always been inhabited whether it was the Natives, Ranchers, Miners or Pioneers life can still be found here today. Which is why its such a good candidate for the town site being haunted there is energy here you can feel it in the air and the rich history found here is as good as it gets as far as adventuring in the Nevada Frontier making Belmont one of the top ghost towns within the Silver State. Please make sure you watch some of our videos so you can learn about some of the sites around Belmont and its rich history. While today very few people live in Belmont it still very much is alive with its relics of the past and the ghosts which haunt them.

Copyright By
Lord Rick aka AngelOfThyNight
Founder
Author, Producer, News Editor, Paranormal Investigator and Talk Show Host

PS Please note that this project is not finished yet we will return in a couple years to do more research and work such as visiting the mills close up perhaps even getting access inside some of the buildings such as the courthouse found here so state tuned.





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