Horseshoe Bend, California
Horseshoe Bend is a mining ghost town of the California Gold Rush, formerly on the Merced River in Mariposa County, California
History[]
It was originally a placer and hydraulic gold mining camp in the Sierra Nevada foothills. Horseshoe Bend was about three miles southwest of Coulterville, California at it peak this mining camp had 400 residences. Its site is now submerged under the waters of Lake McClure reservoir. Horseshoe Bend was covered in 1926 with the completion of the Exchequer Dam. In honor of the mining camp there is on Lake McClure a Horseshoe Bend campground. John Muir studied the area of Horseshoe Bend and wrote about the Adenostoma fasciculatum plant, a flowering plant, type of chaparral. [1][2] [3] [4][5]
See also[]
- Mining communities of the California Gold Rush
References[]
- ^ lakemcclure.com, Horseshoe Bend
- ^ sierranevadageotourism.org, Lake McClure Horseshoe Bend Campground
- ^ California Gold Rush History, September 16th, 2009, by Tessa Sibbet
- ^ ancestry.com, Ghost Town USA’s MARIPOSA COUNTY, CALIFORNIA.
- ^ THE WRITINGS OF JOHN MUIR, Sierra Edition, VOLUME II, Page 13, 19 and 195
Categories:
- Ghost towns in California
- Former settlements in Merced County, California
- Merced River
- Mining communities of the California Gold Rush
- California ghost town stubs