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MONOVILLE CALIFORNIA
First Official Township on the eastward rush
Ghost Town (Unoccupied)
Mono County
Circa 1859 to early 1900's
As the first eastern strike
of Dog Town became over crowded, hardy prospectors began exploring other areas
to the south and east. In 1859 Cord Norst, a former Dog Town inhabitant struck
a find while dry digging near the present day Conway Summit. Word of his
success soon reached Dog Town and the mining camps of the west causing a
eastward rush. Business men were those among the hoards of people making their
trek over the Sierra Mountains in to Mono Diggins. As the refined arrived a
settlement began to form just below the diggins area and businesses were opened
to support the needs of the prospectors and those arriving every day. Similar
to Dog Town, prospectors employed a very basic means of Dry Panning and digging
to extract gold in the gulches. The town peaked at about 700 residents
following the winter of 1860, and every day the word of a growing settlement
continued attracting new prospectors and explorers alike. Some remained in the
camp of Dog Town and even more continued on south to the Mono Diggins and the
newly formed Monoville. Many of the hardier explorers and prospectors would
venture out on their own and explore areas further North, South and East after
gathering supplies at Monoville. Being the only place East of the Sierra's
resembling and serving as a town site at the time, Monoville became the staging
point and key supply location for those who preferred to head out on their own.
Prospector and explorer William S. Bodey, of whom the Historic town of Bodie
was named, lost his life only months after locating pay dirt near the Historic
town site that now bares his name while returning from Monoville with supplies.
It was the promotion of Aurora that increasingly drew people out of Monoville which
by the 1870s had shrunk by more than half of its residents. Due to the areas
lack of building materials and resources at Aurora, whole buildings at
Monoville were dismantled and loaded in to large wagons and transported to
Aurora. By late 1880, there was not much left of Monoville, and the diggins
above shrunk to a hand full of die hards and their shack homes built in the dry
washes they named Rattlesnake and Bacon Gulches. Although the settlement had
virtually disappeared, the diggins were consistently worked off and on in to the
1900's.

More recent dwelling next to early structure where
Monoville once stood.

Overview of the Mono Diggins Site. Tailings and prospector
holes are scattered amongst the ground.The area and gulches are littered with remains of
fallen shacks and abandoned homes
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