Thanks in advance.
Yves
|
Replies sorted oldest to newest
quote:I have been taking some pictures and hope to write an article for the magazine.
quote:If you can get to Hickory, they have a daily entry fee of $35.
quote:WOW !!!! Obviously it was a great convention from the amount of traffic on that thread.... It must have been overwhelming...
quote:Obviously, besides Jim, not many members of this forum have been attending and it is a pity.
quote:Originally posted by AMCDave:quote:If you can get to Hickory, they have a daily entry fee of $35.
I e-mailed a number of folks on the convention website asking if they had a daily or general admission as I was going to be in Hickory this week or next. After never getting an answer back I picked next week as it fit the family schedule better. Oh well....they didn't need my $35 I recon.....
quote:I received the same lack of customer service. Three emails over the summer and none answered
I went to Hickory, although I prefer to be out west that time of year. (I got there
later). I enjoyed it...had not been to the area in years. Explored Hickory (furniture
sales), the Southern RR Museum at Salisbury (second time, was there in winter once
researching my dad's locomotive), Tweetsie, Blowing Rock, a few covered bridges
and water mills in the area, she had some interesting tours including Biltmore at
Asheville, I bought a few items but I met a guy who had had access to fantastic
photos, never published, of the Gold Prince mill at Animas Forks (that was torn down and moved down to build the second mill at Eureka). Views all around it!! Much better than anything in the Sloan and Skowronski book (The Rainbow Route).The
Gold Prince is purported to have been the largest mill in Colorado and is on my "to
build" list. Uh, WAS it the largest in Colorado?
What I MISSED in the Hickory area (well, western NC) was the Reed Gold Mine state
park...gold mining in NC before the gold rush. Didn't hear of that until some time after I got home.
The Reed Mine is a NC Historic Site now. It was the FIRST gold mine in North America. The first nugget was 17 pounds found in 1780 something I think. Prior to 1849 NC was the leading gold producing state. Charlotte had a US mint as a result. I worked at the Reed doing archeology while it was being developed into a historic site in the mid 1970's. There is an underground tour as well as a restored stamp mill brought from the Coggins mine located a few miles away. It is worth a trip if you are in the area.
George Lasley
Story goes that while digging the foundation for the first NCNB tower (now BoA) they found old mining tunnels in downtown Charlotte. Been to Reed and number of times....lived within a few miles for years.
Sorry I missed Reed...., maybe I'll blunder back that way. Gold mining is in strange places, as the saying goes, "gold is where you find it". My brother and I made a trip west over ten years ago, and one of the places he wanted to hit was gold mining on an island in a lake in Minnesota. (not my first thought of where to look for gold, either)
He rented a catamaran and off we motored out onto, I think, looking at the map,
Rainy Lake, weaving among islands to this small one that was pockmarked by
prospect holes full of water. I thought then and now that I wouldn't want to dig
down on a very small island, and then stope out to dump the lake in on me. Ore was hauled by boat to a mill on shore. Colorado mines and many other had water problems that forced their closing, had to dig drainage tunnels, and pump like crazy. Rainy Lake is on the Canadian border just east of International Falls, known for winter heat waves. We had breakfast in a mom and pop restaurant right on the
tracks as trains rolled through...but don't remember the town.
Access to this requires an OGR Forum Supporting Membership