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Keystone Copper Mine (United States)


Unlike most of the other mining towns in the county, Copperopolis' claim to fame isn't gold, but copper. It was founded in 1860 by William K. Reed, Dr. Allen Blatchly, and Thomas McCarty, at the site of the second big discovery of copper ore in the region (the first was nearby Telegraph City). The town grew rapidly, as the need for copper during the Civil War to make bullets was great. The copper was sent to Stockton and then on to San Francisco, where it was loaded onto ships and taken around Cape Horn before finally arriving in smelters on the East Coast.
After the war ended, the expense of mining and shipping copper proved to be too high and the population dwindled as the mines closed. However, a Boston company purchased the mines in the 1880s and mining operations resumed. The town went through boom periods during the two World Wars, when demand for copper went up again. By the time the mines closed in 1946, according to the U.S. Bureau of Mines, they had produced 72,598,883 pounds of copper worth over $12 million. No copper mining has been done since. Hitch-hiking near the Copperopolis area is known to be very difficult
Wiki.[url]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copperopolis,_California[/url]

Photos of Keystone Copper Mine

Historic Photographs Of Keystone
Historic Photographs Of Keystone (1 photo)
Last updated February 5th 2009 by carnkie
Photographs Of Keystone
Photographs Of Keystone (0 photos)
Last updated February 5th 2009 by carnkie

Google Earth Map of Keystone Copper Mine


Other location/mapping information:

Latitude: 37.9806
Longitude: -120.641

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