Wall Spring: Difference between revisions

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Symons 1877
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Lucius Arcularius was murdered near March 1, 1864 near Wall Spring.  After finding his body, the search party went back to [[Granite Ranch | Granite Creek station]] "and fixed up a box and came back and buried him."
Lucius Arcularius was murdered near March 1, 1864 near Wall Spring.  After finding his body, the search party went back to [[Granite Ranch | Granite Creek station]] "and fixed up a box and came back and buried him."
In 1877, Thomas W. Symons traveled through the area: "Leaving Surprise Valley we set out going through the old outlet of the lake by the main road to Reno and separating at Clark's about 10 miles from the valley two courses were run to the Granite Mountain which was occupied as our last triangulation station October 26; A four days march from Granite Mountain brought us to Susanville passing by [[Wall Spring | Wall Springs]], Murphy's Salt Works, Smoke Creek, and Shafer's. Mr Murphy has built up quite an industry in the desert. On boring a few feet into the soil water is found which is a fully saturated solution of salt and which by means of a windmill he pumps into inclosed spaces of the ground and there it is evaporated and leaves the salt which is very pure and of excellent quality. From one gallon of water he gets two pounds and ten ounces of salt. He was extending his works so as to make more salt as he is at present unable to supply the demand."<ref> Thomas W. Symons, "[https://books.google.com/books?id=ZWMtAAAAIAAJ&dq=Symons%201878%20executive%20report&pg=PA118#v=snippet&q=%22Black%20Rock%22&f=false Executive and Descriptive Report of Lieutenant Thomas W. Symonds Corp of Engineers on the operations of Party No 1 California Section Field Season of 1877]," p. 113, 1878. In Alvin R. McLane "Silent Cordilleras, The Mountain Ranges of Nevada", p. 19, Reno: Camp Nevada Monograph Number 4, 1978, 118 pp.</ref>


===Resources===
===Resources===
<resources/>
* [http://geonames.usgs.gov/pls/gnispublic/f?p=gnispq:3:::NO::P3_FID:850302 GNIS]
* [http://geonames.usgs.gov/pls/gnispublic/f?p=gnispq:3:::NO::P3_FID:850302 GNIS]
* Asa Merrill Fairfield, "[http://books.google.com/books?id=NRcVAAAAYAAJ&lpg=PA368&ots=P_NKd6mJzu&dq=%22Lucius%20Arcularius%22&pg=PA368#v=onepage&q=%22Lucius%20Arcularius%22&f=false Fairfield's Pioneer History of Lassen County, California.]" (1916)
* Asa Merrill Fairfield, "[http://books.google.com/books?id=NRcVAAAAYAAJ&lpg=PA368&ots=P_NKd6mJzu&dq=%22Lucius%20Arcularius%22&pg=PA368#v=onepage&q=%22Lucius%20Arcularius%22&f=false Fairfield's Pioneer History of Lassen County, California.]" (1916)

Revision as of 22:59, 1 January 2015

Wall Spring is located on the west side of the Smoke Creek Desert, north of the Parker Ranch.

Lucius Arcularius was murdered near March 1, 1864 near Wall Spring. After finding his body, the search party went back to Granite Creek station "and fixed up a box and came back and buried him."

In 1877, Thomas W. Symons traveled through the area: "Leaving Surprise Valley we set out going through the old outlet of the lake by the main road to Reno and separating at Clark's about 10 miles from the valley two courses were run to the Granite Mountain which was occupied as our last triangulation station October 26; A four days march from Granite Mountain brought us to Susanville passing by Wall Springs, Murphy's Salt Works, Smoke Creek, and Shafer's. Mr Murphy has built up quite an industry in the desert. On boring a few feet into the soil water is found which is a fully saturated solution of salt and which by means of a windmill he pumps into inclosed spaces of the ground and there it is evaporated and leaves the salt which is very pure and of excellent quality. From one gallon of water he gets two pounds and ten ounces of salt. He was extending his works so as to make more salt as he is at present unable to supply the demand."[1]

Resources

<resources/>

  1. Thomas W. Symons, "Executive and Descriptive Report of Lieutenant Thomas W. Symonds Corp of Engineers on the operations of Party No 1 California Section Field Season of 1877," p. 113, 1878. In Alvin R. McLane "Silent Cordilleras, The Mountain Ranges of Nevada", p. 19, Reno: Camp Nevada Monograph Number 4, 1978, 118 pp.