Results for Gold
Second Deadwood Gold Discovery
Near this point in 1875 occurred the second of two initial...
The Homestake Gold Mine and Open Cut
The Homestake lode, the basis for the great Homestake Mini...
Goldsboro
The west Sanford community of Goldsboro, at the turn of th...
Georgetown and Goldsboro
African Americans were first brought to the Sanford area b...
The Saga of Gold Tooth John
(Or: How the Holiday Inn Central Came To Be)
First t...
Confederate Line Crossing the Goldsboro Road
Directly in front and to your left, Confederate Maj. Gen. ...
Fighting South of the Goldsboro Road: The “Bull Pen”
You are looking south of the Goldsboro Road at the area wh...
A Golden Dedication for I-90
The nation celebrated completion of Interstate 90 after co...
Gold Point
Known originally as Lime Point, this area was first settle...
Haile Gold Mine
(Front)
In 1827 Benjamin Haile (1768-1842) found g...
Results for Gold
Second Deadwood Gold Discovery
Near this point in 1875 occurred the second of two initial gold discoveries in the Deadwood area. It was made by the Lardner party of eight prospectors, steered here by John B. Pearson, a man already familiar with Deadwood Gulch. ...
The Homestake Gold Mine and Open Cut
The Homestake lode, the basis for the great Homestake Mining Company, was discovered by Moses Manuel, who, with his brother Fred, had come to the Black Hills in 1875. The two brothers, along with Hank Harney, officially located the claim ...
Goldsboro
The west Sanford community of Goldsboro, at the turn of the 21st century, is home to more than 4,000 people, was the second Florida town incorporated by black citizens. William Clark opened a store in 1886 in the village of ...
Georgetown and Goldsboro
African Americans were first brought to the Sanford area by slave-holding families settling in the Fort Mellon area during the 1840s. Later in the nineteenth century, Henry Sanford welcomed black residents to his city when it was established in 1870 ...
The Saga of Gold Tooth John
(Or: How the Holiday Inn Central Came To Be)
First the Cherokee Indians were here.
Then the White settlers were here. Among the first of these was Edwin Plaster who built his home near here. He grew cotton on this plot of ...
Confederate Line Crossing the Goldsboro Road
Directly in front and to your left, Confederate Maj. Gen. Robert F. Hoke’s division, on loan from the Army of Northern Virginia, blocked the old Goldsboro Road (now Harper House Road) to deflect the oncoming Union advance. The division was ...
Fighting South of the Goldsboro Road: The “Bull Pen”
You are looking south of the Goldsboro Road at the area where Union Brig. Gen. James D. Morgan’s division began a defensive position facing Gen. Robert F. Hoke’s division after being deflected by the main Confederate line. These battle-hardened Union ...
A Golden Dedication for I-90
The nation celebrated completion of Interstate 90 after contractors paved the last four-miles of freeway near Blue Earth in 1978. Reminiscent of the "Golden Spike" that symbolized completion of the nation's first transcontinental railroad in 1869, officials arranged to tint ...
Gold Point
Known originally as Lime Point, this area was first settled about 1880. The early camp was abandoned by 1882. In March 1908, a silver strike brought a new camp into existence. Called Hornsilver, it flourished for about a year, boasting ...
Haile Gold Mine
(Front)
In 1827 Benjamin Haile (1768-1842) found gold here while panning in the streams on his plantation. After he found gold ore as well, Haile set up a mining operation. By 1837 the Haile Gold Mine included a 5-stamp ...