GOLD HILL CEMETERY GOLD HILL CATHOLIC CEMETERY STOREY COUNTY, NEVADA A Record of Burials, 1860-1997 Compiled and Edited By Stephen J. Lawrence Carson City, Nevada October 1997 Background Gold Hill was named by James "Ole Virginny" Fenimore and others after they discovered a ledge of high grade gold ore while prospecting in 1857. About two miles south of Virginia City, the town's fortunes rose and fell with the boom and bust cycle of the Comstock Mines. By 1865, the town had three oundries, three fraternal organizations, two newspapers, two banks, four stage offices, a large business section, and three lightly attended churches. Six mines in the vicinity of Gold Hill were some of the most productive on the Comstock Lode, producing several million dollars worth of gold and silver by 1880 when the main lode played out. Many of the men buried in the Gold Hill Cemeteries were miners and many of those died from accidents in the mines. Most notable was the fire that consumed three mines on April 7, 1869. The fire began at the 800 foot level in the Yellow Jacket Mine. Just after the morning crew arrived in the mine it collapsed and exploded sending fire into the Crown Point and Kentucky Mines. Thirty-seven men lost their lives and it was three years before all smoldering traces of the fire were extinguished. The Gold Hill cemeteries once flourished with flowers and ornamental plants irrigated by water piped from the Sierra Nevada. In 1997, both cemeteries were in poor shape with many headstones missing or broken because of vandals. The elements have taken a toll on elaborate wooden rails and posts used to designate grave sites and the flowers and plants have been replaced by sagebrush and desert grasses. A past grass fire damaged a number of grave sites. Both cemeteries are on public land administered by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM). The BLM is currently cataloging and photographing headstones in both cemeteries. The sources used to compile this record of the Gold Hill cemeteries include headstone inscriptions documented by the author, burial records compiled by Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR) in the mid-1950's, and burial records compiled by the Daughters of the American Pioneers in 1960 (DAP). The author thanks Eileen Kessler, Reference Librarian, Nevada State Library and Archives for supplying copies of the DAR and DAP documents. Location From Carson City, Nev. take U.S. Highway 50, east to the junction of State Highway 341 (Virginia City highway). Turn left onto highway 341 and follow until junction with State Highway 342. Take U.S. Highway 342 to Devils Gate, large rock outcrop through which the highway has been cut. From Devils Gate, drive 1.6 miles to a dirt road on the left side of the highway. Turn left onto the dirt road and follow it until it swings towards the west and take the first right turning north. Follow that road until you see the Gold Hill Cemetery. To get to the Gold Hill Catholic cemetery ( might be American Flat cemetery) take the dirt road just as you did for the Gold Hill cemetery but turn left (towards the south) instead of turning north to go to the Gold Hill cemetery. Continue on for 1/4 to « mile until you come to a small dirt road off to the right, just past a large mound of mine tailings. Take that small dirt road to the top until you get to a flat area. Park and the north part of the cemetery is on your left.