Skagit River JournalFree Resources Stories & Photos |
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Center, you can see one of the pack trains that supplied the mine every month or so. These pack trains transported everything larger than what was brought in by backpack. Right, this is probably the river gorge east of what is now the town of Newhalem. |
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Upper left shows drilling inside the mine, using some kind of high pressure drill. Upper right, we assume these buildings were built along Thunder creek. Can anyone tell us for sure? Lower left, miners were cooped up for a long time with only each other for amusement. On rainy, drizzly nights, cards may have been their only way to recreate. Lower right, this gramophone must have been very welcome in the bunkhouse. It had to be transported to the mine by horseback or muleback. |
We were very pleased when Jesse Kennedy of the National Park Service was able to identify one of the photos. Jesse is responsible for the extensive museum at the Park Service center near Marblemount. Here is what he found. "We have the photo that is labelled Skagit Mine Buildings. Our records show that the buildings in the photo are not any of the series of Skagit Queen Mines buildings. The photo is of the Rainbow Talc Mine (aka Rainbow No. 1). They were located on the north side of the Skagit river, between Bacon Creek and Jennings siding (just shy of milepost 85). Gretchen Luxenberg's history indicates:"
The lode claim on this site, the Rainbow, was located September 24th, 1931 (relocated July, 1945). In a mineral report completed April 28, 1972, it states 'talc mining on the Rainbow No. 1 has been continuous for approximately twenty-five years.' However, it is believed that this is the first talc mine on the upper Skagit River, so it may have been worked at an earlier date under a different name or unofficially."The claim was also called McMurrell Talc. According to Gretchen, an early Marblemount resident noted that the talc mines on the Skagit were present when he arrived in the area in 1912. The only current remains are a number of holes drilled into rock."
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