Death Valley National Park History
A land of extremes, Death Valley is one of the hottest, driest and lowest places on earth. With summer temperatures averaging well over 100 degrees and a long history of human suffering in the vast desert, the valley is aptly named. However, this place of eroded badlands, sand dunes, and golden hills also has a haunting sense of beauty.

Long before white settlers came upon the valley, four separate groups of Native Americans inhabited these desolate lands. Some 9,000 years ago, the Nevares Spring People, a group of primitive hunters and seed gatherers, lived in the valley at a time when lakes still existed, the climate was mild, and game was plentiful.
Four thousand years later, the Mesquite Flat People occupied the valley, then the Saratoga Spring People arrived about 2000 years later. By then, the basin had become a hot, dry desert. About 1,000 years ago, the Desert Shoshone camped near water sources in the valley during the winter, but moved to the cooler mountains in the summer. The nomadic Shoshones enjoyed the valley for centuries until the first groups of emigrants began to enter the area on their way to the California goldfields.
The first white pioneers to come to the valley was a group of California bound emigrants who split off from a wagon train headed out of Utah in 1849. Sure that they could save time by cutting across the valley, the group became known as the “Lost 49’ers.” Lost and out of food, the group finally made their way out of the desert, giving its name when they declared "Good-bye, Death Valley." During their hellish trip across, one of the miners found silver ore and would later fashion it into a gun sight. The ore found in the desert was quickly nicknamed the Lost Gunsight Mine, which began a mining boom that would last for more than a century.
From the 1880s to the turn of the century, mining was limited and sporadic in the Death Valley region, with many of the mining districts meeting with a notable lack of success. This was primarily due to a lack of water and fuel, difficulties in transportation and inefficient technology. However, there was one long-term profitable ore mined in the area – borax, a mineral used to make soap and other industrial compounds. The Harmony Borax Works became one of the earliest successful mining operations, operating from 1883 to 1888. The mine was famous not only for its rich borax deposits, but also for the Twenty Mule Team wagons used to transport the partially refined mineral.
With greater technology, machinery and transportation renewed the Interest in gold and silver mining in Death Valley after the turn of the century. Before long, mines sprang up at Skidoo, Rhyolite, and Keane Wonder that became large-scale operations. Flourishing during the first decade of the 20th century, the mines slowed down and by 1915 large scale metal mining had ended in Death Valley.
In the 1920s the first tourist facilities in the valley were lodged in tent houses at the site of Stovepipe Wells. Seven