Duckwater Valley

Coordinates: 38°57′N 115°42′W / 38.950°N 115.700°W / 38.950; -115.700
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Duckwater Valley
The basin with the village Duckwater and in the background the Pancake Range, seen from SR 379
Duckwater Valley is located in Nevada
Duckwater Valley
Duckwater Valley
Location of the Duckwater Valley in Nevada
Floor elevation5,495 feet (1,675 m)
Length12 miles (19 km) North-south
Geography
Population centersDuckwater
Borders onPancake Range (west) and Duckwater Hills (east)
Coordinates38°57′N 115°42′W / 38.950°N 115.700°W / 38.950; -115.700
Traversed byDuckwater Creek
GNIS ID: 840205

Duckwater Valley is a valley in Nye County, Nevada. It starts south of the northern border of Nye County, and runs south for a distance of approximately 12 miles (19 km) to Railroad Valley.[1] The Duckwater Valley is enclosed by the Pancake Range in the west and by the Duckwater Hills in the east. The Duckwater Creek crosses the valley. State Route 379 goes partially through the Duckwater Valley as well.[2] The only populated place in the valley is Duckwater. Part of the valley is occupied by the Duckwater Reservation.[3]

History[edit]

The valley had been inhabited for a long time by Native Americans, when the first white Americans settled in the Duckwater Valley in the 1860s after silver ore was discovered in nearby Hamilton. Agriculture arose in the valley, and for years hay, grain, vegetables, and fruit were grown for the inhabitants of Hamilton.[4] Isaak "Ike" Irwin, who produced hay, was in 1868 the first person to settle in the present-day village Duckwater.[5] When Hamilton was in decline, farmers in the Duckwater Valley started focussing on hay and grain, that they fed to their cattle.[4] According to the 1881 book History of Nevada by Thompson and West, the valley consisted almost entirely of meadows, of which 800 acres (320 ha) was occupied by agricultural lands. That land was used for growing grain and vegetables. Back then, some fruit plants had been planted recently.[1]

Thereafter, the livestock sector gradually grew in the Duckwater Valley, and it became the biggest in the valley. Around 1910, the farmers reduced the size of their cattle, because their rangelands were damaged by flocks of wild sheep in the winter season. In 1913, the Ely Record said the Duckwater Valley was "one of the most extensive ranching and farming sections in Eastern Nevada." The newspaper wrote that there were a number of ranches, one of which with 1,000 acres (400 ha) of land, of which 600 acres (240 ha) were in cultivation. Those ranches grew hay, grain, alfalfa, and potatoes, and were grazed by herds of cattle.[4]

The reservation of the Duckwater Shoshone Tribe, that is situated entirely in the Duckwater Valley, has a surface area of over 3,850 acres (1,560 ha), and was officially created in 1940.[5][3] The idea to establish a reservation had first been raised in 1937 by employees of the Florio Ranch, of which the owner wasn't able to pay the mortgage after he lost all his sheep in a blizzard. They figured they could sell the ranch together with some other ranches to the government for an Indian reservation. After the idea received the support of the Shoshone, the Bureau of Indian Affairs bought two ranches, and thus created the Indian reservation.[6] At its creation, it had a size of 3,240 acres (1,310 ha), but the government has expanded it since by acquiring more ranch lands.[3]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Thompson; West (1881). History of Nevada. Oakland, California. p. 515. Retrieved 25 November 2016.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  2. ^ "General Highway Map 2012: Nye and White Pine Counties" (PDF). Nevada Department of Transportation. 2011. Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 November 2016. Retrieved 25 November 2016.
  3. ^ a b c "Bureau of Indian Affairs Summary for Ely, Duckwater, and Goshute Indian Reservations" (PDF). Nevada Division of Water Resources. Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 November 2016. Retrieved 25 November 2016.
  4. ^ a b c "Nye County Ranchers Take Soil's Wealth". Nevada State Journal. 18 May 1913. p. 7. Retrieved 25 November 2016 – via Newspapers.com. Open access icon
  5. ^ a b Hall, Shawn (1981). Preserving the Glory Days. Reno/Las Vegas: University of Nevada Press. p. 95.
  6. ^ Crum, Steven J. (1994). "THE WESTERN SHOSHONES OF SMOKY VALLEY, NEVADA, 1900-1940" (PDF). Online Nevada Encyclopedia. Retrieved 25 November 2016.