California gold mining ghost town for sale on Craig`s list for $225G

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A 12-acre slice of the American dream -- a gold mining ghost town in northern California, complete with bar and liquor license -- can be yours for less than a quarter million.
That’s the pitch on Craigslist for the privately-owned parcel in Seneca with no known environmental hazards, several small buildings, scenic grounds along the Feather River and even an island -- all for just $225,000.
“Seneca is the real McCoy. Historic. Very close to, or containing a historic Chinese-built gold mine."​
- Craigslist

“Seneca is the real McCoy,” the Craigslist posting reads
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. “Historic. Very close to, or containing a historic Chinese-built gold mine. (Active gold mining today in the vicinity.) This deal includes several small buildings in various states of (dis)repair. It was home to the ‘Woodstock of the West’ in the 1970s -- thousands attended (we have a clipping somewhere).”
The deal includes all rights to minerals and timber from the land and boasts waterfront footage on both sides of the Feather River, the principal tributary of the Sacramento River, which saw a major influx of prospectors and settlers to the region during the 1849 California Gold Rush. It’s also the purported former stomping ground of Ishi, the last known member of the Yahi people of California, who was known as the “last wild Indian” before he died in 1916.
“Possibly THE last private acreage within a National Forest,” the ad continues. “(Not many liquor licenses in the region, either.) A big tree is growing up through the porch of the bar. The public access dirt road from both north and south is one of the most scenic in the USA.”
The northern access road, according to the pitch, is “darn scary” and features 1,000-foot drops into a gorge. The southern access road, meanwhile, is easier trekking in winter or poor weather conditions.
Potential buyers should be familiar with rural living and expect to wait a few days to see the property, as the owner lives a long way from the town.
Formerly North Fork, Seneca is an unincorporated community in Plumas County at an elevation of 3,625 feet. Gold was reportedly found in the region in 1851, prompting the boom of a wild mining town that once boasted a dance hall, livery, blacksmith and a hotel with solar-heated showers. The largest gold nugget found in Seneca was reportedly 42 ounces, worth $28,000 in 1942 -- or roughly $394,000 in today’s economy. Its post office originally opened in 1902 before closing in 1918, then re-opening five years later. It finally moved in 1941 before closing for good in 1943.

Hmmmm!! thinking !!
 

Sounds wonderful I really love that area of Calif.
 

Ok folks, now's our chance, let's all go in together on this place.

We can spend our further declining years gold mining. I was wondering what I was going to find to supplement my retirement income! Well wonder no more.
 
Hey, I'm up for it. I'll bring my metal detector. I'm sick of finding bottle caps and tin cans anyway.:sentimental:
Sounds good Pappy.

I have been wanting to get a metal detector, it always looks like so much fun, I've been watching a lot of metal detecting videos on youtube. I think it would be the perfect hobby for us.
 
I'll join up, but only if I can dress and act like Walter Huston in Treasure of the Sierra Madre -

"GOLD, I tell ya', gold! HEE-HEE! Yessir, I can smells it a mile away!"

*dancing around*
 
Sounds good Pappy.

I have been wanting to get a metal detector, it always looks like so much fun, I've been watching a lot of metal detecting videos on youtube. I think it would be the perfect hobby for us.

You collect bottle tops and empty cans OH ??

The cuz and his mate trekked up into the Cape with a metal detector and heads full of fantasies. They dug up bits of old barb wire, empty shell casings, nails, shards of shattered gear boxes and enough gold to almost cover their fuel costs.
 
I have a Metal Detector - C-Scope Auto 800

It is very difficult over here to discover anything worthwhile due to our throw away society. Ring pulls are a real headache.

You now have to get permission before you venture out.
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Who knows there might be some gold left but I guess most of us are beyond the age where it becomes an adventure?
 
We have a few old mining town sites within a couple miles of us. So they would be fun, we used to go to an old bottle dump years ago and found a few nice bottles. And around the grounds of an old hotel, we found their dump from the kitchen, boy did they ever eat a lot of oysters back then, that is why they were wiped out, over harvesting. They were shipped all over the world.
 
Mine is similar to the one pictured. The ocean shore can yield some good finds now and then. The best time to go is right after a hurricane, after the ocean bottom has been stirred up.
i have never found anything worth while, so I gave it up years ago. I did find a 25 cent piece once.:eek:nthego:
 
Thank you for the info Pappy. We want to be able to use it in water too.

I could only hope to do as well as you have in finding riches.:eek:nthego:
 

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