Bigfoot's Online Photo Log

WELCOME TO BIGFOOT'S ONLINE PHOTO LOG

The guide to the hikes is in the same order as they appear in the book.  Simply click on a selection on the left of the screen and join us as we hike.

The 38 Historic Side Trips are listed directly after the hiking menu and are listed in the same order they appear in the book.  Select the point of interest and "click" to review our photos and interpretive impressions.

We recommend that you search around the outdoor locations, as many have been overgrown with brush and vegetation for so long, that visitors are still discovering items of historical significance.
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    1 Almeda Mine Trail

    Almeda Mine - Found at Last! - Josephine County, Oregon

    The Almeda Mine, it is quite visible from the Galice Road and from the magnificent Rogue River, but we were determined to find the Almeda Mine the hard way.  By land!

    The challenge we accepted was to find the Almeda Mine by the maze of forest roads that twist and turn through our wild, mountainous country.


     After two previous unsuccessful searches, we more closely examined our sketchy forestry maps, and through process of elimination, picked the route we chose today.  We ran as far as we could by four-wheel drive until we were halted by a large steel gate belonging to the Bureau of Land Management.

    The gate was to prevent vehicular traffic, but allowed for passage of foot traffic around it.

    We wound through magnificent, mature forests that had not fully begun to display their fall colors.  We felt sure that this time the mountain would give up her secret, and after a couple of hours we were rewarded with the distant sound of rushing water.


    The road curved around the gulches and canyons that are present the entire way around the mountain, and around each bend, the river's voice grew louder, until finally its' tune changed to a steady roar.

    The moon stayed with us throughout the morning, and was probably watching to see if we'd finally make our destination.  Maybe it was just as curious as we were.

    Suddenly we emerged from the dark, shrouded forests into bright sunlight at the edge of a cliff overlooking the mighty Rogue River.

    The Almeda rapids add their voices to the river's chorus.

    Rafts full of adventurers were floating the wide and docile section of the Rogue, just a few miles from where the mighty river gives up its' mild-mannered facade.  After the Rogue makes its' final turn toward the Pacific Ocean, it drops its' need to make a good impression on visitors, and turns into a raging, deep and narrow monster that thrashes its' way through the mountains to the sea.


    Shortly, the Almeda Mine appears far below, and soon we are looking at one of the sealed entrances.


    The Almeda Mine was named after owner John Wickham's favorite niece.  John Wickham was born in Illinois, and his family had moved to Minnesota when he was 15, where he fell in love with a gal he later married after he followed her to Kansas, and after a stint as a buffalo hunter on the great plains, and later a gold miner in Colorado.  Ten years later he went back for his bride, and moved to Idaho and then Washington to involve himself in the mines of the west.  His niece Almeda was born in Spokane, Washington.  In 1898, John was in Southern Oregon, and he was attracted to the area on the Rogue River known as the BIG YANK LODE.  He and his son staked a claim, and began to buy up other claims.  John organized the Almeda Mining Company, and he built a sawmill and other huge mining buildings on the site.



     Looking down from the mine entrance, below us is the bottom entrance, and although we did not explore it, I do believe that behind me and above on another far off ledge, there is another entrance to the mine.


     This old photo shows just a small part of the total Almeda Mine operation.

    I believe that there are remnants of some of this equipment laying on the property.

    Although I can't be sure, because I am not by any means an expert on mining, this photo appears to show two, five-stamp ore crushers in the background, which would indicate a huge operation.


     This could be some of the equipment from inside, and my guess is that it was a smelter.


     Since they also extracted silver, copper and many other elements in addition to the gold, a smelter would have been most necessary for this large an operation.  It appears to be laying on its' side, and from the looks of the following firebox, I do believe this to have been a massive smelter.




    The entire area is strewn with mining debris, and keeping in mind that this entire area was covered with over 50 feet of flood water in 1964, and probably many times prior to that when the wild Rogue River decided to have temper tantrums, and so who knows how much was washed downstream over the years.  The enormous power of raging water can destroy just about anything in its' path.

    More equipment, which I could not begin to guess what it was used for.

    There are huge concrete footings with gigantic bolts projecting from their tops, which must have been footings for the massive buildings that covered the mountainside.

    This is the door blocking the lower entrance to theAlmeda Mine.  Thousands of feet of tunnels lie inside this mine.  Layers of tunnels, create a network of levels like a giant anthill inside this entire mountain.  Levels are said to penetrate in all directions, and it is said to be as far as 400 feet below the river level.
     
      I would have loved to explore the great depths of this maze, but naturally it is well sealed.  These old mines are extremely dangerous as I learned in my younger days while exploring the mines around Central City, Colorado.  I came close to my demise on several explorations, and I was relieved to find the Almeda Mine was inaccessible to my curiosity.  If I had been able to go inside, I might not be writing this now, because it looks wicked!


     This is a shot looking from the middle of the low-lying area surrounding the mine, with the Rogue River behind me.


    Not much left  of this steel that  is laying in the outflow area.


     Here's another view of the same pipe, and you can see that it is off to the side of the mine.


     This charred area appears to have been severely heated, and I believe it must have been the base where the smelter rested.  It appears as a great lava flow, where the rock has been melted by tremendous heat.



    Here's another view of what I think was a smelter.




     Downstream, and alongside where I believe the large mining building projected upward, is a flat plateau that shows signs of habitation.  There are numerous water lines, and the site is full of metal, tin and wood of all descriptions.  There are pieces of china and crockery scattered across a large area.  I assume that this was a barracks or a large area of several living quarters for the mine workers.  In the past, the journey to the mine was not as eventful as the one it took us to reach it.  There was a floating bridge, and when that was washed out in about 1927, there was a ferry that one could use for ingress and egress to the mine property.  The heavy equipment however, had to be brought in over the mountains, and thus the very solid and well-built mining road, over which we traveled to reach the Almeda Mine.


     Looking over the ground, one can almost envision the miners at the end of their shift cooking, cleaning and relaxing on this plateau overlooking such magnificent scenery alongside the Rogue River.




     Returning to the top, and looking down at the Almeda Mine area.

    One last comment, now that I know what the creek is far below.  You can see the straight channel from the Almeda Mine entrance to the Rogue River.  I wonder what Zane Grey would have thought as it passed by his cabin 25 + miles downriver?



    On the way back, and I still wish I could get in there!



    More rafters are enjoying this beautiful October day.






    On the way back up the trail, everywhere we go there are more signs of what must have been an absolutely monstrous operation in its' day!




    This has been a culmination of a fun search for part of our adventures in exploring what I feel is the most beautiful county (Josephine) in all of Oregon!  I just hope our next adventure is an easier one.

    2 Ament Dam

    Ament Dam, Grants Pass, OR




    It was built in 1902 by the Golden Drift Mining Company to provide water for their mining operations.  The dam served the Dry Diggings mine upriver from Grants Pass.

    The locals hated the Ament Dam, because the salmon refused to go through the dark tunnel that was the fishway.  They said the dam killed more salmon than were ever caught commercially.  Now, instead of gathering to watch the fish, the local "artists" come out here to practice their craft.

    It was reported that saboteurs dynamited the dam in 1912 and did major damage, however many thought it was just a malfunctioning in some of the dam equipment, and it was never proven that it was sabotage, but it makes for great reading.   The owners repaired the damage , but a state fish warden dynamited a wing of the dam a few years later, according to reliable sources, and since the dam was hated by everyone anyway, a lot of people chose to accept this as fact.




    Hard to believe that we are on the third level of this structure.  There are two stories underneath here that are covered in sand and rock.  Once the dam was removed, the wild Rogue floods reclaimed most everything.  This room once held a huge turbine that was as big as an 18-wheel tractor-trailer  --  it washed away, never to leave a trace!

    In 1921, the Ament Dam was removed.  It was to be replaced by the Savage Rapid dam, which was also removed in 2009.