FRENCH CORRAL
The somnolent, rural atmosphere which envelopes this settlement today belies its early
beginnings during the days of gold. French Corral was the first of the historic mining camps to
spring up along the San Juan Ridge. A French settler built a corral for his mules here in 1849,
and when rich placers were later discovered nearby, a town quickly appeared on the site of the
Frenchman’s corral.
The gavel deposits of the ancient San Juan River channel follow along the ridge for many
miles. These accumulations, washed down over millions of years, contain fossil wood and nearly
every kind of rock known to the Sierra region. And gold, lots of gold. The deposits were left
high and dry above the present river systems by some past geologic events, causing wild
speculations amongst the miners as to how the gold got there.
For several years the town simply existed, with what mining there was taking place in a
rather desultory manner as the deposits did not appear to be rich. But when hydraulic mining was
introduced, its economy and thoroughness changed everything. The town boomed as hundreds of
miners rushed to the area, making French Corral one of the premier towns in the district, second
only to North San Juan in size and importance.
In addition to being known for its rich gold mines, French Corral is famous for being the
terminus of the world’s first long-distance telephone line. The sixty-mile long line was built by
the Edison Company in 1878 at a cost of $6,000. It stretched up the Ridge from French Corral
through Birchville, Sweetland, North San Juan, Cherokee, North Columbia, Lake City, North
Bloomfield, Moore’s Flat, Graniteville, Milton, and Bowman Lake. The line was built for three
mining companies, the Eureka Lake and Yuba Canal Company, the North Bloomfield Mining Company,
and the Milton Mining and Water Company, in order to more effectively manage their ditches and
flumes along the Ridge. The three companies owned and operated a total of over 320 miles of
ditches and flumes, constructed at a cost of over $5 million. The phone line enabled them to
precisely regulate the flow of water from the reservoirs high in the mountains, through the
complicated system of flumes and ditches, to their gigantic hydraulic mining operations along the
Ridge.
The results of the hydraulic mining operations which took place here from the 1850’s to 1884,
are still visible along the road. Hillsides washed away created mini-canyons which reveal the
layers of gravels laid down by the ancient river. Sunlight often catches and glitters off specks
in these walls, drawing the attention of those driving by. Gold?
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