Eight
members of the Skyliners Hiking Group hiked to Uncle Sam Mine on 22
February 2014. From Cottonwood we drove east on Hwy 260 to I-17 and
then south to Hwy 169 which we followed for 10.3 miles before turning
right onto Old Cherry Road. We followed Old Cherry Road 1.7 miles,
turned left onto Forest Road 531 and drove for 3.6 miles to the
intersection with FR 519 (right)
where we parked to start our hike.
Once
through the gate on FR 519, we stopped for a group photograph.
Left
to right: Robert Wakefield, Collene Maktenieks, Ruth Frazier, Connie
Woolard, Lila Wright, Jim Manning and the author – photograph by
Name Withheld
We
found ourselves hiking along a forest road that was, at first,
essentially level and in good condition; however, it soon became a
little steeper and fairly rough, requiring a high clearance,
preferably 4-wheel drive, vehicle.
Then
about 1.2 miles from FR 531 we came to a spot in the road that would
would certainly have deterred me from driving my 4-wheel drive pickup
any further. A section of one side of the road (left)
had collapsed where it had been undermined by erosion, and to pass it
would place a full-size vehicle in a very precarious position that
might cause it to topple into the wash alongside the road.
Another
0.3 miles brought us to an old corral and a gate that apparently
divided an upper pasture from the lower one.
Although
I am sure that FR 519 must originally have gone all the way to Uncle
Sam Mine, it now ends at this gate, about 0.2 miles below the mine.
The trail runs through the gate and between two posts (right)
beside the wash.
After
passing between the posts, the trail enters the wash and follows it
all the way to the mine site. Do not turn to the right at a side
wash; just follow the main wash straight ahead and you will soon see
the mine tailings on the right. Although one can reach the mine by
way of the side wash, the route is much more difficult.
There
are several vertical shafts located above the tailings, one with a
tower mounted in it, possibly to lift ore.
Information
obtained from the Arizona Department of Mines and Minerals indicates
that the primary name for this mining site is Uncle Sam, but it also
provides the following alternate names: Black Chief, Black Warrior
Prospect and Black Chief Copper. The current status is given as
“past producer” and the listed commodities are: Iron Magnetite,
Iron Hematite, Manganese, Silicon and Copper.1
It
was still early for lunch, so we decided to travel on up the wash to
eat at the spot where we had ended an April 2009 hike before turning
back. From the top of the slag pile we could see that there was a
well-worn cattle path (left) that
we could follow.
The
hills on both sides of the wash we followed were covered with a
mixture of juniper, scrub oak and manzanita. Our path was easy, with
a sandy bottom and a gentle slope. By a little after 1100 we reached
the spot where we had paused for lunch on a 04 April 2009 hike and
decided to stop for lunch.
We
all stopped along the way up the wash to admire the many colorful
rocks scattered about. Shown here (right)
is a photograph of rocks we saw in the same area during our 2009
hike.
Following
a leisurely lunch and my customary nap, we headed back down the
trail. After we had passed the old corral and climbed up the ridge
between there and where we parked, Jim decided that he wanted to make
a detour down into a wash that we had crossed on a recent scouting
hike, follow it downstream to Medlar Spring Trail and return by that
trail to FS 531. He wanted to see whether he could again find a
unique rock he had noted on the scouting hike. I joined him and we
detoured through the cat claw, manzanita and scrub oak down to the
wash, entering it at exactly the same place we had entered on the
scouting hike. The rock was located in the stream bed, so we felt
sure that we would find it by just following the wash downstream.
Unfortunately, the stream had cut more than one stream bed and we
followed the wrong one part of the way, missing the rock entirely. In
the map below, our detour is in blue and the pertinent section of the
scouting hike is in green. The rock must have been along the circled
section of green track in the lower right quarter.
The
round trip hike to our lunch stop was about 4.4 miles, the elevation
change was about 446 feet and the maximum elevation was 5701 feet.
The track is shown in red on the included map (next
page).
1
http://services.azgs.az.gov/OnlineAccessMineFiles/S-Z/StlouisYavapai369a.pdf
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