Everything about Ruth Nevada totally explained
Ruth is a small town in
White Pine County,
Nevada that was founded in 1903. As of 2005 the population of Ruth, Nevada is 394
(External Link
).
History
At the edge of the first large
copper mine a settlement for the mine workers was established from tents and wood huts. The owner of the mine named the settlement after his only daughter Ruth.
With the opening
Nevada Northern Railway in the year 1906 copper production began to
boom. By 1910 the settlement was already established a small distance for the first site. Ruth was a
company town for
Nevada Consolidated Copper Company: the houses belonged to the mine and the city and were administered by them.
Saloons and
bordellos were forbidden.
Not all mine settlements were like that. In the neighboring
Riepetown, whose remnants were demolished in 1995, there were 16 saloons, and knifings and robberies were common.
Labor disputes often became bloody. October 1912 saw shootings increasing and three strikers killed. Nevada's Governor Oddie proclaimed the martial law for Ruth, in order to terminate the strike. In 1919, disputes again arose but this time peaceful labor dispute were settled under guidance of the
Western Federation of Miners and the
Industrial Workers of the World.
At the beginning of the
Great Depression, Ruth had 2,300 inhabitants. The Company that had founded Ruth changed owners in 1956. The old city Ruth was again torn off because of expansion of the open mining. The new owner,
Kennecott Corporation, offered the building of a new city with houses to the inhabitants for favorable prices. The new settlement was tuned over to the administration of the County. Due to the frequent removals Ruth got the pointed name "traveler city" (
traveling town).
Ownership continued to change until 1999 when copper in the open mining was diminished, the managed pits was last 3.2 km long; 1.6 km across and 1000 ft. deep. The mining of copper and the railway were shut down in 1999.
From 1996 to 1999, the
BHP Nevada Railroad was based here.
The
Nevada Northern Railway Museum maintains some track in the area.
Former U.S. Congresswoman
Helen Delich Bentley, who represented the state of
Maryland, was born in Ruth.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Ruth Nevada'.
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