|
Jerome history
Jerome is full of history. Discover how this ghost
town/hippie hang-out/artist colony was once a "billion-dollar" mining
camp. Get a behind the scenes view of Jerome and see its hidden places
(well, not all of them).
Jerome
is perched high on the side of the mountains bordering the
southwest edge of the Verde Valley over rich ore deposits.
These deposits were first used
by the Native-Americans and observed in 1583 and 1598 by Spanish
explorers. In 1876 mining claims and a mill were located near
the present site of the Town of Jerome. These claims organized
by Arizona Territorial Governor Frederic Trittle were purchased
in 1882 by the United Verde Company. This camp was named Jerome
in 1883 after Eugene Jerome, a major financier of the United
Verde Copper Company.
A small blast furnace was hauled
in by wagon and copper was produced in 1883 and 1884. The
unprofitable company was purchased in 1883 by Senator William
Clark of Montana.
In 1885 Clark constructed a
narrow gauge railroad, the United Verde and Pacific Railway from
Jerome to Jerome Junction (Chino Valley), in efforts to ship ore
out for processing. He also expanded the smelter making the
United Verde Copper Company a very profitable enterprise. But
fires deep in the mines necessitated the beginning of open pit
mining. The Jerome Smelter, which sat over the mines, was
replaced by a smelter in the new town of Clarkdale in 1915.
The Verde Valley Railroad, from
Drake to Clarkdale, replaced the old narrow gauge line. The
strike in 1915 of a rich copper vein, by the United Verde
Extension, owned by James Douglas, added to the town’s
prosperity. The mines were once earning a million dollars a
month making Jerome the “Billion Dollar Mining Camp”
Jerome’s population grew to
almost 15,000 before it began to decline. Although it survived
numerous fires in the early 1900s, the buildings you see in
Jerome today are the same buildings that existed when the town
was in its heyday. Walking down Main Street is like taking a
step back in time. Remnants of the “red light district”, Company
Hill, old hotels and saloons, still exist.
Today the population of Jerome
is close to 500. When the mines shut down in the 1950s, the
population shrank as low as 200. Buildings were boarded up and
the town thus received its name, Ghost Town. By the 1960s to 70s
hippies began to discover Jerome as a cheap place to live where
they could get away from it all. Buying up homes for pennies,
Jerome began to come alive again. These hippies were also
craftsmen and women, artists and musicians. Opening up galleries
and selling their wares, this counter-culture group of settlers
began to attract tourists to the sleepy little mining town. By
the 1990s Jerome became known as a destination spot. Today the
town is visited by over half a million tourists a year.
To receive more detailed
information on Jerome’s rich history, join the Historical
Society
www.jeromehistoricalsociety.org now and receive the Jerome
Chronicle, a quarterly 7-page newsletter. Each newsletter has a
different theme and includes numerous photos. Or look in our
Book Store where we sell as well as publish books on Jerome’s
history.

|