Most People Don’t Know About These Strange Ruins Hiding In Idaho
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Idaho’s abandoned places, ghost towns, and modern ruins make for
unique places to explore, even if history isn’t your thing. We humans
are explorers by nature, and the quest for discovery, both old and new
is something that can reveal far more about a location’s slow fade into
history than a textbook ever could.
Urban adventurers (with the term “urban” being used lightly here in
Idaho) often turn their sights toward relics of old and the ruins of a
more recent past. If you find beauty in ruins and historical decay,
scattered throughout the state are a number of hidden gems – sites that
don’t make the lists of Idaho’s big-name attractions or historical
markers, but probably should. One such place is tucked away seemingly in
the middle of nowhere, but is in fact hidden in plain sight: a set of
modern ruins, four beehive-shaped earthen mounds that sit crumbling
amidst the sagebrush prairie, standing tall against the harsh landscape.
Do you know what they are?
Made from clay said to be from
deposits along Jump Creek, over a dozen of these hut-like domes were
built in the mid 1880s by Warren King of Butte, Montana.
Each is about 20 feet in height and diameter - approximately the size of a tiny house or a flat-bed trailer.
Of the original 16, only three distinguishable huts remain, each in various states of disrepair.
Bricks and debris are scattered nearby - the fatal remnants of the fourth kiln.
They were originally built to make charcoal from wood for smelting the ore at the nearby Nicholia Mine.
Together, they produced close to
50,000 bushels of charcoal per month. Douglas Fir, hauled from various
other sites in the valley, was the preferred wood due to its burn rate.
Before this, charcoal was produced in deep pits bored into the
landscape. The parabolic or "beehive" shape is definitely a little more
aesthetic, I think!
During the 1880s, the Birch
Creek Valley was booming with mining activity as miners worked a rich
body of ore located about 10 miles east of the kilns, known as the Viola
Mine.
Between 1881 and 1888 it produced
$2.5 million worth of lead and silver, which was extracted from the ore
by a smelter located near the mine. The smelter contained two blast
furnaces, each capable of handling 40 tons of ore per day. The furnace
required immense quantities of fuel, resulting in the need for charcoal
kilns to keep a constant supply on hand.
But when Viola shut down in 1888, the kiln huts were abandoned - only two to three years after being built.
Of the original 16, twelve were
torn apart and the bricks incorporated into various buildings around the
valley. The remaining four were listed on the National Register of
Historic Places in 1972, protecting them from further dismantling. The
site is also a part of the Targhee National Forest.
The 40 cords worth of wood that remained inside the kilns or stacked nearby were carried away as well.
To protect the kilns, only one is open for the public to enter.
But as far as unexpected
discoveries in the obscure outer limits of Idaho is concerned, these
massive "modern" ruins are pretty intriguing, wouldn't you say?
Similar structures can be found
in both Death Valley and Wyoming, as well as scattered throughout the
West - but the perfect dome shape of the Birch Creek kilns sets them
apart.
You can find these uniquely rustic gems 5 miles west of Highway 28, near Leadore and Gilmore.
Have you ever seen or visited these unique beehive kilns? Share your photos with us!
Another set of a different time period and composition sits at the
Land of the Yankee Fork State Park in Challis, so be sure to check those
out as well. While you’re at it, history buffs might also enjoy touring
this behemoth piece of mining history.
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