Claim in Eldorado Canyon |
Eldorado Canyon is located in
Southern Nevada along the Colorado River just above Hoover Dam.
People who visit this canyon
today often do not know about the regions violent past. At one time, this canyon
epitomized what people picture when they think about the “Wild West.”
In the 1860s, this area was once the
most prosperous gold mining area in Nevada, before it became a state.
These riches drew many miners and prospectors into the region.
Two mines--the Techatticup
and Queen yielded riches as well as many individual claims in the
canyon. This area is near what is the ghost town of Nelson today.
Tours of Techatticup Mine are given today. |
By the time these two mines
closed down in the 1940s they had yielded millions of dollars in precious
metals.
This frontier boom also
attracted deserters from the Civil War, claim jumpers, and renegade Indians.
Since the area was remote, there was no law for miles around so vigilantism
became the norm.
Gunfights and murders were commonplace.
Gunfights and murders were commonplace.
When the individual claims
played out, the prospectors moved on, but they didn't take the dogs with them. They instead, shot these dogs, left
them chained at their claims or let them loose to roam.
It is believed these dogs being abandoned or killed caused an unusual haunting that still occurs today. Over the past 155 years, stories of sightings of these ferocious spectral hounds have been reported.
Some tales state
that these hounds chase or even attack visitors in this canyon. The locals call these hounds,
“The Hell Dogs of Eldorado Canyon.”
The following is a first
person account about one of these encounters.
My brother and I knew about the spectral dogs in Eldorado, so we decided to camp in the canyon.
For most of our visit, nothing happened out of the ordinary--that is until our last night when we cut our trip
short and left quickly.
We had set up our campsite
near another old mining shaft and then went to explore. We found an
eight-foot rusty chain embedded into the rock wall near the entrance to this
shaft.
We entered and discovered the
bones of what appeared to be a large dog. We then went back to our campsite and
built a fire since it was growing dark.
We ate our dinner and were
relaxing around our small campfire, when the air appeared to thicken around us.
I told my brother I felt that
someone was watching us. We heard breathing and heavy panting near where
we sat.
I jumped as something growled
loudly. Then we heard what sounded like several paws hitting the desert sand.
Whatever it was, it was now circling our campsite.
In a panic, I realized we were
surrounded.
We heard a loud
scratching sound coming from the area where we had seen the chain earlier. By
the firelight, we saw this chain move.
My brother grabbed his
flashlight and pointed it in this direction. It looked like the chain was being
tugged away from the rock wall--it was pulled harder each time.
As one, we fumbled to gather
our gear. My brother flashed his light onto the wall once more. We saw what
appeared to be scratch marks around the chain.
Then the chain dropped.
Something brushed against my leg, and I almost lost my balance. My brother
caught my arm to assist me and now frightened, we both ran faster than ever
before--headed for our car.
We heard a pack of dogs
panting and running after us. Even when we were in our car and driving down the
dirt road, we could hear this pack of dogs chasing us.
We left our gear behind and
we have never returned to retrieve it.
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