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In l877 there was a need for the miners to communicate with the
dams upstream that controlled the release of water for hydraulic
mining. The Milton Mining company wanted to talk to the controllers
sixty miles away. The Ridge Telephone Line was strung from French
Corral near Nevada City, to Milton, in neighboring Sierra County.
In Milton the line was connected to the Western Union Telegraph
Company line which was connected to the rest of the United States.
The Ridge line was hung on trees and poles that connected twenty-two
stations. The phone line was a private line but if someone wanted
to use it a toll of $.50 cents for twenty words was collected.
In order to reach the sixty mile distance there was a booster
station built at Malakoff Mine. A homemade battery was made from
six quart jars held together and filled with mixtures of manganese,
sal ammonia, blue stone, and zinc. The booster allowed the phone
line to continue for the full sixty miles.
After l884 when hydraulic mining was ordered closed the federal
inspectors would arrive from Marysville to check the mines. The
phone lines were used to signal the arrival of the strangers.
They would relay orders to stop the hydraulic mining before the
inspectors would arrive in the diggins. In nearby Downieville,
the miners were notified of strangers in town by hanging out a
pair of stuffed overalls on the Saint Charles Hotel flag pole.
The phone line operated for twenty years and became known as the
first long distance telephone line in the world. Today it is a
California historical landmark that is located in French Corral,
near Nevada City, California. |