Cobre, Nevada

Cobre
Ghost town

Surviving buildings in Cobre (September 2007). Both buildings were owned by the Nevada Northern Railway; the structure on the left is a handcar shed, and the structure on the right is an engine house.
Cobre

Location within the state of Nevada

Coordinates: 41°06′43″N 114°24′03″W / 41.11194°N 114.40083°WCoordinates: 41°06′43″N 114°24′03″W / 41.11194°N 114.40083°W
Country United States
State Nevada
County Elko
Elevation 5,922 ft (1,805 m)
Time zone Pacific (PST) (UTC-8)
  Summer (DST) PDT (UTC-7)

Cobre is a ghost town in Elko County, Nevada, United States.[1]

Overview

The town was located at the former interchange point between the Southern Pacific Railroad and the Nevada Northern Railway, and came into being when construction of the Nevada Northern began in 1905. The Nevada Northern was constructed primarily to serve the copper mines and smelter near Ely, Nevada, and cobre is the Spanish word for "copper." In 1910, Cobre reached its peak population with a total of 60 residents.[2] Over the next few decades Cobre's population would slowly declined due to travelers' preference to the automobile over the train. This led to the Southern Pacific Railroad abandoning the Cobre passenger station in November 1948. The station remained an active railroad section townsite for a few families and crew. Homes and facilties that supported the train crew also remained, The train crew covered the section from Cobre to Shafter. The Nevada Northern Railroad ran a train made a weekly trip to Cobre until June 20, 1983. The 5 homes were sold in 1986 for $1 a building and were dismantled and removed from their foundation.

A post office was established at Cobre in 1906, and it was discontinued in 1956.

See also

References

External links