Camp McKee (2): Difference between revisions
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* [ | * [https://www.northamericanforts.com/West/nv.html#mckee North American Forts - Camp McKee (2)] | ||
* [http://blackrockdesert.org/wiki/index.php?title=Camp_McKee Black Rock Desert - Camp McKee] | * [http://blackrockdesert.org/wiki/index.php?title=Camp_McKee Black Rock Desert - Camp McKee] | ||
* [http://cvassanangelo.org/uploads/Sechrist_2014_Thesis_Final2.pdf University of Nevada, Reno Thesis - Laura K Sechrist, Critical Archaeology at 19th Century Western Way Stations: Granite Creek Station, Nevada.] | * [http://cvassanangelo.org/uploads/Sechrist_2014_Thesis_Final2.pdf University of Nevada, Reno Thesis - Laura K Sechrist, Critical Archaeology at 19th Century Western Way Stations: Granite Creek Station, Nevada.] | ||
Latest revision as of 08:29, 29 December 2025
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HistoryThe Granite Creek stage station was located on Granite Creek along the Susanville to Humboldt River road about five miles north of present-day Gerlach in Washoe County, Nevada. The station had only two buildings and a stone-walled corral. It was the first stop with fresh water after the westward crossing of the Black Rock Desert. The road was known as the Fort Kearny-South Pass-Honey Lake Wagon Road, also called the Humboldt Wagon Road. On 1 Apr 1865 the Granite Creek Station was attacked by a Paiute war party. Two employees were killed in the attack while a third escaped, only to be caught and burned alive. In December 1865, detachments of soldiers were stationed along the Susanville to Humboldt River road at the stage stations, including the Granite Creek Stage Station. The Granite Creek Station post was later established on 20 Jun 1866 and named Camp McKee for an unknown person. In October 1866, Camp McKee was abandoned as a military post, and the government property was moved to Fort McGarry. Current StatusStone foundations can still be seen at Camp McKee (Granite Creek Station site) on the Google map below.
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