Crown King, Yavapai Co., AZ
Crown King
is a “living” ghost town, located in Yavapai County, Arizona,
at an elevation of 6,000 feet.
The site of a former gold mining
town, Crown King is 28 miles west of Interstate 17 on Senator
Highway high in the Bradshaw Mountains. There are four ways to get
to Crown King, but only two routes are accessible by two-wheel
drive vehicles and all are dirt roads.
Crown King can be accessed by
taking exit 248 (Bloody Basin Road) on I-17 and continuing past
the ghost towns of Bumble Bee and Cleator; or by taking exit 259
on I-17. Both routes take approximately one hour traveling at an
average speed of about 25 miles an hour. You do not need a 4 wheel
drive vehicle to get to the town, but a vehicle with high
clearance is preferred and good suspension is highly recommended.
Exit 248 (Bumble Bee) is 10 miles shorter than Exit 259 (Bloody
Basin) but the tradeoff is that 248 is all dirt and taking 259 you
travel another 10 miles north on the paved route of Interstate
Highway 17.
While an active mining town,
Crown King was serviced by the Bradshaw Mountain Railroad. Rail
service to the area began in 1904 upon completion of
"Murphy's Impossible Railroad" -- a series of
switchbacks and trestles that ascended the mountain terrain
between Cleator and Crown King.
The zip code for Crown King is
86343.
Although the town is named after
the Crowned King mine and was originally named Crowned King, the
first recorded gold claim in Crown King was "Buckeye"
and was filed by Rod McKinnon on July 1, 1875. The town's name was
shortened from Crowned King to Crown King in 1888.
At it's height, the town had 500
buildings, including several company stores and boarding houses,
two Chinese restaurants and a post office. The town was
electrified by 1897 and had one telephone at that time.
Of the buildings still standing
and in use in Crown King, the Crown King Restaurant and Saloon has
become the center of activity in the town. The building itself has
an interesting history. The building was originally constructed in
the nearby mining town of Oro Belle (now also a ghost town) and
having been brought to Crown King in 1910 in pieces, on the backs
of mules, when Oro Belle closed. The building was home to a
brothel and bar in both towns.
The post office was established
on July 29, 1875 and was discontinued on May 15, 1954. It has
since been reopened.
Philip Varney, Arizona Ghost
Towns and Mining Towns: A travel guide to history, Phoenix,
Arizona Highways Books, 1988, 117 pages.
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