Property Description
Quiet * Remote * Few People small wet weather creek towards back of propertySIZE: 40.02+/- ac APN#: 003-950-10 LEGAL DESCRIPTION: All that tract of land situated in the Section 31, Township 29 North, Range 32 East, Mt. Diablo Base and Meridian, County of Pershing, State of Nevada, designated as Lot 10, according to the Map of Division into Large Parcels, filed on June 29, 2007 as Document Number 355828 and Map Code Number P-496 in the Office of the Recorder of the County of Pershing, State of Nevada, being 40.02 acres (gross), more or less. Exclusive mineral rights.STATE: NevadaCOUNTY: PershingGENERAL LOCATION: West side of Black Canyon Road. About 10.5 miles north of Lovelock. About 5 miles west of IH80 GPS(approx.): 40.334371, -118.420859GENERAL ELEVATION: approx. ·4360' - 4380' GENERAL INFORMATION: Animals allowed! Camp, RV, build, Mobile, Modulars, site builds allowed. Check with the county for your intended usage.TYPE OF TERRAIN: level-rollingZONING: Residential RecreationalPOWER: noPHONE: noWATER: Must install well if you buildSEWER: No. Only needed when/if you build.ROADS: dirtPROPERTY TAX: approx. $188 a year CLOSING/DOC. FEES: $135 TIME LIMIT TO BUILD: noneASSOCIATION DUES: NONETITLE INFORMATION: Free and clear If/when more info becomes available we will update listingFINANCING INFO and PURCHASE INFO Go to 1881.com Area Land pagePERSHING COUNTY INFO Pershing county has a total area of 6,067 square miles of which 6,037 square miles is land and 31 square miles is water.[10] The tallest and most prominent mountain in Pershing County is Star Peak at 9,840 ftPershing County is generally less rugged than most of Nevada and is typical to the Great Basin with north-trending mountain ranges, with dry valleys separating them.The county was named after army general John J. Pershing. It was formed from Humboldt County on March 18, 1919, and the final county to be established in Nevada.The Humboldt Trail passed through Pershing County, bringing 165,000 immigrants in the 1840s and 1850s, who named the area Big Valley. Travelers would stop here for water and grass before crossing the Forty Mile Desert, regarded as the most difficult part of the trail.Mining began in the 1860s in the Humboldt Mining District. The Star and Buena Vista districts were discovered shortly after, making Unionville the county's mining center. A smelter was built in Oreana. Gold placer deposits were discovered in American Valley, Spring Valley, and Dry Gulch in 1881. These operations worked successfully for about ten years. The Arizona Mine was discovered in 1862 near Unionville, and sustained operations continued until 1880.In 1868, the Central Pacific Railroad was built in the county, running through Lovelock. The Lovelock station was built in the winter of 1879 and was a gateway to Lovelock for the rest of the nineteenth and most of the twentieth centuries. It was expanded in 1917, but abandoned in the 1990s. It was purchased by the City of Lovelock.Courtesy of https://en.wikipedia.org/ >