Stokes Castle
Stokes Castle
Washoe Valley
Washoe Valley
Washoe Valley
Washoe Valley
Washoe Valley
Washoe Valley
Washoe Valley
Washoe Valley
Washoe Valley
Washoe Valley
Washoe Valley
Washoe Valley
Washoe Valley
Washoe Valley
Washoe Valley
Washoe Valley
Washoe Lake & Valley
Washoe Lake & Valley
Washoe Valley
Black Rock Playa
3-09-desert_landscape4_ig_adj
Ski lift
Rhodes, Nevada
Rhodes
Alluvial Fan
The Racetrack
The Racetrack
Washoe Valley
The Racetrack
Ebbets Pass area
IMG_4456
Abandoned Building, Austin
Stokes Castle
Mill site near Tecopa Pass
Crankshaft Crossing
Crater, CA
Cucomungo Canyon
Rhodes
Rhodes
IMG_3590
IMG_3586
Arrowhead Mine, Risue Canyon
IMG_3569
Location
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Stokes Castle, Austin, Nevada


The sign reads:
"Started in the fall of 1896 and completed in June, 1897, by Anson Phelps Stokes, mine developer, railroad magnate and member of a prominent eastern family, as a summer home for his sons, principally J.G. Phelps. After the castle (or the tower, as the Stokes family always referred to it) was completed, it was used by the family for one brief period in June and July, 1897. Since then, with one possible exception, the structure has remained unoccupied.
Stokes Castle is made of native granite, hewn and put in place by the ancestors of people still living in Austin. The huge stones were raised with a hand winch and held in position by rock wedging and clay mortar. The architectural model for the castle was a medieval tower Anson Stokes had seen and admired on an Italian campagna, near Rome. It originally had three floors, each with a fireplace, plate glass view windows, balconies on the second and third floors, and a battlemented terrace on the roof. It had plumbing very adequate for the times and was sumptuously furnished.
The structure stands as an abiding monument to the local men who built it and to those who helped develop the mines of Austin. "
I suspect that Mrs. Stokes may have been less than thrilled with the location...
"Started in the fall of 1896 and completed in June, 1897, by Anson Phelps Stokes, mine developer, railroad magnate and member of a prominent eastern family, as a summer home for his sons, principally J.G. Phelps. After the castle (or the tower, as the Stokes family always referred to it) was completed, it was used by the family for one brief period in June and July, 1897. Since then, with one possible exception, the structure has remained unoccupied.
Stokes Castle is made of native granite, hewn and put in place by the ancestors of people still living in Austin. The huge stones were raised with a hand winch and held in position by rock wedging and clay mortar. The architectural model for the castle was a medieval tower Anson Stokes had seen and admired on an Italian campagna, near Rome. It originally had three floors, each with a fireplace, plate glass view windows, balconies on the second and third floors, and a battlemented terrace on the roof. It had plumbing very adequate for the times and was sumptuously furnished.
The structure stands as an abiding monument to the local men who built it and to those who helped develop the mines of Austin. "
I suspect that Mrs. Stokes may have been less than thrilled with the location...
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