Harmony Borax Refinery -- Death Valley National Park CA
N 36° 28.782 W 116° 52.518
11S E 511170 N 4037163
The machinery used to refine borax at the Harmony Borax works is preserved and on display at Death Valley National Park
Waymark Code: WMQV1W
Location: California, United States
Date Posted: 03/29/2016
Views: 22
The Harmony Borax works operated from 1883-1889, using immigrant Chinese laborers to scoop "cottonball" borax into carriers, which were taken to this refinery. The refined borax was then hauled 165 by 20-mule trains to the nearest railhead.
Today, the ruins of the refinery and the machinery inside are stabilized, preserved, interpreted, and on display.
From the NPS website: (
visit link)
"Harmony Borax Works was the central feature in the opening of Death Valley and the subsequent popularity of the Furnace Creek area. The plant and associated townsite played an important role in Death Valley history.
After borax was found near Furnace Creek Ranch (then called Greenland) in 1881, William T. Coleman built the Harmony plant and began to process ore in late 1883 or early 1884. When in full operation, the Harmony Borax Works employed 40 men who produced three tons of borax daily. During the summer months, when the weather was so hot that processing water would not cool enough to permit the suspended borax to crystallize, Coleman moved his work force to the Amargosa Borax Plant near present day Tecopa, California.
Getting the finished product to market from the heart of Death Valley was a difficult task, and an efficient method had to be devised. The Harmony operation became famous through the use of large mule teams and double wagons which hauled borax the long overland route to Mojave.The romantic image of the “20-mule team” persists to this day and has become the symbol of the borax industry in this country.
The Harmony plant went out of operation in 1888, after only five years of production, when Coleman’s financial empire collapsed. Acquired by Francis Marion Smith, the works never resumed the boiling of cottonball borate ore, and in time became part of the borax reserves of the Pacific Coast Borax Company and it successors. On December 31, 1974, the site was placed on the National Register of Historic Places."