RV Lot - Ballarat, CA
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member ChapterhouseInc
N 36° 02.946 W 117° 13.590
11S E 479598 N 3989418
This Ghost Town near Surprise Canyon Wilderness Area has a large lot to accomodate RVs.
Waymark Code: WMATZT
Location: California, United States
Date Posted: 02/25/2011
Published By:Groundspeak Regular Member harleydavidsonandy
Views: 8

Ballarat was born in Eighteen Ninety Seven following the discovery of the Radcliff Mine in Plesant Canyon. Its namesake was the famous Gold City in Victoria, Australia. It was never a very large town. It served Panamint Valley and Death Valley as a miners supply and recreation center. Ballarats colorful life ebbed with the closing of the post office in 1917.

-----
From Wikipedia

Ballarat is an unincorporated community in Inyo County, California. It lies at an elevation of 1079 feet (329 m).

Today, Ballarat is a virtual ghost town. It was founded in 1896 as a supply point for the mines in the canyons of the Panamint Range. A quarter-mile to the south is Post Office Springs, a reliable water source used since the 1850s by prospectors and desert wanderers. George Riggins, a young immigrant from Australia, gave Ballarat its name when he proposed it should be named for Ballarat, Victoria, in the heart of Australia's gold country.

History
The town was founded in 1897.[2] In its heyday—from 1897 to 1905—Ballarat had 400 to 500 residents. It hosted seven saloons, three hotels, a Wells Fargo station, post office (that opened in 1897), school, a jail and morgue, but no churches. Ballarat was a place for miners and prospectors in the area to resupply and relax.

The town began its decline when the Ratcliff Mine, in Pleasant Canyon east of town, suspended operations. Other mines nearby also began to play out, and in 1917 the post office closed and all that remained were a few diehard prospectors and desert rats.

In the 1960s, Charles Manson and the "Manson Family" of killers moved into a ranch south of Ballarat, and left graffiti in the town. The 1969 movie Easy Rider has a scene filmed in Ballarat; after arriving in the town, Peter Fonda's character, Wyatt, removes his Rolex watch and throws it away before he and Dennis Hopper's character, Billy, head east on their motorcycles towards New Orleans.

Today
Ballarat resident George NovakToday, Ballarat has two full-time residents. As of July 2009, George Novak, Rocky Novak and his dogs, Potlicker and Brownie, live in the town. Rocky runs the general store on afternoons and weekends to supply tourists, and is working on repairing the water pipes that supply the town, for which he is paid by the government. Every summer, a woman named June and her son move into the former jailhouse/morgue.

Ballarat is used as a meeting point for four-wheel-drive expeditions into the Panamint Range and Death Valley, and in winter up to 300 people camp in the grounds of the town. The town was recently used as a set to tell the story of the Ballarat Bandit.

The town has a ZIP Code of 93562, and is inside area code 760.

Ballarat in fictionBallarat has featured in Western fiction including Hellbound for Ballarat (1970) by Nelson C. Nye and Bounty Hunt at Ballarat (1973) by Clayton Matthews.

(visit link)
Business name: State or Gov Park

Address: Not listed

Maximum Number of Hours: Not listed

Restrooms / Bathrooms?: Not listed

Rating: Not listed

Website: Not listed

Visit Instructions:
Must provide a photo. No photo = no credit.
Search for...
Geocaching.com Google Map
Google Maps
MapQuest
Bing Maps
Nearest Waymarks
Nearest Free Overnight RV Parking Locations
Nearest Geocaches
Create a scavenger hunt using this waymark as the center point
Recent Visits/Logs:
Date Logged Log User Rating  
find waldo visited RV Lot - Ballarat, CA 02/14/2015 find waldo visited it
MCrager wrote comment for RV Lot - Ballarat, CA 05/17/2011 MCrager wrote comment for it
ChapterhouseInc visited RV Lot - Ballarat, CA 02/19/2011 ChapterhouseInc visited it

View all visits/logs