Historical Markers of Churchill County
 

  • HM 10 - Sand Mountain
  • HM 19 - Ragtown
  • HM 26 - Forty Mile Desert
  • HM 27 - Grimes Point (Prehistoric Rock Art Site)
  • HM 83 - Rock Creek (Cold Springs Station)
  • HM 110 - Wagon Jack Shelter
  • HM 111 - Edwards Creek Valley
  • HM 135 - New Pass Station
  • HM 147 - A Home of Early Man
  • HM 161 - Churchill County Courthouse
  • HM 178 - Hazen
  • HM 201 - Wonder (Historic Mining Camp -- 1909-1919)
  • HM 202 - Fairview (1905-1917)
  • HM 215 - Lahontan Dam
  • HM 216 - Stillwater
  • HM 263 - Oats Park School
  • HM 271 - Pony Express Trail
    (1860 - Sesquicentennial - 2010)
  • Hazen

    Location: Northern Churchill County, Hazen
    Directions: Along US 50 Alt at Hazen, 10 miles east of Fernley

    N 39° 33.805 W 119° 02.874

    Location: 3
    Visibility: 1
    Accessibility: 1
    Marker type: St (L)
       

    Date Conquered: 8/1/07
    Quick Description: A marker remembering an important supply point in outback Nevada.
    Signed: Yes -- Signed on eastbound lane of US 50 ALT only.

    Full Description:
    Exact description as reads ...

    Hazen was named for William Babcock Hazen, who served under General Sherman in his "march to the sea." The town, established in 1903 to house laborers working on the Newlands Irrigation Project south of here, included hotels, saloons, brothels, churches and schools.

    In 1905 the first train came through on the new routing to Tonopah. In 1906 the Southern Pacific Railroad built a large roundhouse here as well as a fine depot.

    In 1908 Hazen was nearly destroyed by fire.

    As a tough town, it had no peer in the state. Nevada's last lynching occurred in Hazen when "Red" Wood was taken from the wooden jail and hanged on February 28, 1905.

    Here's a marker that's easily forgotten! Mostly ignored, few people pay much attention to Hazen on the drive from Fallon to Reno.

    Next: [179] Site Homepage Contact

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    Copyright © Paul Sebesta

    Fact #178: The dreaded "Forty Mile Desert" is the only feature that separates the towns of Lovelock, Hazen, Fernley, and Fallon.