Genoa Real Estate Navigation Genoa Nevada Area Information
Genoa Nevada History:    
 

Photo number one of Genoa Nevada In June of 1849, H.S. Beatie and his party camped at a location now known as Genoa. They learned from traders passing by their camp that a heavy immigration was expected through the area. So Beatie and his men got busy and built a two room, double logged, one story house, 20 X 60 feet, without floor or roof. They also built a corral for their animals. Beatie and Abner Blackburn crossed the mountains into California with an extra 3 yoke of cattle to sell or trade for supplies they intended to sell to immigrants passing by their trading post. They brought back flour, dried fruit, bacon, sugar and coffee to the post, although their principal trade was in horses and mules.

Remembering the April 1846 Donner Party tragedy, Beatie and his party did not want to chance the winter in the Valley so they abandoned their trading post in September and returned to Salt Lake City where Beatie clerked in the J. & E. Reese Mercantile.

The first permanent settlement was established in the spring of 1851 by Colonel John Reese, a Mormon, who planned to open a trading post on the overland trail. He was a partner with his brother Enoch in the J. & E. Reese Mercantile firm at Salt Lake City. The party arrived in Carson Valley with 13 wagons loaded with eggs, bacon, flour, seed grain and other kinds of seeds. Stephen A. Kinsey, Reese's nephew, acted as guide. Kinsey stopped for a time at a place on the Carson River called Ragtown. This point did not seem favorable so he moved up the river into one of the most fertile of valleys. On July 4, 1851, Kinsey waited for his party at Beatie's old trading post.

On November 12, 1851, the settlers formed and organized a settler's or squatter's government. It was impossible to settle a legal matter or send records back to Salt Lake City, 500 miles away because Indians, bandits, thieves and desperados took advantage of riders on the trail. The settlers adopted rules for taking up land and elected John Reese recorder and treasurer. Reese recorded the first claim for himself in December of 1852 in the new Utah Territory settlement he named Mormon Station (Genoa).

Resolutions, by-laws, rules for water rights, officers to be elected and many other acts took place in Genoa to build a solid and lasting community. Many passing immigrants stayed in the valley and recorded land.

Photo number three of Genoa NevadaThe first principal business was trading. Those who settled in Genoa traded garden produce to travelers for whatever was usable. During these early years, the Genoa people established their church, businesses, a school, political institutions and developed extensive ranch lands. The Genoa Post Office was established December 10, 1852 with the appointment of E. F. Barnard as postmaster; the first important land and Carson River water rights were taken up at Genoa, the first printed newspaper - The Territorial Enterprise was founded.

In 1854, a school was opened in Israel Mott's home a few miles south of Genoa. Mrs. Eliza Mott, wife of Israel, was the first white woman to settle in Carson Valley and Mottsville was named for this early day family. Other families began to arrive and set down their roots in the new settlements on the west side of the Carson River.

Photo number two of Genoa NevadaMormon leader Brigham Young sent Orson Hyde to Mormon Station in 1854 to survey a town site, determine the California boundary and set-up a government. Hyde changed the name of the surveyed town site to Genoa supposedly in honor of Christopher Columbus' birthplace, Genoa, Italy. The Mormons were called back to Salt Lake City in 1857 to help defend the church against threatened action by the United States Government. By this time there were gentile families, as well as Mormons, settling in Carson Valley. Most of the faithful left, but some Mormons stayed.

On March 2, 1861, Congress passed an "Act" creating the Territory of Nevada. On November 25, 1861, nine counties were named: Esmeralda, Douglas, Ormsby, Washoe, Lyon, Storey, Lake, Humboldt and Churchill. Nevada became a State on October 31, 1864.

Photo number two of Genoa NevadaThe first courthouse was built in Genoa and opened for county business in 1865. It was built by contractors Lawrence Gilman and Rufus Adams for less than $20,000. T. J. Furbee, who was superintendent of the Sierra Mining Company, was the architect. This brick building is still standing today, owned by the Carson Valley Historical Society, and houses a museum of early Carson Valley history.

What's a Candy Dance?
Just what is a Candy Dance? you may be asking yourself. People dance with candy while they shop? No, the Candy Dance is a weekend of celebration in Genoa, Nevada, that's been going on for nearly eighty years.
The women of Genoa got together back in 1919 and decided to earn some money for their town. Photo number two of Genoa NevadaThey made a huge batch of homemade candy, and sold it to one and all. That night they held a buffett and dance. The profits from that first "candy dance" went to buy streetlights for the town. That first Candy Dance turned into another, and another, and another. In the 1970s, an arts and crafts fair was added, and the Candy Dance grew and grew. Today the Genoa Candy Dance is well-known as one of the greatest craft fairs in Northern Nevada. Artisans from all over the west come to sell their wares, for many this is their only show in Northern Nevada.

If you've never been to the Candy Dance, make this the year you go. Sure there are crowds, and long lines for the homemade candy, but if you go early you'll miss a lot of the aggravation, and have plenty of time to wander among the artisans booths, shopping until you drop.


 
 

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