seriesNo,seriesEntityName,seriesTitle,seriesDateRange,seriesArrangement,seriesDescription,seriesTotRetentDesc,seriesPrimaryClassCode,seriesExtentDesc 24331,Clifton Mining District (Utah). Recorder,Location notices,1869-1938.,Roughly chronological,"The Clifton Mining District\, organized in October 1869 in the Deep Creek Mountains of western Tooele County\, included the mining camps\, Clifton and Gold Hill. Travelers and prospectors found an abundance of mineral deposits in the Deep Creek Mountains\, so when Patrick Connor constructed a mill and smelter in Stockton\, 125 miles to the east\, mining activity in this area soon followed. The Clifton District was organized before Congress passed a general mining law in 1872. The district was founded on the assumed rights of individuals to explore and claim mineral wealth in the public domain and the tradition of organizing mining districts to manage mining operations and keep records of claims. Congress validated these rights (Statutes at Large\, Treaties\, and Proclamations\, of the United States of America\, vol. 17\, 1872\, chap. 152). Location notices in the Clifton District affirm compliance with district regulations and/or federal law. They give the name of the claim\, its dimensions and,location\, and the names of locators. In case several locators made a single claim\, as was frequently the case in early records\, notices identify how many feet were allowed to each individual. Notices of location provide the date of location and the date filed and were signed by the mining district or county recorder.",,Public,9 microfilm reels