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Nevada Territory

The Nevada Territory in 1861, with the Utah and New Mexico territories.
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The Nevada Territory in 1861, with the Utah and New Mexico territories.

Nevada Territory was a historic, organized territory of the United States from March 2, 1861 until October 31, 1864, when it became Nevada, the 36th state. Prior to its designation as a territory, the area was part of western Utah Territory and was known as Washoe, after the native Washoe people. Despite the silver wealth of Nevada, and the ever-increasing population of miners that came to exploit it, Nevada was not quite populous enough to warrant statehood, but the Union's need for silver and the generally anti-slavery bent of its people trumped the population problem and led to statehood.

Nevada gained most of its present boundaries in 1866, when eastern portions of the state (for example, Lincoln County) and the southern tip were moved from the territories of Utah and Arizona, respectively.

The exact location of the California-Nevada border between Lake Tahoe and the intersection of the 39th parallel with the Colorado River was never clearly delininated, and was surveyed and re-surveyed well up into the 20th century. Congress transferred Clark County from the Arizona Territory to Nevada in 1867.

The territorial capital was Carson City; James Warren Nye was the first and only territorial governor. The secretary of the territory was Orion Clemens, older brother of Samuel Clemens (Mark Twain).

See also: Historic regions of the United States

Last updated: 10-21-2005 02:24:32
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