57°F
weather icon Mostly Cloudy

Tours of Grand Canyon Caverns delight visitors

Discovered in 1927, Grand Canyon Caverns in Northern Arizona celebrates 80 years of subterranean adventure this year. Open daily except Christmas Day, the usual dry limestone caverns located near Historic Route 66 attract thousands of visitors annually. They arrive by traveling a portion of the old Mother Road between Kingman and Seligman.

The caverns lie 165 miles from Las Vegas using U.S. 93 over Hoover Dam into Arizona to reach Kingman, 103 miles distant. In Kingman, watch for the Historic Route 66 signs and head east 62 miles to the short spur road accessing the caverns. The two-lane highway cuts through scenic high desert, ranch country and hills forested with pinyons and junipers. Unlike busy Interstate 40, the main highway, Historic Route 66 carries light traffic and no trucks.

Visitors today enjoy a choice of guided underground tours in this commercially developed underworld millions of years in the making. Appealing to the greatest number of visitors, the regular 45-minute tour leaves every half-hour. It involves some walking and stair-climbing. This tour costs $12.95 for adults and $9.95 for children aged 4 to 12. An abbreviated tour suits those with time constraints or physical limitations. A hard-hatted, off-trail explorers’ tour limited to no more than six visitors reaches other portions of the caves.

A young woodcutter for the Santa Fe Railroad, Walter Peck, discovered a small cavern entrance in 1927 when he investigated a saddle and two skeletons inside a shallow opening in the rocks. Local Hualapai people laid to rest two brothers who died of Spanish influenza during the terrible pandemic of 1918. At that time, a large boulder blocked the cavern entrance. By the time Peck stumbled upon the funeral site, the boulder had fallen through into the cavern below.

Peck returned with some friends, lanterns and lengths of rope. They lowered a young cowboy into the unknown depths, feeding out 150 feet of rope before he reached the bottom of a large room. His light reflected on crystals that he thought were gold. He carried some samples back to the surface.

Assays later proved the sparkling stone to be calcite colored by iron oxide, but Peck had already bought the property and filed mining claim in anticipation of his “gold” strike in the cave that he dubbed Yampai Cavern. Newspapers sensationalized the discovery of the caverns and the human remains. Soon the public read about two “cavemen” with no mention of the saddle. People clamored to see the burial site and the caverns.

Determined to recoup some of his investment, Peck began to charge a quarter for those adventurous enough to visit his caves. Visitors flocked there on Route 66, then a gravel road. Early visitors had to squeeze through the natural entrance and go down singly by rope, supplying their own light. It was not a trip for the faint of heart.

In 1935, locally stationed Civilian Conservation Corps workers took on improving access to the caverns as a project, with Peck supplying the materials. The CCC boys constructed a 30-foot wooden stairs, three 15-foot ladders and 70 feet of swaying suspension bridge to get visitors into the caverns. Visitors had to have nerve and stamina, but more of them could see the caverns, traveling on a widened, paved Route 66. Peck upped the fee to 50 cents.

Construction of a 210-foot shaft made possible the installation of a 21-story elevator in 1962, a few years after the caverns acquired a kitschy new name, Dinosaur Caverns, despite the absence of any dinosaurs. The developing interstate system supplanted highways like Route 66, bypassing many little towns and roadside attractions like the caverns. The elevator still transports visitors safely and comfortably, though the price and the name have changed again.

Today’s visitors find the caverns contain an unintended time capsule. Still stockpiled in one of the largest chambers are food, water, medical supplies and toilet paper for 2,000 people, a result of the nation’s effort to find safe havens and bomb-proof shelters during the Cold War. The dry air of Grand Canyon Caverns preserves the hoard untouched decades later.

Margo Bartlett Pesek’s column appears on Sundays.

Don't miss the big stories. Like us on Facebook.
MORE STORIES
THE LATEST
Hike, bird-watch, shop, nibble at China Ranch Date Farm

A verdant oasis hidden in a secluded canyon, China Ranch Date Farm near Death Valley National Park is an excellent cool-seasondestination.

Utah ghost town is rich in pioneer history

Surrounded by serene pastures and stately groves of trees with the soaring cliffs of Zion National Park for a beautiful backdrop, tiny Grafton ghost town invites visitors to step into its pioneer past.

Bring home priceless memories on a Christmas tree cutting adventure

If you’re pining for a freshly cut Christmas tree this holiday season, you could go to one of the pop-up, tented tree lots that dot the Las Vegas Valley this time of year. But if you’re feeling more adventurous, you could round up the family and make a day of it by traveling to more forested parts of Nevada, as well as Utah, Arizona and California, to search for a perfect tree to harvest yourselves.

Holiday trains make for memorable excursions in Southern Nevada

Southern Nevadan families seeking special experiences for their youngsters should consider a holiday train ride. Long after memories of other holidays fade, most children fondly recall the year they rode the train with Santa.

Now is the best time of year to visit Death Valley

The hottest, driest and lowest national park, Death Valley is well-known for its blistering summer temperatures. For that reason, the best time of year to visit is what’s considered the offseason in most other parks: mid-October to mid-May.

Side road through Moapa Valley leads to scenery, history

Autumn is a prime time to explore Southern Nevada’s side roads into places bypassed by our busy freeways and major highways. State Route 169 through Moapa Valley provides just such an enjoyable drive.

Beatty Days festival salutes town’s history

The three-day event, planned for Nevada Day weekend, celebrates Beatty’s founding in the early 1900s and its heritage of mining and ranching. It draws hundreds of visitors to the community of about 1,200 people located 115 miles northwest of Las Vegas.

Fall is a fine time to visit Spring Mountain Ranch

Mellow autumn days linger late in the season at Spring Mountain Ranch State Park in the scenic Red Rock Canyon National Conservation Area west of Las Vegas.