Day Trip · ~50 min from the East Shore

Virginia City

The boomtown that bankrolled the West —” and, incidentally, cut down Tahoe's forests to do it.

Why Go

The Real Old West, Still Standing

In 1859 the Comstock Lode turned this mountainside into one of the richest places on Earth —” 25,000 people, opera houses, and silver enough to help fund the Union in the Civil War. When the ore ran out the town simply froze in time, which is why today you can walk original wooden boardwalks past original saloons on C Street with the Nevada desert falling away below.

It's touristy in the best way: costumed characters, candy shops and staged shootouts up front, and real, remarkable history one layer down. A young reporter named Samuel Clemens took the pen name "Mark Twain" writing for the newspaper here —” and the timbers that shored the mines came from Tahoe's forests, a story we tell on our About the Lake page.

1859 Comstock Lode Boardwalks & saloons Mark Twain's start
Build Your Day

The Virginia City Checklist

Underground

Tour a Real Mine

Walk timbered drifts on an underground mine tour (the Chollar Mine is the long-running classic) and feel how brutal chasing the Lode actually was —” hard hats provided, claustrophobes forewarned.

All aboard

Virginia & Truckee Railroad

Ride a historic train through the mining district to Gold Hill and back —” or in season, take the longer V&T excursion all the way from Carson City's Eastgate Depot with a layover to explore town.

On C Street

Boardwalks, Saloons & Museums

Work the boardwalk: swinging-door saloons (the Bucket of Blood pours with a view), old-time photo studios, and small museums up every staircase —” don't miss the 1876 Fourth Ward School at the south end of town.

Events

Time It Right

September's International Camel & Ostrich Races are exactly as ridiculous and wonderful as they sound; summer weekends bring parades and living-history days. Winter is quiet —” and atmospheric.

Getting there: From the lake, take US-50 toward Carson City, then wind up NV-341 through the sagebrush —” about 50 minutes total, with grand high-desert views near the summit. The road is steep and twisty; take it easy, especially in winter. Wear comfortable shoes: the town is built on a serious hillside.
Complete the Loop

Pair It With the Capital

Carson City's mint and Capitol are 25 minutes back down the hill —” together they make the perfect history day.

Carson City guide