Nevada Ghost Towns & Beyond

Travel & Stories by NVTami

  • Home
  • Ghost Towns
    • Ghost Towns & Historical Sites of Nevada, California, & Beyond
    • Top 10 Ghost Towns of Nevada: Northwest
    • Top 10 Best Places to visit off “C” Street, Virginia City
  • About
  • Contact
  • Newsletter

Crater Ghost Town, Mono Lake

January 2, 2026 Leave a Comment

Crater is a forgotten settlement at the southern end of Mono Basin. Concrete foundations, dugouts, debris, and a few dead trees are all that mark the location.

Crater ghost town abandoned Mono Lake Lee Vining Mono County California

While only a small settlement, Crater is filled with stories of life in the Mono Basin. Once a peaceful hamlet, the schoolhouse played a role with desperados, posses, and the tragic murder of a young Sheriff.

Crater ghost town abandoned Mono Lake Lee Vining Mono County California

Postal Service around Mono Lake

Crater ghost town abandoned Mono Lake Lee Vining Mono County California
Family at Mono Lake Post Office
(Photo credit: Owens Valley History)

The post office of Mono opened on March 21, 1882. Two years later, it moved to Bodie. In 1889, a post office opened in Mono Lake, with John Mattley as the first postmaster. The office was a single room with cubby holes for mail.

Crater ghost town abandoned Mono Lake Lee Vining Mono County California
Mono Lake

In the winter, the trip could be impossible or life-threatening. While the setting of the town of Mono Lake is beautiful, it is in a precarious position at the base of the Sierra, and avalanches are all too common. 

Mono Herald and Bridgeport Chronicle-Union
Mar 11, 1911Page 1

Crater Post Office

For residents on the southern side of Mono Lake, receiving mail wasn’t easy. It required a five-mile trip to the post office at Mono Lake. Because the road around the lake was a toll road, each trip required payment, meaning it cost them money to receive the postage. To add insult to injury, even if there was no mail, they still had to pay the toll!

Crater ghost town abandoned Mono Lake Lee Vining Mono County California

Mono Herald and Bridgeport Chronicle-Union
Mammoth Lakes, California • Sat, Oct 14, 1899

On April 18, 1899, a post office opened to serve residents of the southern basin. It was on the J.A. Mattly ranch under the name Crater. Mattly served as the post master.

Crater ghost town abandoned Mono Lake Lee Vining Mono County California
Crater

The Crater post office served primarily the ranchers and a few of the southern mines. The post office operated until September 15, 1911.

Crater ghost town abandoned Mono Lake Lee Vining Mono County California
Farrington Ranch
(Photo Credit: Owens Valley History)

Crater was north of the Farrington Ranch. In a 1966 newspaper article, Ella Mattly, then living in Ontario, recalls visiting the Crater post office. She places the location at the Farrington Ranch. The Mono Herald and Bridgeport Chronicle-Union reported in 1899, the post office opened on the Mattly Ranch, it can be assumed time and distance led to the confusion.

Crater School

Crater never grew into a town but was more of an unincorporated settlement. However, enough children lived in the area to open a school at Crater. The school was well attended, and included students from the local Pauite camps. One teacher, Miss Pyle, married Will Farrington. Eventually, the school moved to the Farrington Ranch, a mile and a half to the south, and a new schoolhouse was built. Ten different teachers taught at the school while it was at Farrington.

Crater ghost town abandoned Mono Lake Lee Vining Mono County California
Crater school, 1924
Photo courtesy of the Mono Basin Historical Society

The schoolhouse became a meeting place, event center, and a church. Parties, dances, and civic events were well attended by Crater’s population and visitors from Mono Lake.

Crater ghost town abandoned Mono Lake Lee Vining Mono County California
Mono Herald and Bridgeport Chronicle-Union
Mammoth Lakes, California
Sat, May 1, 1915 · Page 1
Crater ghost town abandoned Mono Lake Lee Vining Mono County California

1904 Rev Darling from Bodie preached at the schoolhouse at Crater to a “large and appreciative audience.” Mrs. Farrington and Mrs. Mattly organized a Sunday School with good attendance.

Crater ghost town abandoned Mono Lake Lee Vining Mono County California

Like Mono Lake to the north, winters at Crater could be difficult. In 1906, the settlement was snowed in for three weeks. Miss Newman, who had been carrying for her father hill, was “forced” to remain in Crater during this period.

Crater ghost town abandoned Mono Lake Lee Vining Mono County California
Mono Herald and Bridgeport Chronicle-Union
Mammoth Lakes, California • Sat, Feb 17, 1906Page 1
Crater ghost town abandoned Mono Lake Lee Vining Mono County California
Crater

Crater and the death of desperados

In 1915, the Dolan schoolhouse was used for a different purpose, a morgue.

Mono Herald and Bridgeport Chronicle-Union
Mammoth Lakes, California • Sat, Jul 31, 1915Page 2

Workers from Mexico were digging ditches for a new development near the base of Conway Summit. Workers Juan Francisco, age 50, and Theodore Teddy Solido, age 22, got drunk and kidnapped a girl, Sal, from the Piaute camp near Filosena Ranch. Pete Roberts and George Filosena rescued Sal. In retaliation, Francisco and Solindao attacked their ranch that night.

Sheriff Dolan
(Photo credit: Officer Down Memorial Page)

The kidnapping led to a multi-day hunt for Francisco and Solindao. The bandits, armed with a rifle and one with a pistol, fired on Sheriff Dolan, hitting him several times. Tragically, the Sheriff died despite medical care.

Historical marker at the site of the shooting

A posse caught up with the bandits near the craters, where a shootout ensued. Francisco and Solido were shot dead. The posse took the bodies to the Crater school. The justice of the peace, Pearl Mattly, ruled the killing justified.

Francisco and Solindao were likely buried in unmarked graves at a location lost to time. Sheriff Dolan was buried in Bridgeport.

WANT MORE GHOST TOWNS?

For information on more than five hundred ghost towns in Nevada & California, visit the Nevada Ghost Towns Map or a list of Nevada ghost towns.

Learn about how to visit ghost towns safely.

Nevada Ghost Towns Map

References


  • Calhoun, Margaret. Pioneers of Mono Basin. Artemisia Press. 1984, page 16. 59, 60, 132-133.
  • La Braque, Lily Mathieu. Man from Mono. Lily Mathieu La Braque, 1984.
  • Mono Herald and Bridgeport Chronicle-Union Sat, Jan 16, 1892
  • Mono Herald and Bridgeport Chronicle-Union Sat, Dec 7, 1895
  • Mono Herald and Bridgeport Chronicle-Union Sat, Oct 14, 1899 
  • Mono Herald and Bridgeport Chronicle-Union Sat, Oct 29, 1904 
  • Mono Herald and Bridgeport Chronicle-Union Sat, Dec 23, 1905
  • Mono Herald and Bridgeport Chronicle-Union Sat, Feb 17, 1906 
  • Mono Herald and Bridgeport Chronicle-Union Sat, Apr 25, 1908
  • Mono Herald and Bridgeport Chronicle-Union Sat, May 1, 1915
  • Mono Herald and Bridgeport Chronicle-Union Sat, Jun 18, 1927
  • Mono Herald and Bridgeport Chronicle-Union Sat, Sep 3, 1927
  • Mono Herald and Bridgeport Chronicle-Union Sat, Dec 31, 1932
  • Mono Herald and Bridgeport Chronicle-Union Thu, Jan 23, 1941
  • Mono Herald and Bridgeport Chronicle-Union Fri, Jun 10, 1966
  • Salley, H.E. History of California Post Offices. The Depot, 1991.
  • Wedertz, Frank S. Mono Diggins: Historical Sketches of Old Bridgeport Big Meadows and Vicinity. Chalfant Press, 1978.
Follow me on social media:
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • Gab

Filed Under: Ghost Towns

Previous
Next

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Newsletter Sign Up

Never miss a ghost town, sign up for our weekly newsletter.

Select list(s) to subscribe to


By submitting this form, you are consenting to receive marketing emails from: . You can revoke your consent to receive emails at any time by using the SafeUnsubscribe® link, found at the bottom of every email. Emails are serviced by Constant Contact

SEARCH

Hi, I’m Tami. I have been exploring Nevada and Eastern Sierra ghost towns and historical sites for 25 years. My goal is to photograph and document the rich history of the area. If you love seeing and learning about the more unusual ghost towns and locations, you have come to the right place! Follow along as my Jeep, Honey Badger, and I work towards our objective of visiting every ghost town in the region!

Follow me on social media:
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • Gab

Categories

  • Ghost Towns
  • Travel Update
  • Sutro Tunnel & Ghost Town
  • Top 10 Ghost Towns by Region
  • Ranch Life & Wildlife

Recent Posts

  • Qualey’s Camp
  • Filosena Ranch
  • Jarbidge Jaunt
  • I’m back!
  • China Camp: Bodie’s Woodcutter Camps

Copyright © 2026 · Nevada Ghost Towns & Beyond · Hello You Designs