Callville
Bay , Nevada
Located in the Lake Mead National Recreation Area
(updated on Jan. 9, 2008)
Distance
from Las Vegas :
32 Miles
Time of year to visit :
All Year
Gasoline Available :
No
Fee : 3$ to enter
the Lake Mead National Recreation Area
Services
Available :
     
Road Conditions :
Nevada Department of Transportation
Tourist Information :
Nevada
Commission on Tourism
Lake
Mead National Recreation Area (U.S. National Park Service)
Callville
Bay History:
Seeing
the viability of steamboat travel to transport supplies and immigrants,
Mormon leader, Brigham Young recruited Bishop Anson Call to establish
a colony and build a warehouse on the Colorado River.
Call
was sent to select a site for a steamboat port on the Colorado
River and in 1864, he established Calls Landing which is about
15 miles upstream from the present day Hoover Dam.
A
large warehouse was constructed first, followed by a landing,
post office and corral. The steamboat Esmeralda completed a trip
on October, 1866, and delivered 100 tons of freight.
Call’s
Landing (also referred to as Call’s Fort and Old Callville)
became a permanent settlement with homes, warehouse and irrigation
systems. Supplies intended for the newly established Mormon communities
in the west traveled from New York and other eastern cities to
Panama. From there goods were shipped to the west coast of Mexico,
through the Gulf of California and up the Colorado River to Call’s
Landing.
In
January, 1867, the Army arrived at Fort Callville and it became
an outpost until May, 1868. Callville, being very desolate, isolated
and lonely, had the most desertions of the Army company stationed
at El Dorado, and one suicide.
The
Mormon's plan for a supply route via the Colorado was abandoned
when the transcontinental railroad was completed in northern Nevada
in 1869.
When construction for the Boulder Dam began (now know as Hoover
Dam), portions of the old warehouse still existed. Callville then
became submerged when Lake Mead was formed by the damming of the
Colorado River.

Directions:
• Take E LAKE MEAD BLVD / NV-147 leaving Las Vegas for approx.
12.6 miles;
• Turn LEFT onto NV-167 / NORTHSHORE RD. and continue for
approx. 7.8 Miles;
• Turn RIGHT onto CALLVILLE RD. and continue for approx.
3.6 Miles until you reach Calville Bay.

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