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Special Tours Offered To Flood-Stricken Scotty’s Castle In Death Valley National Park

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Published Date

March 2, 2017

The fire crew from Mesa Verde National Park helped remove mud from the historic buildings at Scotty's Castle/NPS photo, Danielle Dawson

No visitors have been allowed into historic Scotty’s Castle since the "largest flood event in recorded history of the area" washed through Death Valley National Park in October 2015, but that’s about to change. The park and the Death Valley National History Association are offering a limited number of tours this spring to see the damage caused by the floods and learn about the restoration of the historic district.

Scotty’s Castle Flood Recovery Tours will be offered twice a day on March 5, 12, 19, 26, and April 2. The tour costs $25 per person, lasts two hours, and involves walking over uneven surfaces. Children younger than 6 are not allowed, and each tour is limited to 13 participants. Reservations are required and can be made by calling 1-800-478-8564, ext. 10. More information is available at the Death Valley National History Association’s website.

Aside for these ranger-guided tours, the area will remain off-limits to the public until repairs are completed, likely to be late 2019 or early 2020. Before the flood, about 120,000 people per year visited Scotty’s Castle. Nearly half of them took the hour-long tour to see the inside of the Main House. Park rangers dressed in clothing from the 1930s as they recounted the fantastical tales of the history of the house and its unusual residents.

Scotty’s Castle is a historic district clustered near a lush spring in the north end of Death Valley National Park. Millionaire Albert Johnson built Scotty’s Castle as his personal retreat to get away from it all in the 1920s. However, his good friend Death Valley Scotty claimed it was his Castle and claimed to have financed it with a gold mine in the basement. The two men had an unusual friendship – they met because Scotty conned Johnson out of thousands of dollars.

Over three inches of rain fell on the hills surrounding Scotty’s Castle in just five hours on October 18, 2015. The resulting flash flood inundated two of the historic buildings, causing significant damage to the interior of the visitor center and Hacienda. Almost a mile of water line, over 25 electrical poles, the septic system, and huge sections of eight miles of road washed away. Fortunately, the damage to the main house was minimal.

NPS crews and contractors moved the entire museum collection off-site to protect it from temperature and humidity changes, pests, and risk of fire, flood, and vandalism. Participants on the Flood Recovery Tours will see part of the inside of the main house without furnishings.

The National Park Service has marked several milestones in the flood recovery effort. Hundreds of miles of roads across the park were cleared of debris and reopened. The heavily-damaged Jubilee Pass section of Badwater Road reopened last summer. Artists Drive and Harmony Borax will be repaired and open by mid-March.

An access route to Scotty’s Castle for construction vehicles was created. Mud and debris were removed from the historic buildings, walkways, and swimming pool. A temporary water line now supplies water to the historic district’s fire suppression system. Electricity has been temporarily restored to most buildings.

Over the next couple years, the Park Service plans to repair the damaged water reservoir, replace the nearly mile-long water line, replace the septic tanks and leach field, finish repairs to the electrical distribution system, rebuild the road, repair several buildings, install interpretive exhibits, bring the museum collection back to the main house, and dozens of other projects.

The total cost of recovering from October 2015’s floods is estimated at $48 million. This funding is coming from entrance fees paid by Death Valley National Park visitors, which were increased in last October, plus regional and national offices of the National Park Service, Federal Highway Administration, and donations.

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Comments

All the Scotty's Castle Flood Recovery Tours are currently SOLD OUT! We hope to be able to add more walking tours next season so keep an eye out for future Death Valley National Park press releases! Thank you to everyone for your support of this amazing national treasure. If you are interested in making a donation to assist with the Scotty's Castle historic preservation efforts please visit us at: dvnha.org/donate or give us a call at 1-800-478-8564, ext. 10.


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