Gold Mine in a Restaurant Basement
Dahlonega, Georgia
Frank Wayland Hall was the richest man in Dahlonega before he found gold while digging the basement of his new house, just off the town square, in 1899. He asked Dahlonega -- a city famous for its gold -- for permission to dig a mine. Dahlonega said no. Frank Wayland Hall apparently went ahead and dug one anyway, in secret, a shaft five feet wide and 31 feet deep. He stuck a rich vein of gold ore at 24 feet, but died of typhoid fever before he could mine it.
The house was then bought by a married couple who turned the building into the Smith House restaurant. Not realizing that the shaft in the basement was a literal gold mine, they used it as a trash dump. A subsequent owner poured a concrete floor over it, and it wasn't until 2006 that the floor was dug up, the shaft rediscovered, and its purpose understood.
The current owners of the Smith House have preserved the shaft as a free tourist attraction -- because even though there's gold in that thar pit, the town forbids mining within city limits. Visitors walk down a flight of stairs to a darkened room in the basement, peer into the hole, and watch a video of a bearded miner exploring its claustrophobic innards. "What's took place here is some hard work," he says at one point. "It's quite the thing to do it right under the city's nose."