Tuesday, May 26, marked the 30th anniversary of the demolition of the Bunker Hill smokestack, one of the most recognizable landmarks in Idaho’s Silver Valley. The towering structure had long stood as a symbol of the region’s century-long relationship with hard-rock mining and metal smelting before it came down in 1996.
For generations of Shoshone County residents, the Bunker Hill stack represented both industrial pride and a complicated environmental legacy. The Bunker Hill smelting complex was once among the largest lead and zinc processing operations in the United States, employing thousands across the Silver Valley at its peak.
The demolition marked a turning point in the region’s identity as communities shifted focus toward cleanup, economic recovery, and heritage tourism. The site remains part of one of the nation’s largest Superfund cleanup areas. Learn more about the Silver Valley’s complex lead contamination history and how the mining era shaped the landscape of Northern Idaho.
What Comes Next
The anniversary serves as a reminder of the ongoing reclamation and environmental remediation work still underway across the Silver Valley. For further context on the geology and mineral wealth that built the region, see the related piece on ancient brines and Idaho’s silver and cobalt belt.