In 1773, silver and lead were found close to the village of
Tayna. A small smelter was built in 1774–1778 and a settlement grew around it. In 1779, it became a seat of a
volost. Destroyed by high waters, it was rebuilt and extended in 1789–1790. Their leader Yegor Barbot de Marny (1743–1796) planned to transfer the management of all Southeast
Transbaikalia's extensive mining region here from
Nerchinsky Zavod, where the ore was exhausted. Since the expectations at Gazimursky Zavod were also not fulfilled, the plan did not succeed. The plant was expanded again in 1832. In 1834 there were 330 workers, including many exiles. However, in 1846 the smelter was closed. In 1837, there were 141 households in Gazimursky Zavod, and by 1860 their number declined to 109. In 1851, the first
staff of the First Infantry Brigade of the Trans-Baikal
Cossacks troops was in Gazimursky Zavod. A hospital was established, which was open also for the civilian population. From 1872 to 1918, the Third Infantry division was stationed there. On January 4, 1926, Gazimursky Zavod became the administrative center of its eponymous district. In 1934, a
Machine and Tractor Station was established in the
selo. In 1961, thirteen
kolkhozes in the raion were consolidated into two
sovkhozes. The administration of one of the sovkhozes was in Gazimursky Zavod. ==Economy==