Tag Archives: Gold Rush

Vacation to Angels Camp, June 10-13, 2012, Part 2

Visit to Columbia State Park

 

 

By Judy J. Pinegar

On Tuesday John and I, and my family visited Colombia State Historic Park, a living, restored gold rush town. The concessions and businesses in the park close on Thanksgiving and Christmas days, but they are open for every other holiday, weather permitting.

The Gold Rush to Columbia, California began on March 27, 1850 by a small party of prospectors. News of the discovery spread and they were soon joined by a flood of miners. Unlike many settlements that have changed with the times, Columbia, California seems to be frozen in the 1800’s, and appears to be the best preserved of California gold rush towns. Columbia State Historic Park offers a blend of museums, displays, town tours, live theater plays, shops, restaurants and attractions.

After a great Mexican lunch, we saw the soap shop, the museum, information center and the working blacksmith shop. We also visited many other stores, enjoyed a few sarsaparillas, listened to some street musicians, and my four year old granddaughter made her very own dipped candle.

As a grand finale we rode a stagecoach through the woods  – where the bad guys tried to take our gold (we didn’t have any thank goodness, because they weren’t willing to pull teeth). It was a wonderful, educational trip.

Judy J. Pinegar is a writer and her articles have appeared in many publications.

 

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Museums in Auburn : Barnhart Museum, and Gold Country Museum – Mining

museum-sign

Image 1 of 11

By Judy J. Pinegar

Arriving in Auburn on a hot Sunday in July, John and I decided to tour a couple of museums. First was the historic Bernhard Museum just off Auburn Folsom Boulevard near the fairgrounds. The house is over 150 years old, built in 1851 by George Bishop and John Long as the Traveler’s Rest Hotel, one of Auburn’s oldest surviving buildings.

In the Gold Rush, this hotel held teamsters traveling the old Auburn Folsom Road, and miners working in nearby Rich Flat. In 1858 the building was converted to a home for one of the builders, George Bishop. The house and 30 acres were sold in 1864 to Eliza Caruthers, and again in 1868 to the Bernhard family. This family and their descendants lived here for over 100 years. They started planting vineyards, making wine and then built a two story natural rock winery into a hillside in 1874.

Now with only 2+ acres left, the house has become a beautifully restored museum of the Victorian Era (mid 1830’s to 1900). No pictures are allowed inside the museum, but it is truly a sight to see. Also on the grounds is an old wine processing building, displaying wine making and barrel making artifacts, as well as a barn with a hearse, a sleigh, buggies and wagons of days gone by.

The top of the stone winery is now an art gallery, while the bottom still houses and operating winery, Bonitata (more on this later).

Next we visited the Gold Country Museum, housed in a historic Works Progress Administration (WPA) building, on the Auburn fairgrounds itself.  We began by touring a replicated hard rock mine (thanking our lucky stars that we didn’t have to do that job!) Many other mining displays are also on display, as well as a model stamp mill, and an assayer’s office, a miner’s cabin and an old saloon.

After this tour we went back to the Barnhart Museum Parking lot, but walked down to the winery to do a little wine tasting in the Bonitata Boutique Winery (see last picture in the slides).

Judy J. Pinegar is a writer and winemaker, and her articles appear in many publications.

John J. O’Dell Realtor® GRI
Civil Engineer
General Contractor
(530) 263-1091
Email jodell@nevadacounty.com

DRE#00669941

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A Short History of the California Delta Part 3 of 4

Early San Francisco from article by Susan Saperstein
Early San Francisco from article by Susan Saperstein

Picture from Guide Lines News Letter

By Bill Wells

European Settlement

The Mexican Government surely became concerned about the interlopers ferreting around in their territory and it is believed that this is what led them to grant John Sutter his vast tract at the confluence of the Sacramento and American Rivers.  One of Sutter’s boats was the schooner Isabella which legend has it had been the private yacht of King Kamehameha the Great of the Sandwich Islands, possibly the first yacht in the Delta!  Leaving what is now San Francisco in August of 1839 it took Sutter and his band eight days to find the entrance to the Sacramento after passing through Carquinez Straits which speaks to the maze of waterways even then.  Sutter eventually landed on the bank of the American River at about where the city dump of Sacramento is located.  He built his fort nearby at what is now the corner of 27th and L streets in Sacramento.  Sutter became a Mexican citizen on August 29, 1840 and was appointed Captain in the Mexican Army as well as judge and representative of the “Government at the Frontier of the Rio Sacramento”.  Sutter’s treatment of the Indians is a matter of controversy. Certainly he treated them no worse than did the Mexicans or the Spanish before them. What is known is that he minted tin coins with stars stamped into them for payment to the Indians for work performed and the coins could be redeemed later for food or dry goods in Sutter’s store.

Charles Weber migrated westward and arrived at John Marsh’s ranch at the base of Mt. Diablo in October of 1841.  Weber made his way to Sutter’s fort and was employed there in the winter of 1841.  Sutter sponsored Weber to obtain Mexican citizenship, which made Weber eligible to receive a land-grant from Mexico.  In 1844 Captain Charles Weber and William Gulnac obtained a Mexican land grant for the Rancho del Campo de los Franceses of about 48,000 acres.  Weber later bought out Gulnac for $200 and started the settlement of Slough Town later renamed Tuleburg.

During the Mexican-American war the Mexicans imprisoned Weber for refusing to raise arms against the Americans.  Commodore Robert F. Stockton the American military commander of California rescued him.  In gratitude Weber renamed his settlement Stockton which name it still bears today. The Steamer John A. Sutter was the first power boat to arrive in Stockton on November 1849.

On June 16, 1846 the settlers in California under the command of John Fremont declared independence from Mexico and created the Bear Flag Republic.  On July 11, 1846 Paul Revere’s nephew Lieutenant Joseph Revere sent a United States flag to Sutter and the U.S. annexed California under the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo which included paying Mexico a cash payment of $15,000,000 and the United States assuming claims of American citizens against Mexico of $3,250,000. This ended Mexico’s 21 year control of California.  On September 9, 1850, by act of congress California became the 31st state in the Union.

Gold!

Sutter's Mill - Photo courtesy of Bureau of Ocean Management, Regulation and Enforcement
Sutter's Mill - Photo courtesy of Bureau of Ocean Management, Regulation and Enforcement

In January of 1848 James Marshall found gold at Sutter’s sawmill on the American River at Coloma and the news quickly spread to San Francisco in spite of Sutter’s attempt to keep the discovery secret.  The first known newspaper account was on March 15, 1848 in The Californian in San Francisco and from then on the population of Northern California grew exponentially.

Sam Brannan seized the opportunity and opened a store selling mining supplies.  Sam is credited with founding the city of Sacramento and was rumored to have been seen running through the streets of San Francisco yelling “gold has been discovered in the Sierras!”  Brannan was reported as California’s first millionaire.  John Sutter later in 1848 said:”Every little shanty in or around the Fort became a store, a warehouse or a hotel, the whole settlement was a veritable bazaar.”

Captain William Warner and Lieutenant William T. Sherman (later as General Sherman of Civil War fame) surveyed the area between Sutter’s Fort and the Embarcadero along the Sacramento River laying out the first grid of the city that would be known as “Sacramento City”.  Sam Brannan claimed credit for the name.   From Sherman’s memoirs: “ Having finished our work on the Cosumnes, we proceeded to Sacramento, where Captain Sutter employed us to connect the survey of Sacramento City, made by Lieutenant Warner, and that of Sutterville, three miles below, which was then being surveyed by Lieutenant J. W. Davidson, of the First Dragoons. At Sutterville, the plateau of the Sacramento approached quite near the river, and it would have made a better site for a town than the low, submerged land where the city now stands; but it seems to be a law of growth that all natural advantages are disregarded wherever once business chooses a location. Old Sutter’s embarcadero became Sacramento City, simply because it was the first point used for unloading boats for Sutter’s Fort”

Originally the San Joaquin had a myriad of turns and bends and plans to straighten it were formulated in the 1870’s.  The project was finished in the 1930’s by cutting through numerous islands and dredging the channel to 26 feet.  This one project created many new islands and meandering waterways that are still in existence today.

John Bidwell had a 17,700 acre land grant along the Sacramento River starting in 1844 that included the area that now is the City of Rio Vista.  In 1848 at the beginning of the gold rush a wharf was built to handle the steamer traffic.  N.H. Davis purchased the town site from Bidwell in 1855 and by 1860 the town was called Rio Vista.  The great storm of 1861 washed the town away and it was later rebuilt on higher ground where it remains today.  The channel of the Sacramento river originally went through horseshoe bend to the east of Decker Island just downstream from Rio Vista but a cut was made and the channel moved to its present location in 1918 creating Decker Island.

Up until the rivers were silted in by hydraulic mining in the 1870’s steamers could make it all the way up the Sacramento to Red Bluff and up the Feather River as far as Yuba City.  On the San Joaquin steamers made it as far as Firebaugh near Fresno.  There are even records of steamboats going as far as Coloma (!) on the American River.  The hydraulic mining caused terrible silting of the rivers, which is still a major problem today.   The Yuba river near Marysville went from a “fish filled 30-foot (deep) water” in 1850 to where “the river was almost level with Marysville streets” in 1878 according to Marysville mayor at that time C.E. Stone.  The Briggs orchard near Marysville was covered with 20 feet of silt.  In one year in the 1870’s “46 Million cubic yards of gravel, a mass a mile wide and a mile long and fifteen yards deep had been hurled into the streams or spread over the farm lands”.  Over a thirty year period two billion cubic yards of debris filled the Sacramento River and its tributaries.

The gold rush brought hoards of people to Northern California.  Some came overland but many came by sea.  As of March of 1850 Sacramento City had thirty stores, six saloons, and many other business establishments.  By 1855 Sacramento produced $300,000 worth of manufactured items per month.

The name of the settlement of Yerba Buena was changed to San Francisco in 1847.  The original settlement was started at Yerba Buena Cove but as the population and area expanded a new name was thought to be in order.  Gold captivated most people until about 1860 at which time agriculture was rediscovered.  The original farmers were called rimlanders because they farmed on the edges of the Delta before the islands had been surrounded with levees and reclaimed.

Source:

Bill Wells
Executive Director
California Delta Chambers & Visitor’s Bureau
PO Box 1118
Rio Vista, CA 94571

916-777-4041

Click Here for California Delta Chambers Website

For all your real estate needs call or write:

John J. O’Dell
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O’Dell Realty
(530) 263-1091

johnodell@nevadacounty.com

Enter Nevada County 2011 Fair Artwork Design Contest

Art work by Janene Powell

WIN $250 IN ARTWORK DESIGN CONTEST
Submit the winning artwork for the 2011 Nevada County Fair and you could win

There’s still time to enter the Nevada County Fairgrounds artwork design contest. If you’re a talented or aspiring artist, and you’d like $250, this is the contest to enter! All you need to do is create the best artwork to illustrate the 2011 Nevada County Fair slogan, “Gold! Rush to the Fair.”

The contest is open to Nevada County residents only and takes place until January 14. If you submit the winning artwork, you will win $250 and a 2011 Nevada County Fair package. Additionally, the winning artwork will be used on various Fair promotional pieces, print ads, buttons, t-shirts, banners, posters, and flyers.

Interested artists may use any medium and can submit up to three entries, which must be on 8-1/2 by 11-inch paper. Entries can be delivered to the Fairgrounds Office at 11228 McCourtney Road or mailed to the Fair Office at PO Box 2687, Grass Valley, CA  95945. A complete set of rules can be found on the Fair’s website at www.NevadaCountyFair.com, or by calling the Fair Office at (530) 273-6217.

The 2011 Nevada County Fair is August 10 – 14.

By Wendy Oaks

Publicist, Nevada County Fairgrounds

(530) 273-6217

wsoaks@gmail.com

Website: www.NevadaCountyFair.com

Blog: www.NevadaCountyFair.blogspot.com

Facebook: Nevada County Fairgrounds

2011 Nevada County Fair                August 10 – 14

2011 Draft Horse Classic                  September 22 – 25

2011 Country Christmas Faire       November 25 – 27