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Boitano-Net State Historical Landmarks Amador County |
California State Historical Landmarks in Amador County
Properties of historical importance in California are currently designated as
significant resources in three state registration programs: State Historical
Landmarks, Points of Historical Interest, and the California Register of
Historic Places. Below is a list of the State Historical Landmarks for
Amador County. This data is provided by the
Office of Historic Preservation - California Department of Parks and Recreation
and is also available in the
California Historical Landmarks Book
NO. 470
PLYMOUTH TRADING POST
- This building, constructed entirely of brick, was built by Joe
Williams in 1857. In 1873 the many small mines of the area were combined to
become Plymouth Consolidated, and this building became the new company's
office and commissary.
NO. 762
D'AGOSTINI WINERY
- D'Agostini Winery was started in 1856 by Adam Uhlinger, a
Swiss immigrant. The original wine cellar, with walls made from rock quarried
from nearby hills, hand-hewn beams, and oak casks, is part of the present
winery - some of its original vines are still in production.
NO. 35
OLETA (OLD FIDDLETOWN)
- Settled by Missourians in 1849, Fiddletown was a trading center
for American, Loafer, and French Flats, Lone Hill, and other rich mining camps.
Called Fiddletown because residents 'were always fiddling,' the
settlement became Oleta in 1878 but the original name was later restored. Bret
Harte added to the community's fame in 'An Episode of
Fiddletown.'
NO. 31
DRYTOWN
- Founded in 1848, this is the oldest town and first in which gold
was discovered in Amador County. Its venerable town hall and other picturesque
structures remain. The town was not 'dry,' as the name implies-it
once contained 26 saloons.
NO. 322
SUTTER CREEK
- This town was named after John A. Sutter, who came to the region
in 1846, and was the first to mine the locality in 1848. There was little
activity at Sutter Creek until 1851, when quartz gold was discovered. In 1932
the Central Eureka mine, discovered in 1869, had reached the 2,300-foot level.
By 1939, it was the best-paying mine at Sutter Creek.
NO. 1007
KNIGHT FOUNDRY
- Knight Foundry was established in 1873 to supply heavy equipment
and repair facilities to the gold mines and timber industry of the Mother Lode.
Samuel N. Knight developed a high speed, cast iron water wheel which was a
forerunner of the Pelton Wheel design. Knight Wheels were used in some of the
first hydroelectric plants in California, Utah, and Oregon. This site is the
last water powered foundry and machine shop in California. A 42-inch Knight
Wheel drives the main line shaft, with smaller water motors powering other
machines.
NO. 30
LANCHA PLANA
- Lancha Plana (Flat Boat) was well settled by 1850 due to the
hydraulic mining operations in the extensive gravel beds along the Mokelumne
River. The Amador Dispatch newspaper was born here in 1856. Poverty Bar, Camp
Opra, Copper Center, and Put's Bar were 'suburbs' of the larger
town.
NO. 788
D. STEWART CO. STORE
- This general merchandise store built by Daniel Stewart in 1856 was
the first building erected in lone Valley from nearby Muletown brick. Once
known as 'Bed-Bug' and 'Freeze Out,' Ione was an important
supply center on the main road to the Mother Lode and Southern Mines.
NO. 867
PRESTON CASTLE
- The 'Castle,' built in 1890-1894, is the most
significant example of Romanesque Revival architecture in the Mother Lode. It
was built to house the Preston School of Industry, established by the State
Legislature as a progressive action toward rehabilitating, rather than simply
imprisoning, juvenile offenders. Doors of the 120-room 'Castle'
closed in 1960 after new facilities were completed.
NO. 506
THE COMMUNITY METHODIST CHURCH OF IONE
- The cornerstone was laid in 1862 and the church, constructed of
locally fired brick, was completed in 1866. Dedicated as the Ione City
Centenary Church and later popularly known as the Cathedral of the Mother Lode,
this church was the first to serve the people in the area.
NO. 118
JACKSON GATE
- Jackson Gate, on the north fork of Jackson Creek, takes its name
from a fissure in a reef of rock that crosses the creek. In 1850 about 500
miners worked here and the first mining ditch in the county was dug here - its
water sold for $1 per inch.
NO. 786
ARGONAUT AND KENNEDY MINES
- Argonaut Mine, discovered 1850, and Kennedy Mine, discovered 1856,
played dramatic roles in the economic development of California, producing
$105,268,760 in gold. Kennedy Mine has a vertical shaft of 5,912 feet, the
deepest in the United States. The Argonaut was the scene of the Mother
Lode's most tragic mine disaster-on August 27, 1922, 48 miners were
trapped in a fire at the 3,500-foot level - few survived. Both mines closed in
1942.
NO. 865
SITE OF JACKSON'S PIONEER JEWISH SYNAGOGUE
- On September 18, 1857, Congregation B'nai Israel of Jackson
dedicated on this site the first synagogue in the Mother Lode. High holy day
worship continued until 1869 when the larger Masonic Hall was used to
accommodate the congregation. The wooden structure then served as a schoolhouse
until 1888. Relocated onto a nearby lot, it became a private dwelling, and was
razed in 1948.
NO. 34
PIONEER HALL
- The Order of Native Daughters of the Golden West was organized on
these premises, the site of the Pioneer Hall, on September 11, 1886.
NO. 36
MIDDLE BAR
- Site of gold rush town on the Mokelumne River, now inundated by
Pardee Reservoir at certain times of the year.
NO. 39
BUTTE STORE
- This is the only structure remaining of Butte City, prosperous
mining town of the 1850s. As early as 1854 Xavier Benoist was conducting a
store and bakery in this building. Later Ginocchio had a merchandise business
here.
NO. 41
BIG BAR
- The Mokelumne River was mined at this point in 1848. Established
in 1849, the Whale Boat Ferry operated until the first bridge was built, about
1852.
NO. 38
IRISHTOWN
- This was an important stopping place for emigrants on their way to
the southern mines. The first white settlers on this spot found it a 'city
of wigwams,' and hundreds of mortars in the rocks testify that this was a
favorite Indian camping ground.
NO. 37
CLINTON
- Clinton was the center of a placer mining community during the
1850s and of quartz mining as late as the 1880s. This town once decided Amador
County elections as its votes were always counted last.
NO. 1001
CALIFORNIA NATIVE AMERICAN CEREMONIAL ROUNDHOUSES (THEMATIC), CHAW SE'
ROUNDHOUSE
- In a village, the roundhouse served as the center of ceremonial
and social life. Constructed in 1974, the Chaw se' roundhouse continues
this tradition. With its door facing the east, towards the rising sun, four
large oaks are the focal point of this sixty-foot-in-diameter structure. Today
ceremonial roundhouses are the most significant architectural manifestation of
the continuing Mistook spiritual heritage.
NO. 29
VOLCANO
- The spot was discovered in 1848 by Colonel Stevenson's men,
who mined Soldiers Gulch in 1849. By 1853 the flats and gulches swarmed with
men who named them picturesquely. Hydraulic operations, begun in 1855, brought
thousands of fortune seekers to form a town of 17 hotels, a library, a theater,
and courts of quick justice. During the Civil War, Volcano's gold served
the Union - Volcano Blues smuggled the cannon 'Old Abe' in by hearse
to quell rebels.
NO. 715
SITE OF FIRST AMATEUR ASTRONOMICAL OBSERVATORY OF RECORD IN CALIFORNIA
- On the knoll behind this marker George Madeira built the first
amateur astronomical observatory of record in California. It was there that he
discovered the Great Comet of 1861 with a three-inch refractor telescope.
NO. 28
MAIDEN'S GRAVE
- It is said that in 1850 a young girl, Rachel Melton, native of
Iowa, was accompanying her parents on a journey West via covered wagon train
when she became violently ill. Camp was made and every effort was made to cure
her, as she was the joy of the party, but she passed away and was buried on
this spot.
NO. 662
OLD EMIGRANT ROAD
- Here the Old Emigrant Road began a long loop around the Silver
Lake basin, reaching an elevation of 9,640 feet at one place. This difficult
portion of the road was used by thousands of vehicles from 1848 to 1863, when
it was superseded by a route approximating the present highway.
NO. 40
KIRKWOOD'S
- Resort, stage station, and post office were originally built by
Zack Kirkwood in 1864. When Alpine County was formed from Amador County, the
division left the barn and milkhouse in Alpine, while the Alpine-El Dorado line
went directly through the barroom of the inn.