The area known
today as Sonora in Tuolumne County, California, was originally the land of the Mi-wuk
Indian people. What became Sonora is in a narrow sheltered valley that has two
all-year creeks: Sonora Creek and Woods Creek. This was a favorite wintering
area these people. They left only
after the population in the region increased due to those arriving seeking
gold.
What
became the city of Sonora was founded during
the California Gold Rush. It was established in 1848, by miners emigrating from the
State of Sonora in Mexico. The early settlement was often referred to as the
“Sonoran Camp,” and was once known as the “Queen of the Southern Mines.”
Although
there was mining activity in the Sonora area in 1848, the first documented
discovery was in Wood’s Creek near the north part of town on March 17, 1849.
Unlike many Gold Rush towns, no specific individual is credited with the
discovery of gold in Sonora.
News of the gold discovery at the Sonoran Camp spread, and fortune-seekers
came from all over, including from Mexico, Chile, and other South American
nations. In addition, many of the city’s early residents came from Germany,
France, England, Ireland and Italy. By 1849, the population of the town was
approximately 5,000. (According to the 2010 U.S. Census, the city’s population
remains about that number.)
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1866 downtown Sonora
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Many
gold-seekers boarded ships on the East Coast and sailed to Panama where they
crossed the Isthmus on foot or horseback and vied for passage on crowded ships
bound for San Francisco. From San Francisco it was an additional two day trip
by schooner to Stockton and then a dusty stage ride through the foothills to
Sonora. They found that Sonora was mostly a camp of dirt streets. Most of its
structures were tents. There was very little in the way of accommodations.
The
first record of Sonora organizing as a town was on November 7, 1849. After a scurvy
outbreak during the preceding winter affected many members in the region, the
citizens gathered to discuss a hospital. Through contributions from the locals
and the sale of town lots, the hospital was built and maintained throughout the
rainy season that followed. Lime juice, fresh potatoes and other items rich in
vitamin C were given to sufferers to stop the epidemic.
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Early merchants on Washington St.
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No
wagon roads were present during the first few years. Travel in and out of Sonora
was done on foot, or by horse or mule. Supplies were brought in from Stockton,
seventy miles distant. It was said that, during 1849 and 1850, travel between
these two towns was so frequent that, “the campfires along the route were near
enough together to show the traveler his way, even at night.”
The
Old Town Well was dug at the
edge of the town’s plaza in 1848. Fed by an underground spring, it was the
camp’s first public water well and was responsible for providing fresh water to
the inhabitants for many years. (With all those men panning for gold, you can
imagine what was in those two creeks.)
Starting
on July 4th of 1850, Enos Christman established and operated the Southern Mines
first newspaper, The Sonora Herald. It was printed on wrapping paper. A
year later, he commented on the human variety to be found in the camp: “Sonora
is a fast place and no mistake. Such a motley collection as we have here can be
found nowhere but in California. Sonora has a population hailing from every
hole and corner of the globe-Kanaka, Peruvians, Spaniards, Mexicans, Chilians,
Chinese, British convicts from New South Wales, known as ‘Sidney Birds,’
Englishmen, Frenchmen, Dutch, Paddies, and not a small sprinkling of Yankees. We
have more gamblers, more drunkards, more ugly, bad women, and larger lumps of
gold, and more of them, than any other place of similar dimensions within Uncle
Sam’s dominions. The Sabbath is regarded as a holiday, granting men and women a
more extensive license to practice vice than any other day in the week.”
Like
so many Gold Rush towns, Sonora had a wild reputation in its early days.
According to Frank Marryat, who wrote about his 1851 experiences in Sonora, “No
church bells here usher in the Sabbath… every man carries arms, generally a
Colt revolver, buckled behind, with no attempt at concealment.”
The
area was not completely devoid of religious influence. Catholic Padre Arnault
was in Sonora in the fall of 1849 and he established St. Patrick’s. However,
Sonora was a pretty wild place. The Mormon “gold missionaries” who came to the
region to find a place to pan for gold came first to Sonora. Because Sonora was
such a rough town, they soon abandoned the area and set up along Mormon Creek
west of Columbia about five miles to the north.
As
California became a state following the Treaty of Hilgado marking the end of
Mexican-American War, Tuolumne County was established as one of California’s
original 27 counties on February 18, 1850. Sonora was established as the county
seat. Unlike other counties where the county seat moved from one city to
another, Sonora remains the county seat. It remains the only incorporated city
in the county. As pack trains, freight wagons, and stage lines all passed
through town on their way to the mining camps lying south, it became an
important commercial center for the region.
The following is taken from “California State Highway 49: The Golden Chain”
written by Bob Dylan (http://cali49.com/hwy49/2013/10/3/sonora)
Sonora became the
center of the controversy created when the State Legislature passed the
so-called “Foreign Miners Tax” in 1850, requiring all non-American miners to
pay a monthly tax of $20. The tax was primarily aimed at Mexican miners, as the
white miners had decided that “only Americans had the God-given right to mine
for gold, and that Mexicans most certainly were not Americans.” What it really
boiled down to was racism and greed.
The tax was deeply
resented; resistance to its collection led to violence and bad feelings between
the white and Mexican miners. Soon the “Americans” had the rich placers
virtually to themselves as most of the Mexican miners and their families left
town. Some of those forced into leaving turned outlaw and took to raiding,
robbing and murdering white miners whenever the opportunity arose. The worst
violence took place immediately following the imposition of the tax, during May and June of 1850, when assaults became an almost daily
occurrence. Dread and terror prevailed throughout the community and no one
walked the streets unarmed.
The Foreign Miners
Tax resulted in another problem for Sonora and the surrounding communities. The
exodus of nearly two thousand Mexican, Chilean, and French inhabitants cut
Sonora’s population almost in half, resulting in hard times for the business
community. Business declined to such an extent that many merchants were forced
into closing and the boom town suddenly became a rather quiet place. The tax
was finally repealed in 1851, marking an end to most of the violence as law,
order and civilization settle down over Sonora.
Although Sonora would
never again see the dangerous times it once knew, there was still gold in the
rivers and the hard rock mines would continue to yield riches for decades to
come. In fact, the region became known as one of the famous pocket-mining
districts of the Southern Mines, yielding tremendous amounts of gold to those
who stumbled across these rich pockets. One such pocket uncovered in the
Bonanza Mine yielded 990 pounds of gold in one week, valued at over $300,000.
Other mines, such as the Sugarman and the Negro, were known for their pockets
of beautifully crystallized gold. In May of 1851, the town was incorporated as
a city and was soon an important supply and commercial center.
After
incorporation as a city, Mayor Charles F. Dodge presided over the first town
meeting on May 26, 1851. The first Council immediately enacted ordinances
related to gambling. Ordinance Number 14 outlawed any game “having in its
tendency deception or fraud.” Ordinance Number 15 allowed faro, monte,
roulette, other gaming tables, and games of chance, for a license fee.
Sonora
had several disastrous fires in its early days. The first took place in 1849
and nearly consumed the entire canvas and brush camp.
The
next major blaze took place on June 18 of 1852. It started in the “Hôtel de
France,” which was located on the plaza facing Washington Street. Called “The
Great Fire,” it burned almost every building in town. A Swiss named Mollier,
who was in the Hotel de France, lost his life. The total losses exceeded
$700,000. After the fire was extinguished, some rogues tried to jump the land
on which buildings once stood, but guards were posted to stop their attempts at
stealing the land.
The
worst occurred on June 18, 1852. It destroyed almost every structure from Church Street in
the downtown, or older part of Sonora, to the northern uptown region where St.
James Episcopal Church, also known as The Red Church, was built in 1859.
Prior
to the fire, wooden buildings along Washington Street were built close together
without side streets. 1853 was a year of three fires which took
place on August 17, October 3, and November 2. They caused thousands of dollars
in damages and one person lost his life. As a result of those disastrous fires, instead of there being one long, unbroken main street, Sonora rebuilt with side
streets to help act as fire breaks. The street layout of Sonora’s downtown has
remained relatively unchanged since 1852.
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Side of 1853 building built of local rock
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Most
of the earliest buildings that remain in downtown Sonora were built in 1853 or
later—after these fires. Many, like their contemporaries in Columbia, used
brick. Quite a few structures were built with rock walls. The local slate in
all manner of sizes and shapes were formed into thick walls.
An
example is the Wells Fargo & Co. building built of stone by Emanuel
Linoberg in 1856. (D.M. Kenfield served as the town’s first Wells Fargo agent.) This
building no longer exists. A plaque marks this site located at 87 S.
Washington. However, its description is as follows:
“The
side wall of this structure provides a great look at one of the early methods
of construction used throughout the Gold Country. Stones of countless shapes
and sizes were painstakingly formed into thick sturdy walls, which offered
excellent protection against fire and burglary.”
Other
early buildings are the following:
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Gunn House built 1850
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The
Gunn House is Sonora’s earliest
residence and first two-story structure. Dr. Lewis C. Gunn arrived in nearby
Jamestown in 1849 where he attempted mining for a brief time. Largely
unsuccessful, in 1850, he returned to medicine and moved his practice to the busier camp
of Sonora. In November of that year, he bought an interest in the Sonora Herald. Soon after, he made plans
to build an adobe house. Constructed by Mexican laborers, the Gunn House originally
had a balcony across the entire front of the second story. The lower floor
housed the Sonora Herald’s printing
office. When Dr. Gunn was elected recorder in 1850, it also housed the county
recorder’s office. The upper floor served as living quarters for Gunn and his
family, after his wife and four young children arrived in Sonora on August 13th
of 1851, after a six-month long journey from Philadelphia via rounding Cape
Horn.
The
City Hotel on S. Washington
Street, completed in late summer of 1852, became a popular stage stop. It is constructed
principally of adobe brick and cut stone. It was built by Alonzo Green and
James Lane, two of Sonora’s earliest pioneers.
The
Barber Shop on S. Washington Street
first opened in 1859. The building has been remodeled with a new “old style”
façade.
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1883 of Yo-Semite House
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The
Brick Office Buildings which
look so neat and lawyerly, were built in the 1850s to serve as an office
building and a bank. Still complete with their iron doors, the buildings stand
at 21 and 23 N. Washington.
The
Yo-Semite House was built
on N. Washington Street in 1858. It was first occupied by Fred Freund, cabinet
maker, upholsterer, and undertaker. The building has served as a hotel, saloon,
restaurant, hardware store, and general merchandise store.
St. James Episcopal Church, the “Red Church,”
is the second oldest wood frame Episcopal church in California. Construction
began in 1859 on a site donated by Caleb Dorsey at the north end of Washington
Street. Funds for the building materials were also donated. The building was finished
in 1860. The Reverend John Gassman, a native of Norway, served as both the
architect and the first minister of St. James.
The
Burden Undertaking Parlor was built
on N. Washington St. during the 1850s for Charles Burden.
The
I.O.O.F. Hall was erected during
the early 1850s. When the Sonora I.O.O.F. Lodge No. 10 was organized on June
7th of 1853, the Odd Fellows purchased the two-story brick building on W. Dodge
Street and have met there ever since.
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I.O.O.F. Hall in continuous use since 1853
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The
Tuolumne County Jail housed
prisoners from 1857 to 1960. The site on W. Bradford Ave. was acquired in 1857,
after a grand jury determined that the previous jail was a “public nuisance.”
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Old Tuolumne Co. Jail, now museum & history center
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The first
Tuolumne County Courthouse was constructed of wood in 1853. It was a two-story
structure that faced Green Street between Jackson Street and Yaney Avenue. It
remained in use until 1898.
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First Tuolumne Co. Courthouse 1853-1898
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By 1860, most of
the “easy” gold had been panned out of the local creeks (Sonora Creek and Woods
Creek). The city began to shrink as those chasing gold moved elsewhere. Yet,
Sonora was a commercial and cultural center for the region. It was a county
seat. It continued into the next decade and beyond.
Although my
current book, A Lawyer for Linton, is set in 1885, years after Sonora was
incorporated, many of the buildings mentioned in this post still existed at
that time. They also existed at the time of last year’s novel, Kendrick, set in 1854 Columbia (with a few
chapters taking him to Sonora), and in my book published the first of April, Cole,
set mostly in 1866 Stanislaus County to the west of Tuolumne County, with Cole
taking a few trips to Sonora to purchase land and register a brand.
To find the book
description and purchase link for A Lawyer for Linton, please CLICK HERE.
To find the book
description and purchase link for Kendrick, please CLICK HERE.
To find the book
description and purchase link for Cole, please CLICK HERE.
Sources:
https://www.sonoraca.com/visit-sonora/sonora-california-history/
https://www.sonoraca.com/visit-sonora/sonora-california-history/short-history/
http://cali49.com/hwy49/2013/10/3/sonora
https://www.daytrippen.com/sonora-day-trip-californias-gold-country/
Wikipedia:
Sonora, California