Tuolumne
Cities & Towns
Groveland
Jamestown
Sonora
Tuolumne City
Twain Harte
LANDMARKS
NO. 122 MONTEZUMA - First record of
Montezuma was June 1850 when partners
Solomon Miller and Peter K. Aurand,
proprietors of the 'Montezuma Tent,'
were attacked and Aurand killed by a
group of Mexicans during the foreign
miners tax excitement of that period.
Due to the lack of water, little mining
occurred here until 1852 when a ditch
and flume were completed bringing water
for placer mining. Two types of mining
were carried on, placer operations on
the flats and tunnels extending under
Table Mountain. The gravel produced
3-1/2 C. per pan in the mid 50s. The
yield was from $5 to $10 per day. One
placer nugget found in 1853 weighed 18
lbs. 8 oz. By late 1852 the population
was about 800. At its zenith Montezuma
City had four saloons, two hotels, Adams
Express Co., post office, church, some
homes, and many tents and cabins. The
town was nearly destroyed by an
incendiary fire which started in Clarks
Hotel on June 29, 1866.
Location: On State Hwy 49 (P.M. 11.3),
2.5 mi N of Chinese Camp
NO. 123
COLUMBIA - Columbia, the 'Gem of
the Southern Mines,' became a town of
4,000 to 5,000 in the 1850s, following
the discovery of gold here by the Hildreth party March 27, 1850. Gold
shipments, estimated at $87,000,000,
declined rapidly after 1858, but
Columbia never became a ghost town.
Columbia State Historic Park was created
in 1945 to preserve its historic
buildings and sites.
Location: Columbia State Historic Park,
NW corner of Washington and Broadway
Sts, Columbia
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name: COLUMBIA
NO. 124 TUTTLETOWN - This early-day
stopping place for men and mounts was
named for Judge Anson A. H. Tuttle, who
built the first log cabin here in 1848.
Stones used in the base for the plaque
are from the old Swerer store built in
1854, remains of which still exist
(1949). Mark Twain traded here.
Tuttletown Hotel, built in 1852 and
still standing in 1949, was last
operated by John Edwards.
Location: On State Hwy 49 (P.M. 24.8) at
Wilcox Ranch Rd, Tuttletown
NO. 138 MARK TWAIN CABIN - This is a
replica of Mark Twain's cabin, with
original chimney and fireplace. Here on
Jackass Hill, young Mark Twain, while
guest of the Gillis Brothers in 1864-65,
gathered material for The Jumping Frog
of Calaveras County, which first brought
him fame, and for Roughing It.
Location: 1 mi NW of Tuttletown off
State Hwy 49
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name: SONORA
NO. 139 ST. JAMES EPISCOPAL CHURCH - The
seventh parish of the Protestant
Episcopal Church in California, St.
James is the oldest Episcopal Church
building in the state. The first
services were held in the church on
October 4, 1859, and it was consecrated
by Rt. Rev. Wm. Ingraham Kip in 1870.
Location: Intersection of N Washington
(State Hwy 49) and Elkin Sts, Sonora
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name: STANDARD
NO. 140 WELLS FARGO EXPRESS COMPANY
BUILDING - This building, erected in
1849 by the Walkerly brothers, was
subsequently owned by the Morris
brothers. It housed a general
merchandise store in connection with the
office of Adams Express Company,
predecessor of Wells Fargo & Company.
The original express agents were Sol
Miller, C. W. H. Solinsky, and the
Morris brothers.
Location: SW corner of Main St and
Solinsky Alley, Chinese Camp
NO. 395 SHAW'S FLAT - In 1850 this
community was alive with gold miners.
James D. Fair, after whom the Fairmont
Hotel in San Francisco is named, was one
of the most notable. The Mississippi
House, built in 1850, contains many
relics including the original bar and
post office with its grill and
mailboxes. On a nearby hill stands the
old bell, given by miners, which
summoned men to work and announced the
convening of various courts. According
to tradition, a local bartender added to
his income by panning the gold dust
dropped on his muddy boots as he served
customers.
Location: SE corner of Shaw's Flat Rd
and Mt Brow Rd, 2.6 mi SW of Columbia
NO. 406 BIG OAK FLAT - First called
Savage Diggins after the man who
discovered gold here in 1848, the town
was renamed Big Oak Flat about 1850
after the giant oak tree that stood in
the center of town, near this spot. The
oak, which was about 13 feet in
diameter, was undermined in 1869 and
burned in 1890, only pieces remained in
1949. Rich placer and lode mines are
reported to have yielded $28,000,000
during the town's heyday. Stone
buildings erected in 1852 were still
standing in 1949.
Location: On State Hwy 120 (P.M. 30.2),
Big Oak Flat
NO. 407 SUMMERSVILLE (TUOLUMNE) - The
area's first non-Indian settlers, the
Franklin Summers family, arrived in 1854
and built a log cabin a half mile west
of this spot, the geographical center of
East Belt Placer Gold Rush from 1856 to
1857. In 1858, James Blakely discovered
the first quartz lode half a mile east
of here and named it 'Eureka.' The mine
became the nucleus of the town of
Summersville, which was later called
Carters and finally became Tuolumne.
Other mining towns lively in gold rush
days were Long Gulch, two miles south,
and Cherokee, two miles north.
Location: In island, center of Carter St
at intersection with Tuolumne Rd,
Tuolumne
NO. 419 JACKSONVILLE - Near this site
stood the historic town of Jacksonville,
now inundated by the waters of Don Pedro
Reservoir. The town was settled by
Julian Smart, who planted the first
garden and orchard in the spring of
1849, and named for Colonel A. M.
Jackson. In 1850 it was the principal
river town in the area and the center
for thousands of miners working the rich
bed of the Tuolumne River.
Location: Vista point at N approach to
Don Pedro Bridge, State Hwy 120 (P.M.
19.4), 3.5 mi SE of Chinese Camp
NO. 420 SOULSBYVILLE - Site of the
famous Soulsby Mine (discovered by
Benjamin Soulsby), Soulsbyville is the
first community in Tuolumne County to be
founded (1855) entirely upon the
operation of a lode mine. First to work
the mine were hard rock miners from
Cornwall, England, the first group of
499 Cornishmen arrived in 1858.
Location: NW corner of Soulsbyville Rd
and Community Dr, Soulsbyville
NO. 422 SONORA-MONO ROAD - Jedediah
Smith is reputed to have been the first
white man to cross over or near Sonora
Pass in 1827. A portion of the road was
built by Tuolumne County Water Company
in 1852 and a toll gate, fine hotel, and
stables were located near this spot in
the 1850s. Surveyed to Bridgeport, Mono
County in 1860, the road was completed
in 1864, when a six-horse team took
three weeks for the round trip between
Sonora and Bridgeport.
Location: On State Hwy 108 (P.M. 14.5)
at Sugar Pine cutoff, Sugar Pine
NO. 423 CHINESE CAMP - Reportedly
founded about 1849 by a group of
Englishmen who employed Chinese as
miners, Chinese Camp was headquarters
for stagelines in early 1850s and for
several California Chinese mining
companies. Much surface gold was found
on hills and flats. The first Chinese
tong war in the state was fought near
here between the Sam Yap and Yan Woo
Tongs. Stone and brick post office,
built in 1854, is still in use. The St.
Francis Xavier Catholic Church, built in
1855, was restored in 1949, its first
pastor was Father Henry Aleric.
Location: NW corner of State Hwy 120
(P.M. 15.9) and Main St, Chinese Camp
USGS Quadrangle Sheet Name: CHINESE CAMP
NO. 424 SAWMILL FLAT - Its name derived
from two sawmills erected here to supply
mining timbers in the early 1850s,
Sawmill Flat was rich in pocket gold in
its heyday, population at one time was
1,000. The mining camp of a Mexican
woman, Dona Elisa Martínez, at north end
of the flat, is reported to have been a
hideout of the famous bandit Joaquin
Murieta. The legendary 'Battle of
Sawmill Flat' would have taken place
here.
Location: 22041 Sawmill Flat Rd, 2 mi SE
of Columbia
NO. 431
JAMESTOWN - James Woods first
discovered gold in Tuolumne County west
of this point, on Woods Creek, shortly
before the town was founded by Colonel
George James on August 8, 1848. Large
quantities of gold were recovered from
the stream. The town became known as
gateway to the Mother Lode and the
southern mines.
Location: NE corner of Main and Donovan
Sts, Jamestown
NO. 432 SPRINGFIELD - Springfield
received its name from the abundant
springs gushing from limestone boulders.
The town with its stores, shops, and
hotel built around a plaza once boasted
2,000 inhabitants. It is believed to
have been founded by Dona Josefa
Valmesada, a Mexican woman of means with
the reputation of aiding Americans in
the war with Mexico. During the town's
heyday, 150 miners' carts could be seen
on the road, hauling gold-bearing dirt
to Springfield springs for washing.
Location: At intersection of Springfield
and Horseshoe Bend Rds, 1.1 mi SW of
Columbia
NO. 438 PARROTT'S FERRY - This is the
site of the ferry crossing established
in 1860 by Thomas H. Parrott that
connected the mining towns of Tuttletown
and Vallecito. The ferry was in
operation until 1903, when the first
bridge was built. The ferryboat, of
flatbottom wooden construction, was
propelled on heavy cables anchored in a
large boulder. Still visible (1949) at
low water on the Calaveras side of the
river is the sandbag dam built to form a
small lake that stored enough water to
float the ferries in dry periods.
Location: Vista area on Calaveras side
of Columbia-Vallecito Highway Bridge,
Stanislaus River Parrott's Ferry Rd, 5
mi NW of Columbia
NO. 445 CHEROKEE - Gold was discovered
here in 1853 by the Scott brothers,
descendants of Cherokee Indians. Scars
of placer 'diggins' in every little
arroyo in Cherokee Valley, healed over
by Mother Nature, were later replaced by
a quartz mine. Present-day productive
farms in this area were once rich placer
grounds.
Location: On Confidence-Tuolumne City Rd
(P.M. 8.5), 2 mi N of Tuolumne City
NO. 446 GROVELAND - Formerly called
'First Garrote' because of the hanging
of a Mexican for stealing a horse,
Groveland was built in 1849 as shown by
dated adobe brick taken from a
partition, adobe buildings were still
standing in 1949. Gold was discovered
here in 1849, and thousands of dollars
in placer gold were taken from mines on
Garrote Creek, Big Creek, and other
diggings.
Location: On NE corner of Main (State
Hwy 120) and Back Sts, Groveland
NO. 460 SECOND GARROTE - A sizable
settlement was established at this rich
placer location in 1849 by miners
spreading east from Big Oak Flat and
Groveland. The famous hangman's tree,
part of which still stands (1950), is
reported to have been instrumental in
the death of a number of lawbreakers
during the heyday of this locality.
Location: On State Hwy 120 (P.M. 34. 7),
2.4 mi SE of Groveland