Capture Calif

Capture California

What is a YOLT? Well, you may have heard the term YOLO. Gary and Sherri think we can live again, not as James Bond, but as being reborn. Consequently, we are having fun in our life, after all, You Only Live Twice.

Showing posts with label Sonora. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sonora. Show all posts

Thursday, September 27, 2012

Adventure 051, Site 134 – Sugg House


Capture California, the Game-2012
Adventure: 051, Site 134 – Sugg House
National Registry ID: 84001210


Team: Thing One, Thing Two
Date:  September 27, 2012
Location:
Latitude: 37° 59.016′ N
Longitude: 120° 22.881′ W
Address: 37 Theall Street, Sonora CA 95370

Description:
Date Built: 1857



Thing One and Thing Two were looking for a parking place when we went down Theall Stret. Found a parking lot when Thing Two said, look over there! Sure enough it was this oldish looking brick house. When we read the plaque, we thought oh wow, there is history here. As you can see by the inscription, William Sugg and his whole family were remarkable. It was really good to have found this out and a little more history in our backyard.



Inscription from HMDB:
In 1857, William Sugg, a freed slave, built this three-room brick-faced adobe house. The adobe blocks were made in the front yard. The walls are up to 18 inches thick. A wood frame kitchen was at the rear. As Sugg’s family eventually grew to 11 children, it became necessary to construct the wood frame addition. It was completed in the 1880’s. The rooms were occasionally rented out as “overflow” to the City Hotel. State law changes, in 1921, requiring hot and cold running water in every commercial room, ended that 41-year practice, the family not being able to afford the expense. The home was occupied by the Sugg family for 125 years. Grandson, Vernon Sugg McDonald, was the last to live in the house.
Placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1984.




From HMDB:
Thousands of the miners who came during the Gold Rush were black, including about 500 in Tuolumne County. Often, miners came as slaves with their master along with an agreement that they would be freed after a certain amount of time mining gold, or found a certain amount of gold.

One black who came about 1850 with his master was William Sugg, who bought his freedom for a dollar in 1854. He established a business repairing and refurbishing leather harnesses and began building in 1857 what still stands as the Sugg House, a block east of Washington Street. Sugg was not wealthy and he made his own adobe bricks and made a roof from cut-up 5-gallon tin cans nailed to rafters.

William Sugg's wife, Mary Snelling, traveled across the country in a wagon train, ending up near what is now Merced. Mary, twelve years old, was the daughter of a white man and a black woman and had light black skin. Many of the Indians they encountered during the wagon trip saw Mary and believed that she was a kidnapped Indian and wanted to rescue her. Whenever Indians came near, she hid.
Source: Sonora Visitor - http://www.sonoravisitor.com/t/historyt.php?localarea=history&morechoices=y




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Overall Landmark References:

Adventure 051, Site 135-City Hotel


Capture California, the Game-2012
Adventure: 051, Site 135-City Hotel
National Registry ID: 1983001248


Team: Thing One, Thing Two
Date:  September 27, 2012
Location:
Latitude: N 37° 59.010
Longitude: W 120° 22.915
Address: 145 S. Washington St., Sonora, CA USA


Description:
Date Built: 1852



You can envision the miners hanging around the front of the building, but none, except those who struck it rich probably slept here. Like the out-of-luck miner, we move on as well.



From the Waymarking site:
Alonzo Green, Sonora mayor in 1852 and 1853, and James Lane were associated in the building of the City Hotel in 1852. Constructed of slate, adobe, and red brick, it is one of the oldest buildings in Sonora. In the 1860s, it was purchased by Olivier Bemis. The street level part of the hotel had a large sitting room, bar and restaurant, with rooms upstairs. In the early 1900s, the hotel ran a horse pulled bus daily to meet the trains for the convenience of prospective guests."



From the NHRP:
The significance of the City Hotel in Sonora lies in its method of construction and its importance"in the community life of Tuolumne County. In addition, the City Hotel survives today, 130 years after it was built, one of Sonora's oldest buildings and certainly an example of a very early building still standing in California'-s Gold Rush country



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Overall Landmark References:

Adventure 051, Site 132 – Tuttletown

Capture California, the Game-2012
Adventure: 051, Site 132 – Tuttletown
California Landmark Number: 124


Team: Thing One, Thing Two
Date:  September 27, 2012
Location:
Latitude: 37° 59.45′ N
Longitude: 120° 27.71′ W
Address: approximately 7 miles north of Sonora on Highway 49

Description:

It is hard for Thing One to get excited about this place. Apparently the hotel which was here burnt down and now the standing establishment is a min-mart/bar combination. So we take our picture and move on.


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

Inscription from HMDB:
Early day stopping place for men and mounts. Named for Judge Anson A. H. Tuttle who built first log cabin here in 1848. Stones used in this base from 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.



From HMDB:
Judging from historical photographs, the Tuttletown Hotel was a fairly impressive looking building for its day. Regrettably, based on discussion with current Tuttletown citizens, the Hotel burned down around the time this marker was erected. The site of the former hotel, about the only land flat enough to build on, is now occupied by the Red Barn, a combination bar and mini-grocery store






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Overall Landmark References:

Adventure 051, Site 133 – Shaw Flat

Capture California, the Game-2012
Adventure: 051, Site 133 – Shaw Flat
California Landmark Number: 134


Team: Thing One, Thing Two
Date:  September 27, 2012
Location:
Latitude: 38° 0.226′ N
Longitude: 120° 24.088′ W
Address: SE corner of Shaw's Flat Rd and Mt Brow Rd, 2.6 mi SW of Columbia

Description:

This is part of the Mark Twain-Bret Harte Trail which goes through parts of the Gold Country wheren Twain and Harte rambled. Shaw Flats is a little ways off of Highway 49. But with the miner's bell, it does leave something in the memory which other monuments do not. We continue down Shaw Flat Road into Sonora.



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



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