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Information, History of Auburn, CA
Food was prepared using salt, obtained from several sources in the areas around Lincoln, Cool and Latrobe, from springs and a plant, which was gathered during the summer months. Most game hunted was then prepared by baking, roasting, or drying. Certain berries were either gathered for trade or made into drink resembling cider. Flour was made from acorns, and could be used to make several days worth of mush or soup. It is important to note and preserve the history of the Maidu, specifically, the Nisenan group, and the major villages in the area now known as Auburn, California. Most sources do not tell this history. Web sites such as those belonging to the county and city, only tell a small part of the story. Once John Marshall discovered gold near what is now the town of Coloma, those villages were overrun within three years. John Charles Fremont, John Bidwell, and Theodore Sigard were some of the earliest settlers in the area during the early to mid 1840's. A native of France, Claude Chana, while camping next to a ravine near Old Town Auburn, on his way to Coloma, on May 16, 1846 found gold deposits in the soil. His route to the Auburn Ravine was brought by his want for avoiding the long trip to Sutter's Fort. His short-cut, and chance virgin pan of the creek, proved to be worthwhile, ending his trip to Coloma.
Because of the rough terrain and narrow trails, Auburn was the last point for wagons traveling from Sacramento. From that point on, travel was only possible using pack mules, which were used to carry supplies to miners in the remote areas. Miners soon began to prefer to spend the winters in Auburn, and land was up for grabs. The area was all but deserted during the warmer months, when water was lacking. Dedicated miners would haul soil and dirt a great distance, to find water, in order to pan for the gold. With enough work, it was possible to bring in $1,000 a day. Miners picked up pieces of land in and around Auburn through mining claims, but most was inhabited by squatters. Such claims were often referred to as "shotgun titles" and by 1850, Auburn had a population of 1,500 people. During that year, the original 27 counties were established. Auburn was originally part of Sutter County and was one of several towns striving to become the county seat. While the so-called town of Oro originally won, Auburn, rightfully, received the title in 1853. A decade later, in 1860, Auburn was incorporated, but it was short-lived. During the 1850's the town was relatively peaceful. The ground where the courthouse stands in what is now Old Town Auburn was home to bull and bear fights, popular with the miners at that time. The log jail situated next to the courthouse burned in 1855, and was later replaced by a two story brick structure. The town witnessed its first lynching (an Englishman who killed another miner) on Christmas day of 1850, after he turned himself into the sheriff. It is believed that the residents removed the prisoner from the Sheriff's possession and, with their own judgment, hanged the man in the middle of town.
Auburn was incorporated a second time on May 2, 1888. The population grew to more than 2,000 people by the turn of the century. During this time, there was a major rift among the residents because of the growth, expansion and moving as a result of the railroad. Those in the area of new growth, many of which moved from the area known as Old Town Auburn, attempted to declare their separation from Auburn and identified their area as East Auburn. The efforts were for naught as the United States Postal Service would not accept the new identity. In 1894, construction began on the Auburn Court House, which is now a museum, located on the corner of Maple Street and Lincoln Way. It was completed in 1898. The building is a cornerstone of the downtown area, with beautiful Classic Revival and Renaissance Revival architecture, consisting of bracketed cornice and dome. It is one of four remaining courthouses in northern and central California that actually kept the majority of its ornamentation. Just after the turn of the century, Pacific Portland Cement Company found itself in need of a way to connect their limestone quarry to the Southern Pacific line in Auburn. Located four miles east of Auburn, actually in El Dorado County, Mountain Quarry produced material that would later be used to manufacture cement and refine sugar. In 1912, they completed construction the No Hands Bridge, originally known as the Mountain Quarry Cement Bridge, for obvious reasons. At the time, this bridge was the longest span of a concrete constructed bridge in the world, proving the strength of concrete and quality of engineering. It went out of service in the 1940's, but is still used as part of the Western States Pioneer Express Recreation Trail.
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