
On
March 27, 1850, Dr. Thaddeus Hildreth, with his brother George and a handful of
other prospectors, made camp near here. They found gold, and miners streamed in
to share the wealth. Before the month was out Hildreth's Diggings, a tent and
shanty town housing several thousand miners, was created. Its original name was
soon changed to American Camp and then, because that sounded too temporary, to
Columbia.
The first year was almost the last for the new town. Water,
indispensable for mining placer gold, was in short supply. The area had no natural
streams, only gulches carrying runoff from rain and snow. So, in June 1851, the
Tuolumne County Water Company was formed to bring water into the area. The Tuolumne
County Water Company's rates were high, so the miners formed the Columbia and
Stanislaus River Water Company in 1854 to build a 60 mile aqueduct to supply the
mines. The new system was not fully completed until 1858, when the more easily
worked gold deposits had been exhausted and the miners were beginning to move
out. Because of this, the Tuolumne County Water Company managed to acquire the
new system, which cost over $1 million, for under $150,000.
Hydraulic
mining may not have happened at Columbia. Using monitors, or nozzles, to shoot
water at high pressure, where miners blasted loose the gold bearing gravels and
washed out the gold would have been difficult here. It is possible that dams and
methods for forced erosion did the work around Columbia proper. The main parking
lot and other depressed areas were possibly 30 feet or more below the earth's
surface before the miners arrived.
Meanwhile, Columbia's tents and shanties
were being replaced with more permanent structures. Streets were laid out, and
by the end of 1852 more than 150 stores, shops, saloons, and other enterprises
were going strong. There was also a church, a Sunday School, a Masonic Lodge,
and even a branch of the Sons of Temperance.
Wood had been the main construction
material used in these buildings. In 1854, fire, the scourge of many mining towns,
destroyed everything in Columbia's central business district except the one brick
building. When the town was rebuilt, locally produced red brick was used for thirty
buildings. Iron doors and window shutters, and bricks laid on the buildings' roofs
were additional fire protection.
In July of 1855 the New England Water
Company provided piped water for fire fighting and domestic use. Seven cisterns,
each with a capacity of about fourteen thousand gallons, were built under the
streets. Some still store water for fire fighting. The early pipes were used until
1950, when the state installed a new water system.
In 1857 a second fire
destroyed all the frame structures in the 13-block business district, as well
as several of the brick buildings. Rebuilding began immediately, and the citizens
decided to form a volunteer fire department. In 1859 the fire department acquired
the Papeete, a small, fancifully decorated fire engine. Its arrival in Columbia
was the occasion for much fanfare and celebration. A year later the Monumental,
a larger hand pumper, was added.
After 1860, when the easily mined placer
gold was gone, the town began to decline. In the 1870s and '80s many of the vacated
buildings were torn down and their sites mined, and Columbia's population dropped
from a peak of perhaps six thousand to about five hundred.
The town
continued to survive, but not prosper for many years. During the 1920's ideas
began to arise concerning the inclusion of Columbia into the new and growing California
State Park System.
A very serious but ultimately unsuccessful attempt
to make Columbia a State Park occurred in 1934. By this time the town was quite
run down. Many of the structures had become public nuisances and were falling
down. The Legislature passed a bill in 1945 appropriating $50,000 to be matched
by public subscription for the acquisition of lands and buildings in the old business
section of Columbia. Thus, was Columbia State Historic Park born.
Columbia
was only one of hundreds of settlements that sprang up during the exciting years
when the cry of "Gold!" brought Argonauts from all over the world to
seek their fortunes in California. Located in the heart of the Mother Lode, a
mile wide network of gold bearing quartz that extends 120 miles along the western
edge of the Sierra Nevada, from Mariposa northward to Georgetown, Columbia yielded
$87 million in gold at 1860's prices.
Unlike many of these settlements,
which have long since succumbed to fire, vandalism, and the elements, Columbia
has never been completely deserted. Through the years it has retained much the
same appearance as when miners thronged its streets. So, recognizing an opportunity
to preserve a typical Gold Rush town as an example of one of the most colorful
eras in American history, the State Legislature in 1945 created Columbia State
Historic Park.
For a detailed "Time Line" of Columbia's history,
Click Here.
Other
pages of interest on our Website...
"Mrs.
Columbia" Geraldine McConnell - In Memory
Where is Columbia California? (Map & Directions)
Columbia
State Park Streaming Video
Movies
Filmed in Columbia
Historic
Buildings | School Living History Program |
Columbia Docents
Friends
of Columbia SHP | Columbia Diggins 1852
Contact
Us | Columbia Airport Information
July 4th 2004 Parade |Disclaimer
|Misc. Photos
Map
of Downtown Columbia
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