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Volume 056-4 - October 2002 (6 pages)

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Page: of 6

The Holbrooke Hotel
by Bedford Lampkin
—
Te HOLBROOKE HOTEL HAD ITS BEGINNINGS AS
the Exchange Hotel. Prior to that there were buildings
that would be incorporated into the hotel: the bar and the
Gold Exchange building. However, let’s start with what it
looks like today.
TODAY
The Holbrooke Hotel fronts onto West Main Street in
Grass Valley. The entrance is flanked by two iron doors that
served in the past as fire retardants. As we enter, there is a
spacious reception lobby with the venerable bar to the right
behind glass doors. To the left is a small reading room.
Next is the high registration desk and just behind that is the
large dining room with several small meeting rooms off to
the side. Outside the rear of the main building is a patio for
informal dining in pleasant weather.
Down the stairs is the Iron Door, a room which is large
and appropriate to meetings or entertainment.
The hotel is a two-story building with the guest rooms on
the second floor. There are seventeen rooms in the main
building. Behind the hotel and separated by perhaps forty
yards is the Purcell House, which is an annex to the hotel. It
also is a two-story building and contains ten guest rooms.
_~, nthe lobby there is a locked glass case containing a
guest registry book opened to the date of April 25, 1898.
On that date the names of two ex-Presidents, Benjamin
Harrison and Grover Cleveland, and two well-known boxers, James Corbett and Bob Fitzsimmons, appear. Strangely
enough, the presence of these notables was not noted in the
local papers at the time, which makes one think that perhaps it was a prank, or, as the United States declared war on
(~ —__
Nevada Gounty Historical Society
Bulletin
VOLUME 56 NUMBER 4 OCTOBER 2002
Spain that day, the news got lost in the shuffle.
Even with modern appointments in each room, there is a
scattering of antiques, and the hotel offers a charming mid19th-century ambience.
BEGINNINGS
Let us start with a reference in Thompson and West’s
1880 History of Nevada County. On page 67 is the first
mention of a hotel on the location of the present Holbrooke
Hotel as follows:
About five o’clock P.M., August 15, 1862, flames
burst out of the Center Market, on the north side of
Main street and rapidly spread to the adjoining buildings, whose dry and seasoned timbers but gave them
added fierceness. Protection Hose Co. quickly repaired
to the scene, and with the assistance of many volunteers
commenced the struggle, which was terminated in their
favor only after long and tireless exertions. The Exchange Hotel, a new building but partly finished, was on
fire several times, but was saved from destruction.
In the same reference there is mention of a Mr. William K.
Spencer who “opened a stationery store where the Holbrooke now stands, and was burned out in 1855.”
The Holbrooke Hotel in 2002. (Author’s photo.)
(Right) 1853 map of downtown Grass Valley shows Golden
Gate Saloon and neighboring buildings. (Calif. State Library)
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