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Volume 059-4 - October 2005 (8 pages)

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Page: of 8

NCHS Bulletin October 2005
by him for five dollars, and proved to be worth one
hundred. The Miners in the neighborhood, and many from
Deer Creek, now crowded to this hill. Claims were staked
off, and men began to pound the quartz in mortars. One
company took out about twenty thousand dollars during the
winter and spring.
Grass Valley claims the first successful quartz mills in
California. The first quartz mining was on Gold Hill, the
next on Massachusetts Hill where the first claims were
taken up in December 1850 by A. Delano generally known
as “Old Block”.. .
On the 13'" of September 1855, Grass Valley was visited
by one of the most destructive conflagrations in the annals
of the State. After luckily escaping for several years, in an
hour and a half the whole town was destroyed. Thirty acres,
covered with nearly 300 buildings, were covered with
ashes. The fire originated in the United States Hotel, and
destroyed property to the value of about $350,000. . .
[GRASS VALLEY LIFE]. On the Fourth of July [1863] I
had the honor of reading the Declaration of Independence
at the public celebration at Hamilton Hall. The celebration
was a very creditable affair for a mountain town.
On the afternoon of the following day . officiated at the
funeral of Mr. Hooper, driver of the Grass Valley and
Nevada Stage. He was thrown from his seat and the wheels
of the stage passed over his prostrate body. He lingered
only two or three hours after the accident. Just before he
died I called on him and tried to impress his mind with a
sense of the importance of making preparation for eternity.
At his bedside I offered prayer, but as soon as the prayer
was ended, his soul passed away from earth. He gave me no
reason to believe that he was prepared to meet his God. His
funeral was attended by the Firemen, the Military and Citizens generally. It was said to be the most imposing funeral
demonstration ever made in Grass Valley.
[The Putnams left Grass Valley in February 1866. After
another stay in San Francisco, they returned to Massachusetts. There the Rev. Putnam served for several years as
rector of St. Mary Episcopal Church in Newton Lower Falls
on the Charles River, west of Boston. He concluded his
career in the Diocese of New York.
For a more complete account of the lives of the Rev. and
Maria Putnam, see Crosses in a Gold Field: A 150-Year
History of Emmanuel Episcopal Church and Grass Valley
(2005). The book tells the history of the town through the
lives of the men and women who were part of the Episcopal
Church. It includes the stories of a wide range of men and
women who made significant contributions. The large format book, 148 pages with 80 photographs, is available at
The Book Seller, 107 Mill Street, Grass Valley.
For information on the California Historical Society, call
(415) 357-1848 or see their website: www.californiahistoricalsoc.org.
Hamilton Hall was an important theater and meeting
place in Grass Valley in the 1860s and 1870s.
NEVADA COUNTY HISTORICAL SOCIETY
EXECUTIVE BOARD
President Priscilla van der Pas
Vice President Bedford Lampkin
Executive Secretary Pat Chesnut
Treasurer Glenn Straight
DIRECTORS
Firehouse Museum
North Star Mining Museum
Searls Historical Library
Genealogical Research
NCNGRR’/Transportation Museum Division
Wally Hagaman
Glenn Jones
Ed Tyson
Maria Brower
John Christensen
NCHS Books Division Desmond Gallagher
Bulletin Editor Maria Brower
Newsletter Editor Pat Chesnut
Membership
Director-at-Large
Director-at-Large
Director-at-Large
Marilyn Dittmann
Al Dittmann
Brita Rozynski
William Durbrow
8
P.O. Box 1300, Nevada City, CA 95959
Searls Historical Library
214 Church Street, Nevada City (530) 265-5910
Open 1-4 pm daily (except Sundays and holidays)
Firehouse Museum
214 Main Street, Nevada City (530) 265-5468
Summer: Open 11 am to 4 pm daily (except holidays)
Winter: Friday-Sunday 12:00 noon to 3 pm (except holidays)
North Star Mining Museum
Allison Ranch Road, Grass Valley (530) 273-4255
Open May . to October 15 from 10 am to 5 pm
Railroad and Transportation Museum
5 Kidder Court, Nevada City (530) 470-0902
May . to Oct. 31: Open Friday thru Tuesday 10 am to 4 pm
Nov. . to April 30: Open Tuesday and Saturday 10 am to 4 pm”
NCHS Books
511 North Pine St., Nevada City 95959 (530) 265-4312