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CALIFORNIA
LEGENDS
Discover Sacramento |
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By
Priscilla Faith Rhodes
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Sacramento,
California's
beautiful capital city at the junction of the American and
Sacramento
Rivers is disarmingly deceptive. Tranquil boulevards lined with gracious
Victorian homes shaded by leafy old trees, charming neighborhoods, and
river parks mask a mercantile metropolis and political hotbed that thrive
below the surface. The capital city of the largest state in the union, by
population, and the third largest state by area,
Sacramento
is like a sweet-tempered, smartly dressed matriarch of undisclosed wealth
and power.
Things to See in
Sacramento:
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State Capitol
The
California
State Capitol was constructed and furnished between 1860 and 1874
during a period of US cultural history known as the American
Renaissance, a time when artists, artisans, architects, craftsmen, and
philanthropists set out to equal or exceed the greatest achievements
of preceding civilizations. Its pristine white architecture looks like
something straight out of the Holy Roman Empire. Eight Roman
Corinthian columns on the front portico lead the eye to the elaborate
rooftop sculptures, beyond the shining copper dome punctuated by a
glittering 30 inch gold ball set against a clear,
Sacramento
sky. Inside, are beautifully restored massive wooden doors,
magnificently carved stairways and a fabulous Carrara marble statue of
Queen Isabella and Christopher Columbus. Other features include a
circular room of murals depicting early
California
life, and furnished rooms of the restored turn-of-the-century
Governor's office, Secretary of State's office, and Treasurer's
office. The Secretary of State's office has old files stacked up and
tied in red ribbon, showing the origins of the governmental term "Red
Tape." The Senate is decorated in red as in the British House of
Lords, while the Assembly is green, as in the House of Commons, and
both chairs for each head of the chambers are symbolic of the British
monarchy—themes borrowed from the British Parliament from which the
United States bases its two-house system.
Tip: Grab a meal at
the statehouse restaurant located in the basement. Warm red brick
walls, arches and the cool cellar atmosphere give the ambience of an
Italian grotto. Note the walls and arches made from old bricks
retrieved during the massive 1970s restoration when the building was,
as the tour guide says, "carved out like a melon," then recreated to
its original beauty, based on old photos and furnishings found in
storage. Notice the old pictures on the restaurant walls, particularly
the photo of the "Insectuary," a building dedicated to "breeding
beneficial insects" affectionately called the "Bug House."
Check it out . . .
Take a walk through the 40-acre Capitol Park and enjoy the sweet scent
of rose gardens and over 400 exotic plants and trees from all over the
world. Two intriguing 20th century war memorials are also on the
grounds. The Vietnam War Memorial has many sculptures of men in
battle, and a rare sculpture of POW's. The plaque reads: "To the
memory of those who died or remain missing."
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Old Sacramento
Old Sacramento is an old Western
town encompassing ten blocks with two main streets flanked by wood plank
sidewalks. Plenty of side streets loaded with two and three-story
picturesque buildings from the Gold Rush days make a fascinating walking
tour. Listen to echo of shoe heels clapping along the wooden sidewalks, as
pedestrians stroll past shops and restaurants that once housed rowdy
barrooms and gambling halls during the heyday of the 1849 Gold Rush. Today
the smell of grilled steaks and homemade candy fills the air, competing
with the sounds of nearby trains and laughing children carrying gigantic
pinwheel lollipops of rainbow hues. The restored 1876 Central Pacific
Railroad Station is in the center of town and the
California
State Railroad Museum nearby houses more than 20 restored locomotives and
passenger cars.
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Downtown Plaza
A pedestrian tunnel
from Old
Sacramento leads visitors to Downtown Plaza, a modern mall complex
with an open-air market, a megaplex cinema, specialty stores, clothing
stores, ethnic restaurants and minstrels from all walks of life:
peripatetic musicians, jugglers, mimes and other street performers
entertain shoppers and diners. A recently restored Art Deco vaudeville
theater several blocks east shows independent and foreign films.
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Sutter’s Fort State Park
In
1839 while
California was still under the Mexican flag, Captain John Sutter, a
Swiss immigrant received a 50,000-acre land grant at the confluence of the
Sacramento
and American Rivers. Nine years later, while building a sawmill, Sutter's
partner, John Marshall, saw gold shining through the river. Walking back
to his workmen, he remarked, in possibly the understatement of the
century, "Boys, I believe I found a gold mine." But when Sutter heard the
report, he feared ruination for his mill businesses. His fears were not
unfounded. The scent of easy money attracted thousands of desperate people
who flooded the new American territory, launching one of the greatest gold
rushes in history, and establishing a new city,
Sacramento,
to serve the influx of prospectors. As Sutter suspected, mill workers
deserted their jobs in search of gold, while invading gold seekers tore
Sutter's fences to build ramshackle housing on his land. Both Sutter and
Marshall died penniless. Sutter later wrote, "By the sudden discovery of
gold, all my great plans were destroyed . . . I should have been the
richest citizen on the Pacific . . . Instead of being rich, I am ruined."
The state park is the
site of the first white settlement in this region. An 1839 adobe
structure, faithfully reconstructed, now houses mementoes from the pioneer
period and the Gold Rush era. (The original gold nugget Marshall found is
now at the Smithsonian Museum in Washington, D.C.)
State Tourist
Information: (800) 862-2543
Added March, 2005
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About The Author:
Priscilla Faith Rhodes is the author of DISCOVER AMERICA
DIARIES: 50 STATES, 50 STATES OF MIND, and co-publisher of the
award-winning website, Postcards from America,
http://www.postcardsfrom.com,
a edu-travel site that helps students and families learn about America
through postcards.
Article provided by:
Ezine Articles

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Sacramento
Lodging
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Also See:
History of
Wine Country in the Sierra Foothills
Old
Sacramento - Walking on History
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