3586

Rich Bar/Taylorsville Checks

Currency:USD Category:Collectibles / Western Americana Start Price:35.00 USD Estimated At:70.00 - 100.00 USD
Rich Bar/Taylorsville Checks
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Two checks drawn by the Treasurer of Sincerity Lodge, No 132, F. & A. M. Both checks are signed by David Evey. Sincerity Lodge truly started in the Old West. The lodge was started by a group of men who had built a tavern in the Gold Rush town of Rich Bar. Their wives had been less than enthused, and quickly burned the place to the ground. Sincereity Lodge moved to Taylorsville in 1860. Rich Bar, California State Landmark No.337. Twenty miles west of Quincy at a large turnout on State Highway 70. Gold was first found here in July 1850 by miners coming over the mountains from the Yuba Diggins, and there was much production during early 1850s along this east branch of the Feather River's north fork. By the end of the summer, gold-hungry miners descended into the canyon to seek their wealth in gold. Some were lucky enough to become instantly wealthy with finds of $3,000 in gold chunks within a few days. Gold was valued at $16 per ounce at the time. In a year’s time, the gold taken from Rich Bar was valued between $2 and $4 million. The boom years lasted until mid-1853. However, nearly $9 million of gold was discovered between 1850 and 1890 when the mining finally stopped. 'Dame Shirley' (Louise Amelia Knapp Smith Clappe) wrote her "Letters From the California Mines", one of the classics of the gold rush from Rich Bar.









City: Rich Bar
State: California,
Date: 1863/1865

FHWAC#: 24960