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The Sacramento History Museum's historic print shop. The museum features a working print shop, with historic printing presses that are still operational. In 2020, the museum closed due to the COVID-19 pandemic. As a way to maintain engagement, the museum set up a social media account on TikTok. [7]
Crocker Art Museum: Sacramento: Sacramento: Sacramento Valley: Art: Early California art, Old Master drawings, Asian art, international ceramics Dai Loy Museum: Locke: Sacramento: Sacramento Valley: History: Former Chinese gambling house [4] di Rosa: Napa: Napa: Napa Valley: Art: website, art galleries and outdoor sculpture on a nature preserve
Margaret Crocker was made a life director [7] and presented the E. B. Crocker Art Gallery and collection to the City of Sacramento and the California Museum Association, "in trust for the public," [4] the contents of which were valued at the time at more than $500,000. [9]
Sacramento’s vibrant food scene is epitomized by beloved establishments like Club Pheasant, which etched a remarkable history before closing in 2022. These elements reveal the capital city’s ...
Sol Collective: A Center For The Future of Sacramento’s Youth. Sacramento Press. Sol Collective Close to Buying Building. Comstock's. – In addition to the building acquisition, this contains a great deal of overview content about the organization. Word to Your Motherland at Sol Collective. Sacramento Press. Doom, no gloom. Sacramento News ...
In March 1878, The Sacramento Daily Union described the death of Hopkins — “one of Sacramento’s oldest and best friends” — as a “blow upon our city.” William Stephen Hamilton (1797-1850)
The Sacramento Bee. Before it became Sacramento’s flagship daily newspaper and was acquired by one of the largest news media publishers in the United States, The Sacramento Bee was The Daily Bee
The history of Sacramento, California, began with its founding by Samuel Brannan and John Augustus Sutter, Jr. in 1848 around an embarcadero that his father, John Sutter, Sr. constructed at the confluence of the American and Sacramento Rivers a few years prior. Sacramento was named after the Sacramento River, which forms its western border.