Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The fire roared through the building on Sutter Creek’s historic Main Street early Friday. Early morning blaze guts historic Sutter Creek restaurant. No injuries reported
On Monday, Oct. 7, the owners of Old Town’s Mort’s Martini Bar will open Sheet’s Creek in the space, which from 2016 until 2022 had been home to Better Homes and Gardens Real Estate Alliance ...
Sutter Creek (formerly spelled Sutter's Creek and Suttercreek; [11] formerly named Suttersville [12]) is a city in Amador County, California, United States. The population was 2,501 at the 2010 census, up from 2,303 at the 2000 census.
The Sutter Club is a historic building located in Sacramento, California constructed in 1930 in a Spanish Eclectic style. [2] It was recognized as a Sacramento landmark in 1982. [ 2 ] Designed by local architecture firms Dean & Dean and Starks & Flanders, it draws from Mediterranean and Spanish architectural styles. [ 2 ]
The Firehouse Restaurant (1853), redbrick firehouse; (1960) restaurant; Old Sacramento Schoolhouse Museum [9] Eagle Theatre - only survived from 1849 to 1850 but has been reconstructed; Sam Brannan House built in 1853, was also Jones Hotel and Vernon House. Booth Company Building also California Governor Booth's mansion. What Cheer House
Sutter Creek is a stream in the U.S. state of California. [1] The 32-mile (51 km) long stream is a tributary to Dry Creek. [1] Sutter Creek was named after John Sutter, a prospector who arrived to the area in 1848, and who was a central figure to the California Gold Rush. [2]
Marshall traveled the road to tell of his gold find to Captain John A. Sutter. During the 49ers gold rush thousands of miners traveled the road heading out to look for gold and claims. [ 10 ] [ 11 ] California's first stage line, California Stage Company, traveled the road starting in 1849, the line was founded by James E. Birch . [ 12 ]
The original 75-seat restaurant occupies an unobtrusive windowless mid-block storefront on Sutter Street near Jones Street in the Tendernob neighborhood of San Francisco. The restaurant first opened in the late 1950s. Maurice Rouas, then Maître d', purchased the restaurant from its original owner in 1970 and remained active as of 2012.