Placerville Newswire
  • Crime
  • Culture
No Result
View All Result
Get Started
Placerville NewsWire
  • Crime
  • Culture
No Result
View All Result
Placerville NewsWire
No Result
View All Result

Placerville Main Street in the 1920s: When Horse Wagons Met Automobiles on America’s First Transcontinental Highway

A rare glimpse of historic Placerville captures the exact moment when the Gold Rush town transformed into a modern Sierra gateway along the famed Lincoln Highway.

Cris Alarcon by Cris Alarcon
March 8, 2026
in History
422 4
0
Placerville Main Street in the 1920s: When Horse Wagons Met Automobiles on America’s First Transcontinental Highway

Circa 1920s Image provided by James Fischer

Share on FacebookShare on TwitterWhatsappReddit

You might also like

Smith Flat’s Living Memory: Joe Kola’s Oral History of Mines, Wagons and the Smith Flat House

Smith Flat’s Living Memory: Joe Kola’s Oral History of Mines, Wagons and the Smith Flat House

February 5, 2026
From Gold Rush Centennial to Bicentennial Dreams: A Coloma Witness Remembers 1948

From Gold Rush Centennial to Bicentennial Dreams: A Coloma Witness Remembers 1948

January 26, 2026

By Cris Alarcon, InEDC Writer. March 8, 2026

Sit back friend and let me take you on a ride, and mind the dust of the road a moment. What you behold in this old photograph is Main Street of Placerville as it appeared in the years just after the Great War—when the old frontier town was shaking hands with the modern age.


A Street Between Two Worlds

In those days—somewhere around the 1910s to the middle 1920s—a traveler rolling down Main Street might witness a curious sight. A wagon drawn by a patient team of horses could be clopping along one moment, and the next moment an automobile—snorting like a brass contraption escaped from a machine shop—would rattle past in a cloud of dust and gasoline fumes.

Placerville had known many names before settling on its present dignity. In the rough-and-tumble years of the Gold Rush it was called Dry Diggins, and later the more infamous Hangtown, owing to the swift justice meted out beneath a certain oak limb. But by the 1920s the town had softened its reputation and matured into a respectable Sierra foothill community.

Still, the old bones of the Gold Rush were everywhere.


The Heart of Town: The Bell Tower

At the center of life stood the proud Placerville Bell Tower, which locals simply called the Plaza. It was the town’s meeting place, bulletin board, and celebration ground all rolled into one.

On summer evenings, a fellow might hear a brass band tuning up beneath the tower while couples gathered for dancing on a wooden floor laid out by the chamber of commerce. During the famous Days of ’49 celebrations, the plaza became a lively carnival of whiskered prospectors, brass bands, and parade wagons rolling by in grand procession.

Many a gentleman spent six months cultivating an impressive beard in hopes of winning the Whiskerino contest, where the champion whiskers could earn a tidy purse of thirty dollars—a respectable sum in those days.


Main Street: The Highway of the Nation

Folks today might think of Main Street as a quiet historic district, but in the 1920s it was the principal highway through the Sierra.

Before federal numbering arrived, the road through town was part of the grand Lincoln Highway, the nation’s first automobile road stretching from the Atlantic to the Pacific. Then in 1926 the government rechristened the route as U.S. Route 50.

That meant every motorist bound for Lake Tahoe or the Nevada desert had to roll right through this narrow canyon of storefronts.

And narrow it was.

One sign posted along the street warned drivers in bold lettering:

“DONT STOP IN NARROW PART OF STREET – KEEP TO THE RIGHT.”

Good advice, considering wagons, pedestrians, and motorcars were all vying for the same strip of road.


Commerce Along the Boardwalk

Look close at the storefronts and you’ll spy the familiar sign of Rexall drugs hanging above the sidewalk. Drugstores like this were more than mere places to fetch medicine. They were gathering spots where townsfolk came for soda water, gossip, and the latest news from Sacramento.

Just down the way stood the stately Cary House Hotel, already famous among travelers. By 1926 the establishment had installed an electric elevator—an impressive marvel for a mountain town—and had temporarily taken on the fashionable name Raffles Hotel.

Nearby businesses bustled with the needs of a changing economy. As the gold mines quieted, orchards, vineyards, and lumber camps took their place. Timber from the high country poured down the slopes thanks to the mighty Michigan-California Lumber Company, whose aerial tramway carried immense loads of lumber across the American River canyon.

Meanwhile the California Door Company turned Sierra timber into doors, windows, and wooden packing boxes for the valley’s fruit growers.


The Older Stories Beneath the Street

Even as new automobiles hummed along the roadway, Placerville kept reminders of its older past.

Visitors often sought out the curious establishment known as Hangman’s Tree, whose cellar preserved the stump of the original hanging tree from frontier days. It made for a popular photograph among motorists eager to prove they had passed through the legendary town of Hangtown.

And tucked along Main Street stood the old stone building now known as the Fountain & Tallman Museum, originally built in 1852 as a soda works. By the 1920s it remained a landmark of the town’s earliest prosperity.


Sirens of the Modern Age

Placerville was not content to live entirely in memory. Between 1920 and 1921, the city installed a system of electric sirens—modern marvels intended to warn citizens of fires or emergencies. One was placed near the high school, another in Upper Town on Broadway, and a third atop the firehouse of Confidence Engine Company No. 1.

Thus the quiet toll of the bell tower now shared the skyline with the shriek of electricity—an audible reminder that the twentieth century had arrived.


A Town Standing at the Crossroads

So this photograph captures more than storefronts and wagons. It shows a town balanced neatly between two centuries.

Placerville in the 1920s was no longer the lawless mining camp of Hangtown, yet neither had it lost its frontier spirit. The horses had not quite disappeared, the automobiles had not quite taken command, and the old wooden balconies still cast their shade over travelers passing west toward Sacramento or east toward the high Sierra.

In that brief moment of history, Main Street was not merely a street—it was the road of America itself.

And every traveler who passed beneath the Bell Tower carried away a little dust of Hangtown on their boots.

Cris Alarcon

Cris Alarcon

Former Member: Executive Board of Directors, Treasurer, Boys & Girl Club of El Dorado County Western Slope. - Former Member: Board of Directors, Treasurer, Food Bank of El Dorado County. - Opening Team Dealer at Red Hawk Casino - Retried EDC Elections Department Inspector. - Youngest Charter Member of the Hangtown Kennel Club. - Political Strategist and Campaign Manager.

Related Stories

Smith Flat’s Living Memory: Joe Kola’s Oral History of Mines, Wagons and the Smith Flat House

Smith Flat’s Living Memory: Joe Kola’s Oral History of Mines, Wagons and the Smith Flat House

by Cris Alarcon
February 5, 2026

A bicentennial-era interview with Joe Kola captures Smith Flat’s pioneer roots — mines, wagon roads, the Smith Flat House and...

From Gold Rush Centennial to Bicentennial Dreams: A Coloma Witness Remembers 1948

From Gold Rush Centennial to Bicentennial Dreams: A Coloma Witness Remembers 1948

by Cris Alarcon
January 26, 2026

Seventy-eight years ago, a toddler stood at Sutter’s Mill during the Gold Discovery Centennial. Today, he hopes to return for...

Water, Wood and the Gold Rush: How Flumes and Surveyors Shaped El Dorado County in 1855

Water, Wood and the Gold Rush: How Flumes and Surveyors Shaped El Dorado County in 1855

by Cris Alarcon
January 6, 2026

Long before dams and canals, wooden flumes carried water—and wealth—across El Dorado County. Here’s how they worked in 1855

Coloma Gears Up to Mark Historic Gold Discovery with Annual Gold Discovery Day

Coloma Gears Up to Mark Historic Gold Discovery with Annual Gold Discovery Day

by Cris Alarcon
January 5, 2026

Gold Discovery Day returns to Marshall Gold Discovery State Historic Park on Jan. 24 with gold panning, living history, demonstrations,...

Recommended

EDSO Eagle

EDC Arrests and Activity on Dec 21 2024

December 22, 2024
Iconic Lone Eagle Grille Closes After 30 Years at Hyatt Regency Lake Tahoe

Iconic Lone Eagle Grille Closes After 30 Years at Hyatt Regency Lake Tahoe

February 27, 2025

Popular Story

  • El Dorado Supervisors Advance Pay Raise as Sheriff’s Budget Trimmed by $4 Million

    El Dorado Supervisors Advance Pay Raise as Sheriff’s Budget Trimmed by $4 Million

    910 shares
    Share 364 Tweet 228
  • High-Speed Chase from Sacramento to South Lake Tahoe Ends with Arrest in Meyers

    758 shares
    Share 303 Tweet 190
  • Attempted Murder in Meyers Raises Questions About 5150 Holds and Mental Health Safety Net

    848 shares
    Share 339 Tweet 212
  • Placerville Man Pleads Guilty in Multi-State Communications Tower Theft Conspiracy

    683 shares
    Share 273 Tweet 171
  • El Dorado County Arrest Blotter: DUI Busts, Highway 50 Chase and Felony Threats Lead March 5 Bookings

    660 shares
    Share 264 Tweet 165
  • Buy JNews
  • Support Forum
  • Pre-sale Question
  • Contact Us

© 2023 Placerville Newswire Commentary is produced by the Placerville Newswire, a private service focusing on Placerville Local Area issues. All conclusions expressed in this publication should be understood to be solely those of the author(s). You may find us in El Dorado County Placerville, CA 95667

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms below to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Landing Page
  • Buy JNews
  • Support Forum
  • Pre-sale Question
  • Contact Us

© 2023 Placerville Newswire Commentary is produced by the Placerville Newswire, a private service focusing on Placerville Local Area issues. All conclusions expressed in this publication should be understood to be solely those of the author(s). You may find us in El Dorado County Placerville, CA 95667