I take route 99 north towards Sacramento stopping at Lodi and Gait to explore a bit. Parts of this road seems to be the original route of the coast to coast Lincoln Highway. Lodi had a nice clean downtown area lined with shops and restaurants. They have an interesting arch next to the train tracks which remains an operating rail line. Across the tracks seems to be the bad side of town with a hobo jungle looking group hanging on the sidewalk. Lodi is surrounded by many wineries and as you travel out of town you pass miles and vineyards.
The Round house tavern could tell some stories |
The town of Gait wasn’t of much interest except for the Lincoln Highway exhibit in downtown.
The traffic and congestion increases as you approach Sacramento and I stop to finalize where I want to go. I decide first priority is to visit the Capital Building which is also a California Museum. My GPS takes me to the Capital without an issue but then the hard part, finding a parking spot. I make about three circuits around the Capital complex thinking I was going to have to widen my circle and just hike to the Capital. As I was rounding the corner I had a lucky break, very unusual, with a car pulling out of a parking spot with no one else waiting right in front of me. It was a legal spot, parking meter of course, but no time limit and only a few blocks from the Capital.
I went straight to the Capital and did a free self guided tour, the museum was mostly promotional exhibits for every California County and basic information about the Capital building construction, renovations over the years and restoration. The Capital wasn’t actually as great as I thought it would be, I’ve been to several that are more amazing inside. The exterior setting is really impressive with a wide open mall area in front which leads to the harbor area.
Looking up into the rotunda |
Statue of Queen Isabella agreeing to finance the voyage of Columbus |
Emblem in the floor celebrating native culture |
Floor tiles and color combination made for a very light and colorful look |
One of the government chambers |
Close up view of Capital |
Detail shot of sculpture |
After leaving the capital I wandered the streets looking for interesting buildings, finding lots of great stuff, but it was so hot and humid. Hot and humid is something I’m not accustomed to and I was wilting.
A very flag waving veterans monument |
A great thought; Bring me men to match my mountains |
The Crest Theater |
A impressive church building |
The Masonic Temple |
Detail of the Temple, there were many |
A mix of murals and graffiti is common in center city Sacramento |
Sacramento needs a few more people willing to take a chance |
Impressive fountain in Cesar Chavez Park |
Cesar Chavez statue in park |
City Library had a beautiful entrance |
Most buildings appear to be original, not sure how they survived ? |
Creaky wooden walkways add a touch of character |
The Delta King is now a Hotel and restaurant |
Lots of interesting shops here |
On Thursday I visit the California Railroad State Park Museum located in the Sacramento harbor. It is one of the best railroad museums in the country with many beautifully restored rare steam locomotives and passenger cars. The Union Pacific segment of the transcontinental railroad started right here at milepost 0.00 on the harbor and then traveled 1,776 miles to Promontory Point, Utah where the rails joined with the eastern Union Pacific segment of track. Mostly built by Chinese laborers I might add, the americans were all looking for gold.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/California_State_Railroad_Museum
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southern_Pacific_Transportation_Company
Mile post 0.00 of the Southern Pacific |
It takes dreamers to accomplish great things |
History does repeat itself, I think I see a "Make America Great again" sign on the hat |
Love this drawing |
Virginia & Truckee coach was beautiful, the insert show the interior painting |
So many rare restored Locomotives in this museum |
Every detail is perfect |
The romance of the railroad |
Lots of Monster Steam Engines on display |
This was the 1st Southern Pacific Locomotive |
This was the last steam locomotive |
Thomas Sefton was an amazing collector, his collection was donated to the museum and much is on display. The museum docent told me there is an entire warehouse full of stuff not on display. |
The Mansion is now a museum and used as a California welcome center |
I traveled 20 miles away to Folsom, California which is most famous for the Folsom Prison thanks to Johnny Cash. I went to the Folsom Prison Museum located right next to the prison. Going to the museum you walk right pass the visitors entrance with mostly unhappy looking visitors waiting to get in for visitation. They have many interesting objects made by the prisoners inside some good, but mostly bad, like guns and knives. Johnny Cash really made the prison famous with his concert there and song.
You're told it is OK to take photos as long as you don't go past the rock |
photo of Johnny Cash in concert at Folsom |
The last song written by Johny Cash |
Many of these people are creative in a twisted way |
Avoid people with tattoos like these |
The only thing most people know about Folsom is the prison, but the city of Folsom has a beautiful downtown area. Folsom came about during the gold rush and had one of the earliest rail line running to it. As a result it was a boom town, but it lived on. There was much mining activity all around Folsom, the hydraulic mining method was used extensively here and I was told that’s why you will see odd unnatural looking piles of earth in places . The scenic and historic Rainbow Bridge crosses the American River on the edge of town. The river has cut a gorge here and if you find the way to get down there it’s a popular spot on a hot summer day. Crossing the bridge I could see people far below lounging on rocks in the water.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Folsom,_California
Nice mural, flowers were OK too |
Folsom Train Depot with historic coach and museum |
The Williams Carriage Hotel |
John Studebaker started by building wagon wheels, He went on to build the Studebaker automotive empire |
In the evening I went to downtown Sacramento to the Torch Club which is a vibrant blues music club. I was very surprised to arrive and find an easy parking spot across the street, that usually doesn't happen. It’s a bit of a culture clash as the blues club is right next door to another club that has music, or some facimile, more attuned to the young crowd which I don’t understand. The Daniel Castro Band was very good, Castro is one of those guitar players whose fingers dance on the strings, like magic to me.
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