
Here's a view of old Old Sac. One can see one of the SP/CP trains pulling up along the wharf, and also notice the awnings and canopies over the boardwalk sidewalk, to shield folks from the oppressive summer heat (average temp in the 90s, with 100 degree days no uncommon)

There is a network of tunnels and former first floor spaces that are now basements under Old Sac and the rest of downtown due to the grade raising.
The pix here is of the oldest building in Old Sac. Hastings Bank was the former Pony Express terminus and state Supreme Court chambers on the second floor. This pix shows the building when Old Sac was the one of the largest skid rows on the West Coast. One can see a "bottle shop", employment agency, dry goods, and the "Timber Club" bar.

Since ag in the Central Valley was large scale, from the bonanza farming era down to modern day irrigated fruit and veggy production, it relied on a lot of hired-hand itinerant labor, as did the timber industry up in the Sierra Nevada.
Sacto was the entreeport & base for this migratory labor stream, especially since it was the big inland railroad junction for both the SP and Western Pacific "Feather River Route". Thus a big center for drifters coming in to look for seasonal work. Old Sac was their neighborhood.
Substantially rebuilt and restored during an 1960s urban renewal push, Old Sac is now a popula tourist attraction. I've been told that the tourists here are actually mostly locals and day-trippers from the Bay Area, not so much out-of-towners. Lake Tahoe and the Mother Lode gold country is the destination for out-of-state tourism, with Sac being at best a way-station.

There are some museums here (a local history museum and the California State Railway Museum, which is one of the best in the US), but I think people just come for the ambience.
Unlike Daytonians, Sacramentans don't seem to have that "urban fear" that keeps them from venturing downtown. And the locals have suburban alternatives to Old Sac in Folsom, which is a renovated old gold rush town as well as suburb (sort of a "Waynesville") .
Yet they continue to visit here, repeatedly, as the place has always been a sucess. Which might also be due to the size and affluence of Sacramento vis a vis Dayton.



Next, we'll follow this street under I-5 to the modern downtown shopping mall and old K Street, the former shopping street of Sacramento.
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