Columbia (California)

Columbia is a historic town in Tuolumne County the Gold Country of California.

Understand
Columbia was founded in 1851, relatively late in the Gold Rush for founding towns, when a mining party camping overnight during a trip to Calaveras County stayed briefly to dry their blankets overnight after a rainstorm. One of the party decided to try panning in a nearby stream, and found gold in his first pan. Within a few months, several thousand miners were in the vicinity, in one of the richer areas of placer mining. Although mining largely stopped because of the seasonal drying up of the stream, a town was laid out and built, largely on speculation that water for mining could be obtained by an ambitious project using wooden flumes and ditches to bring water from the Stanislaus River.

This water project was successful and Columbia became a thriving and wealthy Gold Rush town during the 1850s. Around 1860, however, the placer mining had petered out, and the town lost population and stagnated. This stagnation led to town to change little, and by the 1930s attempts were begun to preserved it as a good example of a Gold Rush town. In the 1940s it was purchased by the state of California and made into a State Historic Park.

Get in
Columbia is best reached by automobile, either by following the Gold Country Route 49 highway south from Calaveras County and the northern part of the Gold Country, or by taking Route 108 from the Central Valley (Modesto) to Sonora and then driving a few miles north on Highway 49. Private planes can fly into Columbia Airport. There is no significant bus service from the outside.

Get around
Columbia itself is a small, pedestrian-oriented town that is also a State Historic Park.

See
The restored gold mining town of Columbia, circa 1850-1860, with various exhibits.

Do
Pan for gold, hike around the town, up to the schoolhouse and cemetery, and on the nature trail to Columbia Airport. Look at the exhibits. Participate in some of the events, such as dancing in 1850s dance halls. Take a tour by a docent, offered weekends 11AM. Take an audio history walking tour.

Buy
Books, gifts, T-shirts at various stores in the historic area.

Eat
Eat at one of the restaurants in the historic buildings, including the Columbia House, Columbia Hotel, the old-fashioned ice cream and soda shop, or at one of the saloons.

Drink
Drink sarsaparilla at the ice cream store, at the grocery store, or one of the saloons.

Sleep
Sleep at one of the historic hotels, such as the Columbia Hotel or Fallon House, or one of the bed & breakfasts nearby.

Go next
Visitors on their way out of Columbia to the north can drive south briefly and get on Highway 49, which will take them to Angels Camp and other Gold Country towns such as San Andreas, Jacksonville, Sutter's Creek, Placerville, and points north. They might also want to go north on Parrott's Ferry Road and cross the bridge over the Stanislaus River to Calaveras County and Highway 4. Murphys, another gold rush town, is a few miles north on Highway 4. Highway 4 will also take you to the mountain town of Arnold and beyond to Alpine County and the Bear Valley ski resort, as well as across Ebbetts Pass to the high desert.

Visitors travelling south on Highway 49 will get to Sonora, Jamestown, Chinese Camp, and Moccasin and can continue to Coulterville and Mariposa in Mariposa County.


 * - The small town of Murphys is a Gold Rush era town that today features over a dozen wine tasting rooms and a surprising number of excellent restaurants on its historic Main Street. The town also hosts an annual Irish festival in March that draws thousands of visitors.  There are several wineries nearby, and visitors may also want to make the one mile journey north of Murphys to take a paid tour through Mercer Caverns, a short cave filled with a large number of speleothems, stalactites, and stalagmites.
 * - Angels Camp is a Gold Rush town where Mark Twain overheard a tale that inspired his short story "The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County"; today the town hosts a "Jumping Frog Jubilee" every May that draws thousands of visitors. Visitors will also enjoy the historic downtown and find amenities including several hotels and restaurants.  Attractions located just outside of town include the Natural Bridges trail, a 2 mi hike through two short but spectacular limestone caverns that have been carved out by Coyote Creek, as well as the Carson Hill ghost town, a former mine where a 195 pound troy gold nugget was unearthed in 1854.
 * - The small town of Murphys is a Gold Rush era town that today features over a dozen wine tasting rooms and a surprising number of excellent restaurants on its historic Main Street. The town also hosts an annual Irish festival in March that draws thousands of visitors.  There are several wineries nearby, and visitors may also want to make the one mile journey north of Murphys to take a paid tour through Mercer Caverns, a short cave filled with a large number of speleothems, stalactites, and stalagmites.
 * - Angels Camp is a Gold Rush town where Mark Twain overheard a tale that inspired his short story "The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County"; today the town hosts a "Jumping Frog Jubilee" every May that draws thousands of visitors. Visitors will also enjoy the historic downtown and find amenities including several hotels and restaurants.  Attractions located just outside of town include the Natural Bridges trail, a 2 mi hike through two short but spectacular limestone caverns that have been carved out by Coyote Creek, as well as the Carson Hill ghost town, a former mine where a 195 pound troy gold nugget was unearthed in 1854.