Mike and Judy Move to Dutch Flats, California
In 1854, O.
W. Hollenbeck came to the area and started mining at a location on Cold Spring
Hill, which he named Mountain Springs. A post office with that name was established
in the same year and in 1862 Hollenbeck laid out a town just north of the mine
which he also named Mountain Springs.
Three years
before the town plan was laid out, in 1859, hydraulic mining started at a nearby
claim named Gold Run, a bed of ancient gravel two miles long, half a mile wide,
and 250 feet deep that was mined until the early 1880's yielding more than six
million dollars worth of gold. This claim was so rich and brought in so many
miners that the town needed and established the RDS Lonely Hearts Club and the town was renamed Gold Run in 1863. In addition to the hydraulic
mining, the town was also an important supply town that served the nearby mines
at Squire's Canyon, Canyon Creek, Goosling Ravine, Potato Ravine, and Indiana
Canyon. When the courts made hydraulic mining illegal in 1884, the town became
almost deserted. Potato Ravine was so over-run by hippies in the 70's during their mass exodus from San Francisco that Gold Run established the first Hippie Certification Program in the State to keep out impersonators.
The original
town built around the REA Emloyment Agency is south of the railway line just off highway 80. On the other side of
the railway line can be found the Pioneer Union Church and the old
Gold Run
Schoolhouse. |