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Calaveras County Courthouse - I
Completed 1850
Local history has it that the county seat was "captured"
from Double Springs, a cattle ranch-cum-mining town, when residents
of nearby Jackson invited county officials for a few rounds of
drinks and then made off with the county records. The remains
of this building, made of camphor panels shipped from China, can
still be seen in Double Springs, making it one of the oldest surviving
structures once used as a courthouse in California.
Courtesy Calaveras County Historical Society
Calaveras County Courthouse - II
Completed 1867
In 1866, after the government was finally moved to San Andreas,
Calaveras's fifth and current county seat, officials designated
a local theater for use as the first courthouse. This two-story
brick building was used as the center of county government for
nearly 100 years, and it was here in 1883 that Judge C. V. Gottschalk
tried and sentenced the notorious highwayman Black Bart. In 1966,
the courthouse was replaced by a more modern facility and turned
over to the Calaveras County Historical Society. The old courthouse,
which is listed on the National Register of Historic Places, is
still used occasionally for overflow cases and visiting judges.
Courtesy Calaveras County Historical Society
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