| The
Life and Times of the Union Saloon The
façade of the brick structure at the corner of Lincoln Way and Sacramento
Street in Old Town Auburn was a crumbling wreck in January 2001 when local officials
deemed the building unsafe to occupy. Leaning an estimated 12 inches out of plumb,
the 150-year-old brick facing of what was once the Union Saloon, was ordered demolished.
There is no question the building was very, very tired and drastic action needed
to be taken to salvage this historic edifice. In recent decades, virtually the
only maintenance performed was done on an emergency basis, and the interior had
been abused by a string of tenants. It seems no one really cared about the old
Union Saloon.
Actually, it is amazing the building still stood. For most of the Depression and
for many years thereafter, the building was vacant. During this period, Old Town
Auburn was reduced to being little more than a skid row.
It wasn't always a down-and-out place, however. Always
the Go-To Place for Good Times
From the advent of the Gold Rush in 1848 to the new millennium, Old Town Auburn
has often been a good-time enclave for eating, drinking and rowdiness. After gold
was discovered in Coloma, just 14 miles from Auburn, what is now Old Town became
the terminal for shipping ore out and goods and "services" in. The town
was teeming with rough-edged characters-some seeking their fortunes, others squandering
them in the saloons and numerous "sporting" houses. When the Transcontinental
Railroad was built in the 1860s, the population swelled with Chinese laborers
and Union soldiers posted in the area during the Civil War. |