Skip to main content

Jackson Gate Road


Jackson Gate Road is a short two-mile corridor which connects California State Route 49 in Martell east to Main Street in Jackson.  The corridor was once the main highway into the city of Jackson during the Gold Rush era.  Jackson Gate Road served a small community of the same name which was located near the Kennedy Mine.  




Part 1; the history of Jackson Gate Road

Jackson was founded during 1848 and is named in honor of Colonial Alden Jackson.  Upon Amador County being created during 1854 Jackson was selected as the County Seat.  The community would incorporate as a city on December 5, 1905. 

Jackson is one of the longest lasting mining communities in California.  Two of the more notable mines around Jackson were the Kennedy Mine and Argonaut Mine.  The Kennedy Mine once had the deepest mine shaft in North America at approximately 5,900 feet.  The Argonaut Mine reached a depth of approximately 5,500 feet but was more well known for a 1922 fire which killed over 40 miners.  Both the Kennedy Mine and Argonaut Mine closed in 1942 when gold was determined not to be a metal essential during World War II.


The Kennedy Mine is located north of Jackson along a roadway corridor known as "Jackson Gate."  The mine and a community bearing the name Jackson Gate can be seen north of Jackson on the 1882 Bancroft's map of California.  At the time the Jackson Gate Road was the main highway to/from Jackson.  


In 1902 the Ione & Eastern Railroad proposed to build a line from Ione to Sutter Creek along with a future extension to Volcano.  The line only extended east to Sunnybrook before going into Bankruptcy.  The line was purchased by the Amador Central Railroad in 1904 and was extended to Martell.  The terminus of the line included a large switching yard which was present the western terminus of Jackson Gate Road.  

State Highway service to Jackson began with the passage of the 1909 First State Highway Bond Act which defined what would become Legislative Route Number 34 (LRN 34).  The initial definition of LRN 34 was:

"From LRN 4 near Arno to Jackson"

The definition of what would become LRN 34 was extended from Jackson over Carson Pass to Hope Valley by way of legislative action taken during 1911:

"The certain road commencing at the Calaveras big tree grove located in Calaveras County thence running to Dorington in said county, thence E-ly following what is known as the Big Tree and Carson Valley Turnpike to Mt. Bullion in Alpine Cty, thence along the county road to Markleeville in Alpine Cty, thence along that certain road via Kirkwood, Silver Lake, Pine Grove and Irishtown to Jackson in Amador Cty, including therewith the road from Picketts in Hope Valley connecting with the Lake Tahoe Wagon Road, a state highway, at Osgood's Place in El Dorado Cty, and a road from Mt. Bullion via Loupe in Alpine Cty to Junction in Mono County connecting with the Sonora and Mono State Highway is hereby declared and established a state highway and shall be designated and known as "Alpine State Highway""

LRN 34 can be seen passing through Jackson on the 1917 California State Automobile Association Map.  Prior to 1933 the State of California was prohibited from maintaining highways within incorporated cities.  The through route in Jackson for eastbound LRN 34 appears to have always entered Jackson via Sutter Street which passed by the active mines in the city.  The through route through Jackson for LRN 34 eastbound towards Carson Pass would have been via Main Street, Water Street and Broadway. 


In time the corridor through Jackson would become part of LRN 65 then later California State Routes 49 and 88.  The corridor of Jackson Gate Road would be relegated to a backroad alternative to the established state highways in the community.  In 2004 the Amador Central Railroad was shuttered.  The switching yard present along Jackson Gate Road was removed during late year 2009.  



Part 2; a drive on Jackson Gate Road

Eastbound Jackson Gate Road begins at a traffic light along California State Route 49 in Martell.  From southbound California State Route 49 traffic must turn left to access Jackson Gate Road.  A right-hand turn takes traffic west onto Martell Road.  


Jackson Gate Road passes the site of the Amador Central switching yard which is now called Depot Storage and Parking.  





Jackson Gate Road descends through the terrain to the single-lane Oneida Creek Bridge within the Jackson city limit.  










Jackson Gate Road terminates at Kennedy Tailings Wheels Park and the road ahead continues as Main Street into downtown Jackson.  Said park houses the Kennedy Mine wheels which were almost in continuous use during mining operations from 1914 through 1942.  




































Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Cajon Pass; Cajon Pass Toll Road, National Old Trails Road, US Route 66/91/395 and Interstate 15

This past weekend I spent some time in Cajon Pass traversing the many historic road alignments. Cajon Pass is located in San Bernardino County, California along the San Andreas Fault.  Cajon Pass  serves the boundary line between the Mojave Desert, the San Gabriel Mountains, San Bernardino Mountains and San Bernardino Valley.  Cajon Pass is historically one of the most traveled transportation corridors in American California and presently is served by four rail lines, Interstate 15 and California State Route 138. While Cajon Pass is known mostly for carrying US Route 66 it has carried numerous other signed highways that have had a significant impact on regional and national road travel.  While this is my best attempt to compile everything from the best sources I could find into one single transportation history blog regarding road travel in Cajon Pass I suspect as time goes on this article will be frequently updated.  If you have any information that you ...

Pardee Dam Road

Pardee Dam is a 358-foot-high concrete structure located near Campo Seco at the Calaveras County and Amador County Line.  Pardee Dam impounds the Mokelumne River which forms the namesake Pardee Reservoir.  Pardee Dam was completed during 1929 and is part of the East Bay Municipal Utility District.  Pardee Dam is accessed by the namesake Pardee Dam Road which crosses the structure via the one-lane road seen as the blog cover photo.   Part 1; the history of Pardee Dam Road The closest community to Pardee Dam is that of Campo Seco on the Calaveras County side of the Mokelumne River.  Campo Seco was founded in 1850 by Mexican Miners who worked placer claims in Oregon Gulch during the height of the California Gold Rush.  Campo Seco would reach a population of about three hundred by 1860 spurred by the numerous mining claims in the area.  Main Street of Campo Seco flowed directly into the Campo Seco Turnpike which had been authorized by the California L...

California State Route 82/Old US Route 101 on the El Camino Real from San Francisco to Interstate 380

After completing Interstate 380 I made my way northward into the City Limits of San Francisco to drive the northernmost portion of California State Route 82. CA 82 is 52 mile State Route between I-280 in San Francisco southward to Interstate 880 in San Jose.  CA 82 is significant due to it being part of the historical surface alignment of US Route 101 and the El Camino Real. The "El Camino Real" was a Spanish Highway in Las Californias and Alta California which connected the 21 Catholic Missions along the coast.  Essentially the route of the El Camino Real was plotted out in the late 1700s from two Spanish survey expeditions.  The Missions were plotted approximately 30 miles apart along the 600 mile route so that they would be a single day journey by horse.  The El Camino Real name fell into disuse after the Mexican Revolution of 1821 but was revived by American highway promoters in the 1890s and 1900s.  Today the El Camino Real is mostly associated...