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DESCRIPTION:California State Capitol Kwanzaa Press Conference and Kinara Making 
 Workshop\nMatunda Ya Kwanzaa - First Fruits of the Harvest - Kickoff 2024 
 Kwanzaa Food & Ag Expo \n \nFolsom, California - Matunda Ya Kwanza means 
 (First Fruits of the Harvest) and officially begins Kwanzaa Celebration and 
 our journey to document and preserve 19th Century California History, 
 preserving salient contributions to the path towards establishing of the 
 Great State of California.\n\nTogether, California 175 will highlight our 
 California Pan African Cultural Heritage throughout the vast Alta 
 California Mexican Territory, to the 1846 Bear Flag Revolt, US-Mexican War 
 and path toward "Manifest Destiny" becoming the 31st State of the Union, 
 established by the U.S. Congress on September 9, 1850. \n\nFrom the high 
 desert plains near Lake Mt. Shastina, Siskiyou County to the rugged 
 foothill streams above Jamul, San Diego County and all points in between... 
 we continue to travel while exploring, researching and celebrating our 
 unique early California Pan African Pioneer journey yearning for a greater 
 measure of freedom (1840-1875)\n\nMatunda ya Kwanza - California 175 (First 
 Fruits of the Harvest) begins our focused efforts forming new partnerships, 
 sponsorships and collaborations with our California State Library, 
 California State Archives and global stakeholders as we identify pioneer 
 origins, transportation modes and initial destinations of California 
 Pioneers of Pan African Ancestry, both free and enslaved.\n\nHistoric Negro 
 Bar, Sacramento County remains our physical headquarters of our California 
 175 - Underground Railroad Network to Freedom, as originally established, 
 Juneteenth 2000, at the turn of the century.\n\nOfficial records document 
 out authentic geological location of 1848 Negro Bar gold mining camp, that 
 grew into a townsite in the unincorporated northeastern part of Sacramento 
 County.\nThe town of Negro Bar, Sacramento County was established upon land 
 entitled to Honorable Don Guillermo Alexander Leidesdorff, Jr., "Pan 
 African Founding Father of California" a small portion of his 1844 Mexican 
 Land Grant, Rancho Rio De Los Americanos.\n\nA nearly mile long gravel gold 
 mining district will forever be known as "Negro Bar" named after early 
 "Negro Miners" on land owned by Honorable William Alexander Leidesdorff, 
 Jr. in 1848 Alta California, Mexico Territory when the light of day shines 
 upon authentic primary source documents.\n\nU.S. Army Officer P.B. Reading 
 and James Marshall provided official written documentation via a 
 commissioned report of land squatters and rich gold claims, Spring of 1848. 
   \n\nUS Vice Consul to Mexico, Honorable William Alexander Leidesdorff, 
 Jr. who owned many downtown San Francisco properties, businesses and 8 
 Spanish Leagues or 35,321 acres of land, Rancho Rio de Los Americanos, over 
 15 miles along today's American River Parkway.\n\nSeveral thousand early 
 California Pan African placer miners both enslaved and free were part of a 
 much larger multicultural influx into the regional Gold Mining Districts of 
 California, seeking fortunes in the newly discovered gold fields.\n\nMajor 
 flooding along the American River in the Spring of 1852 and new legislation 
 entitled the 'California Fugitive Slave Act of 1852' encouraged many early 
 California Pioneers of Pan African Ancestry to move far away from local 
 "Slave Patrols" to remote regions throughout the vast Gold Mining Districts 
 throughout California. \n\nBy September 1854, Negro Bar, Sacramento County 
 was a regional transportation hub for global miners as seen on the official 
 survey map by Theodore Judah that shows the entire proposed Sacramento 
 Valley Railroad route with the town grid of Granite City overlayed upon the 
 existing town of Negro Bar.  Construction of the "first railroad in the 
 west" began February 1855, and after the death of Joseph Libby Folsom, 
 construction was completed in February 1856.\n\nNearly a century later, in 
 mid-1950's, after several decades of mechanical dredging for gold, the area 
 "under the bridge," known as Negro Bar, was utilized as a concrete staging 
 area for the constriction of Folsom Dam by the US Army Corps of Engineers, 
 today operated by US Department of Interior, Bureau of Reclamation.  
 \n\nThe vast land surrounding Folsom Lake is owned by the U.S. Department 
 of Interior (Federal Land) named Folsom Lake Recreational Area and is 
 managed by California State Parks, California Natural Resource 
 Agency.\n\nMatunda ya Kwanza - California 175, Thursday, December 26, 2024, 
 11:30 am - 1:30 pm, California State Capitol Rose Garden we kick-off our 
 week long "California Grown" holiday utilizing the 7 principles and 7 
 symbols of Kwanzaa aligned with the spirit of MAAT 
 (right-order).\n\nTogether, we share our efforts toward a broader, 
 inclusive and transparent past, present and future throughout the Great 
 State of California and beyond for the world to appreciate.\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2024/12/10/18871356.php
SUMMARY:2024 CA State Capitol Kwanzaa Celebration - Matunda Ya Kwanza - California 175
LOCATION:California State Capitol \nWorld Peace Rose Garden\n1317 15th 
 Street\nSacramento, California 95814
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2024/12/10/18871356.php
DTSTART:20241226T193000Z
DTEND:20241226T213000Z
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