BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
X-WR-CALNAME:www.indybay.org
PRODID:-//indybay/ical// v1.0//EN
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:Indybay-18882182
SEQUENCE:19057880
CREATED:20251212T131900Z
DESCRIPTION:California 175 - Early California Pioneers of Pan African Ancestry, both 
 enslaved and free, were apart of the transition from Mexican Territory to 
 California Statehood, September 1850.\n\n1,918 US Colored Troops enlisted 
 from California to help preserve the Union and end chattel slavery 
 throughout America.  The 13th Amendment to our US Constitution officially 
 ended slavery yet official recognition for Pan African (hidden figures) who 
 paid the price for us to be recognized as African Americans remains 
 unfinished business.. \n\nHistorical Landmarks are sites, buildings, 
 features, or events that are of statewide significance and have 
 anthropological, cultural, military, political, architectural, economic, 
 scientific or technical, religious, experimental, or other value. 
 Historical Landmarks are eligible for registration if they meet at least 
 one of the following criteria:\n\n1) Is the first, last, only, or most 
 significant of its type in the state or within a large geographic 
 region\n\n2) Is associated with an individual or group having a profound 
 influence on the history of California\n\n3) Is a prototype of, or an 
 outstanding example of, a period, style, architectural movement or 
 construction or is one of the more notable works or the best surviving work 
 in a region of a pioneer architect, designer or master 
 builder\n\nCalifornia’s Landmark Program began in the late 1800’s with 
 the formation of the Landmarks Club and the California Historical Landmarks 
 League. In 1931, the program became official when legislation charged the 
 Department of Natural Resources—and later the California State Chamber of 
 Commerce—with registering and marking buildings of historical interest or 
 landmarks. The Chamber of Commerce then created a committee of prestigious 
 historians, including DeWitt Hutchings and Lawrence Hill, to evaluate 
 potential landmark sites.\n\nIn 1948, Governor Earl Warren created the 
 California Historical Landmarks Advisory Committee to increase the 
 integrity and credibility of the program. Finally, this committee was 
 changed to the California Historical Resources Commission in 1974. 
 Information about registered landmarks numbered 770 onward is kept in the 
 California Register of Historical Resources authoritative guide. Landmarks 
 numbered 669 and below were registered prior to establishing specific 
 standards, and may be added to the California Register when criteria for 
 evaluating the properties are adopted.\n\nFrom Sutter’s Fort to Coloma 
 along Historic Coloma Road people of Pan African Ancestry thrived 
 (1840-1875) - Reclaiming the Past:  Pan Africans along the American River 
 Parkway is poised to come alive America 250 - Folsom Juneteenth.\n\nToday, 
 American Flags mark 36 grave markers at Negro Hill Cemetery for the 
 Proclamation of the 13th Amendment to the Us Constitution by US Secretary 
 of State William Henry Seward.  The State of California ratified the 13th 
 Amendment, December 19, 1865.\n\nReprinted - From Unknown Source \nA 
 California State Parks Multi-Million dollar research grant soon may share a 
 more accurate story utilizing primary sources and modern government 
 researcher standards.\n\nThe area of Negro Hill was first thought to be 
 mined by Mormons in 1848 and was a thriving mining camp across the South 
 Fork of the American River above Mormon Island. \n\nIn 1849, an African 
 American man named Kelsey from Massachusetts and a Methodist minister, 
 along with other African American miners, rediscovered the diggings. 
 \n\nTogether, these men established a community African-American, European, 
 Chinese, Spanish, Mexican, and Portuguese miners. Spaniards and Mexicans 
 occupied the ground on the south side of the hill at the mouth of Spanish 
 Ravine in 1849, while African Americans established the camps known as 
 Little Negro Hill and Big Negro Hill. \n\nAs white miners flocked to the 
 area, the town of Negro Hill developed, reaching a population of 1,200 by 
 1853. For a time, Negro Hill was one of the most culturally and ethnically 
 diverse towns in California, nearly as diverse as San Francisco was.\n\nIn 
 1849 three white men from New England came to Negro Hill and established a 
 store and boarding house called the Civil Usage House. \n\nCharles Crocker 
 and Dewitt Stanford joined the Negro Hill business community competing 
 directly with the African American-established trade and businesses. \n\nAs 
 state laws were passed in the 1850s limiting the rights of African 
 Americans, the town began to lose its diversity as violence against African 
 Americans began to increase. \n\nThose buried from the Negro Hill region 
 were reinterred at a site in the present-day Folsom Lake State Recreation 
 Area at the Mormon Island Memorial Cemetery.\n\nIn 2014, 36 old grave 
 markers were replaced with new, granite markers reflecting the authentic 
 name for the Gold Rush Era Community.\n\nCalifornia 175 - Reclaiming the 
 Past:  Early California Pan African Pioneers along the American River 
 Parkway continues…\n\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2025/12/12/18882182.php
SUMMARY:California Historical Landmark Program - Negro Hill Cemetery, 13th Amendment Proclamation
LOCATION:Mormon Island Relocation Cemetery\nGreen Valley Rd. & Shadowfax Lane\nCity 
 of Folsom / Placer County \nGold Rush California Heritage 
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2025/12/12/18882182.php
DTSTART:20251217T193000Z
DTEND:20251217T210000Z
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
