CA California Porch

Almanac note · History and culture

Placerville's old nickname tells a rough Gold Rush story

Placerville grew from Gold Rush traffic near Coloma, and its old Hangtown nickname points to a rough early chapter in the Mother Lode.

PlacervilleHangtownGold RushMain Street

Placerville is close enough to Coloma that the Gold Rush story feels right next door. After James Marshall found gold at Sutter’s Mill on January 24, 1848, people moved through nearby ravines and camps. Some came for work. Some came for supplies. Some came hoping for a lucky break.

The town’s old nickname, Hangtown, comes from one of the harsher parts of that early period. Placerville’s city history ties the name to an 1849 hanging after a crime and a quick citizens’ jury. That is not the whole town, but it is part of the record. Gold Rush places could be busy, hopeful, messy, unfair, and dangerous all at once.

Today, Main Street is a better place to slow down and look for layers: old buildings, Gold Rush signs, food stops, shops, and the way the road bends through the foothills. It is easy to make the story too cute or too grim. The useful middle is to see Placerville as a real Sierra foothill town shaped by gold, travel, law, memory, and later efforts to make an old mining camp into a livable city.

It works well as a stop between Sacramento and the higher mountains, especially if you give yourself time to walk instead of only passing through.

Where to see it

Historic Main Street in Placerville, east of Sacramento on the way toward the Sierra Nevada.

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Reviewed July 1, 2026

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