Nevada City Firehouse No. 1

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Location214 Main Street,
Nevada City, California
Coordinates39°15′49″N 121°01′02″W / 39.2635°N 121.0172°W / 39.2635; -121.0172
Built1861
Architecturalstyleoriginally Greek Revival, now Victorian/Eastlake movement
Nevada City Firehouse No. 1
The firehouse in 2008
Nevada City Firehouse No. 1 is located in California
Nevada City Firehouse No. 1
Nevada City Firehouse No. 1 is located in the United States
Nevada City Firehouse No. 1
Location214 Main Street,
Nevada City, California
Coordinates39°15′49″N 121°01′02″W / 39.2635°N 121.0172°W / 39.2635; -121.0172
Built1861
Architectural styleoriginally Greek Revival, now Victorian/Eastlake movement
Part ofNevada City Downtown Historic District (ID85002520)
Designated CPSeptember 23, 1985

Nevada City Firehouse No. 1 is a historic former firehouse located at 214 Main Street in Nevada City, California. Completed in May 1861 as the city's second firehouse (Nevada City Firehouse No. 2 was the first), it is considered a symbol of the city[1] and "probably the most-photographed building in the entire California Gold Rush country."[2]

Closed in 1938, the building reopened in 1947 as Firehouse No. 1 Museum or simply Firehouse Museum. The museum covers Nevada County history from the late 19th to early 20th century.

Nevada City was California's most important mining town during the California gold rush,[3] and by March 1850, it was the third largest city in the state.[4] The first great fire that leveled Nevada City occurred in 1851, and by 1859, the city had been rebuilt and re-leveled by fire four additional times.[2] In December 1859, the women of the city decided to act; on December 26, they raised $923.50 ($32,319 in 2024) from a ball and a week later they raised $149 ($5,214 in 2024) from a theatrical show, all of which were to be put towards the construction of a firehouse.[2]

Nevada City Firehouse No. 1 was the second firehouse built in Nevada City. At the time, the city had three groups competing for firehouse funds: the 37-[2] or 47[5]-member Nevada Hose Company on Main Street (organized June 12, 1860), the 34-member Eureka Hose Company on Broad Street (organized June 13, 1860), and the 37-member Protection Hook & Ladder (organized June 23, 1860). While Nevada Hose Company officially organized a day before Eureka Hose Company, Eureka Hose Company was offered the money raised by the women in the city, allowing them to complete Nevada City Firehouse No. 2 in January 1861, several months before Nevada Hose Company completed Nevada City Firehouse No. 1.[2][5][6]

Nevada City Firehouse No. 1 was completed on May 30, 1861 and was home to Nevada Hose Company No. 1 from its completion until the firehouse ceased operations in 1938. The firehouse reopened as a museum in 1947.[1]

In 1968, the firehouse was included by the city of Nevada City in its historic district, where it was mentioned as an example of a building that has "great historical interest and esthetic value", contains "important historical exhibits and unique architectural specimens", and is "symbolic of the City's historical past".[7] In 1985, the firehouse was included as a contributing property in the Nevada City Downtown Historic District, where it was described as "the most photographed building in Nevada City".[8]

The firehouse was overhauled and stabilized in 1988, the work paid for by a grant from the California Department of Parks and Recreation.[2]

Architecture and design

Nevada City Firehouse No. 1 is considered a symbol of Nevada City.[1] The building is two stories, made of brick, and topped by a gabled roof. First-story entry is through two large wood doors, each with twelve small windows near their top. An arched glass door allows entry to the second-story.[8]

Fronting the building is an elaborate Victorian/Eastlake movement double-stacked wood porch. Each stack features balustraded railings and is supported by robust posts, while the porch corners, turns, and projections are decorated with curved brackets, scrolls, and other stylized elements. Numerous spindles are also located along the porch's frieze, while the entire stack is topped by a peaked roof covered in fish-scale shingles, the roof itself topped by a belvedere that is topped by a second fish-scale shingle-peaked roof. A fire bell hangs from the belvedere.[8]

The building originally featured a Greek Revival facade, but this was replaced by the Victorian porch facade in the early twentieth century.[1]

Firehouse Museum

See also

References

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