A Twenty Minute Tour of Rocklin History - Roseville California News including Rocklin & Placer County

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A Twenty Minute Tour of Rocklin History

credit: Gary Day, Jean Day -photos (Rocklin Historical Society)
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rhsm-small-2.jpgThe Rocklin History Museum is open from 1 pm until 4 pm on Wednesday, Saturday and Sunday afternoons. If you are in the mood for Rocklin’s history at other times, try this 20 minute tour of two sites which were important to Rocklin’s role as the Sacramento Valley’s major producer of granite products in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

Downtown Rocklin is astride high quality and easily accessible granite in a 100+ square mile eroded granite belt that extends from Folsom to Lincoln. The Rocklin area’s landscape includes 61 abandoned quarries. Many of these were opened in the 19th century to provide culvert stone and riprap for railroad construction and building blocks for California’s monumental buildings such as the State Capitol Building in Sacramento.

Start your tour by driving to the parking lot at the northwest corner of Rocklin Road and Granite Drive. The lake that you see there fills a quarry operated in the early 20th century by the Union Granite Company under the management of Finnish immigrant Matt Ruhkala. Business at Rocklin’s granite operations flourished in the 1890s and very early 20th century, but competition from cement-based concrete attenuated the industry’s growth after 1905. Nevertheless the Ruhkala quarry continued to produce granite curbing and stone for monuments until at least 1915.  Later, Ruhkala operated two other quarries, one of which is now under the westbound lanes of Highway 80.

Next, look from the Ruhkala quarry to the south side of Rocklin Road. Ira Delano’s Rocklin Granite Company quarry was located there. Delano’s quarry was Rocklin’s largest and most financially successful 19th century quarry. Delano was possibly Rocklin’s wealthiest citizen. It was mostly his money that built Rocklin’s racetrack in the mid 1890s. In 1915 quarrymen struck the Rocklin quarries for a raise from $3.25 to $3.75 per day and closed most of Rocklin’s quarries permanently. Delano gave up his business and retired a year later.

Delano’s quarry pit served as Rocklin’s garbage dump during the mid 20th century and that dump now underpins the parking lot and motel in back of the Taco Bell.

Next, go to the east side of the Rocklin City Office Building at 3970 Rocklin Road and climb to the second floor landing of the exterior stairwell. The stairwell is to the left of the building’s entrance. Look south and you will see the sheer granite walls of the Big Gun quarry pit, a spectacular site.
The California Granite company, under the leadership of Finnish immigrant Adolf Pernu, acquired this quarry in the 1890’s and modernized its operations with pneumatic, steam and electric equipment in the early 20th century.  Quarrying operations here survived the granite industry’s early 20th century downturn, but financial problems set in after Pernu died in a Yosemite quarry accident in 1929. Four of Ruhkala’s sons acquired the quarry in 1933 (Ruhkala had eleven children).  They gave it the Ruhkala family’s Union Granite Company name, repaired the aging equipment, and produced monument stone, monuments, and crushed stone products here until 1978.

In 1968 Congressman “Bizz” Johnson commended three of the Ruhkala brothers, Ben, Ruben and Abner, for producing 32 granite benches for the United States Capital grounds in Washington D.C. In the early 1970s the Ruhkalas imported quartz and crushed it to reinforce the concrete walls of the Transamerica building in San Francisco.

Recent owners gave the quarry the Big Gun name in the early 1990s but they did not extract significant amounts of stone. For countertops and monuments the light grey color of Rocklin’s granite cannot compete with the more colorful shades of granite available from elsewhere in California and from overseas. Granite processing operations ceased here in 2005.

Today, in 2007, the latest owner has optioned the quarry to a downtown Rocklin re-development company that is proposing to the city to preserve it as the centerpiece of a commercial venture.

Most of the information in this article is from State Geologic Survey records and from Ruben and Roy Ruhkala

 


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A Haven for Hoboes
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Twelve Bridges
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Run Rocklin
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Rocklin Golf Courses
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Delano's Quarry
According to state records Rocklin was the principal granite producing point in the Sacramento Valley in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Rocklin’s largest and most financially-successful quarry operation of those times was Ira Delano’s Rocklin Granite Company.
Rocklin Hose Company Number One
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Whence Came the Altar Stone
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Oskari’s Journey
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A Twenty Minute Tour of Rocklin History
The Rocklin History Museum is open from 1 pm until 4 pm on Wednesday, Saturday and Sunday afternoons. If you are in the mood for Rocklin’s history at other times, try this 20 minute tour of two sites which were important to Rocklin’s role as the Sacramento Valley’s major producer of granite products in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
Rocklin Goes to the Races
In 1895 horse doctor Mansfield Delano and his wealthy brother Ira, owner of Rocklin’s most successful granite quarry, led a group of nine investors to form the Rocklin Driving Park Association and build Rocklin’s first and only race track.
The Crowd in the Pyramid
The pyramid-shaped Whitney family tomb is an often photographed curiosity near the 11th green of the Whitney Oaks Golf Course.
History doesn’t record the tomb’s construction date but one family member theorizes that
Rocklin's Pyramid Tomb?
In January 1913, Joel Parker Whitney, called Parker then, died at Del Monte California after a long bout with kidney disease. He was 78. According to Richard Miller’s Fortune Built by Gun, Parker had prepared a pyramid-shaped mausoleum for himself...
Porter's Saloon Token Brings $325
On December 19, 2005 an unidentified collector paid $325.00 for a Porter’s Saloon trade token at a Western Americana auction in Reno.
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Major Professional Golf in Rocklin
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Clover Valley
According to Sierra College Geology Professor Dick Hilton, the valley started to form five million years ago as the Sierra range lifted and tilted westward. Runoff streams wore down millions of years of rock and gravel deposits
Saint Mary's through the Years
In 1882 John Bolton, the Irish land developer who plotted Rocklin’s original town site, donated an oak framed lot to Rocklin’s Catholics for our City’s first Catholic Church.
Whitney Ranch (3 of 3)
During the 1860’s and 1870’s Joel Parker Whitney, called Parker then, expanded his Spring Valley Ranch from 320 acres to 18,000 acres.
Whitney Ranch (2 of 3)
In 1857, Boston merchant George Whitney established a 320-acre sheep ranch near a small South Placer County granite quarrying community. That community would later supply stone for construction of
Whitney Ranch (1 of 3)
In 1854, Boston businessman George Whitney visited San Francisco to see the four oldest of his six sons. The four had come to California individually at various times during the Gold Rush and
Finn Hall
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Huff Spring
The spring was a widely known Rocklin curiosity and source of clean drinking water in the late 18th and early 19th centuries. A nearby cluster of 88 bedrock mortars and about 4 acres of gently sloping terrain, partly covered by Springview School’s soccer field, tell that the area was formerly home to a large community of native Nisenan.
Rocklin, A Town Built on Granite
Downtown Rocklin is astride a 100 square mile belt of high quality and easily accessible granite that extends from Folsom to Lincoln. Assisted by easy access to rail shipping, granite mining and creation of finished granite products formed the backbone of Rocklin’s economy
Holmes / Renaldi Shootout in 1914
In 1914, Rocklin’s once-booming granite industry was waning due to labor strife and competition from cement-based concrete. The Southern Pacific Railroad had moved Rocklin’s roundhouse to Roseville 6 years earlier. And a peace officer died in the line of duty for the...
Rocklin’s Roundhouse 1867 to 1908
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Rocklin: Prosperous and Growing in the 19th Century
In February 1893, Rocklin’s population was expanding, its industrial base was solid and business was booming, so its electorate approved a ballot proposal to incorporated as a city.
Nisenan, Rocklin’s Earliest Culture
They built their villages on low rises along Rocklin’s streams, hunted game animals in Rocklin’s hills and meadows and gathered fruits, nuts, seeds and roots here for 2000 years before European explorers
Introduction to Rocklin History Series
Recent archeological evidence indicates earliest human habitation of the Rocklin area at about 7,000 years ago.






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