Posted on 22-05-2023 03:38 AM
Historic sites in Rocklin, CA
Rocklin's historic locations can be viewed via our interactive virtual tour, or by using the text-only tour below.
1. Old Finnish Picnic Grounds
It is located about 200 yards past the end of China Garden Road, adjacent to Interstate 80. This picnic area was used as a meeting and gathering place by the Finns of Rocklin in the early days.
Quarry built by the early Union Granite Company
The Placer / Rocklin library is situated in front of a lake on the corner of Rocklin Road and Granite Drive. During the early 20th century, Finland's Matt Ruhkala managed the Union Granite Company, which operated this quarry. A granite mining industry flourished in Rocklin during the 1890s and very early 20th century, but it declined after 1905 due to competition from building materials other than granite. Although Union Granite and several other quarries continued to produce granite curbing and stone until at least 1915, they were not well-known for their granite products. Ruhkala operated a quarry east of Rocklin cemetery earlier, starting in 1903. Interstate 80's westbound lanes are now beneath it.
3. Rocklin Cemetery
At the corner of South Grove Street and Kannasto Street, you will find the Rocklin Cemetery. An inebriated local citizen died on the spot, probably in the 1850s, after he was buried in the cemetery after a day of drinking. Near the cemetery entrance, a kiosk features a map of the burial locations of several Rocklins historical figures.
4. Finnish Temperance Hall
A short distance south of Rocklin Road is Finn Hall. As Rocklin flourished in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, so did its saloons. Finns were freed from the strictures of the state church and craved relaxation after hard days in the quarries, which caused them to develop worrisome drinking problems. Rocklins Finnish Temperance Society was established in 1905 by family members concerned for their well-being. Finn Hall was constructed for social functions. Finnish quarry owners donated granite blocks for the steps and foundation, Helen Kesti wrote in her memoirs in 1967. Every block of gravel and every team of horses that delivered it could be identified by Kestis' father and friends.
5. Quinn Quarry
Winding Lane is about 200 yards west of South Grove Street, where this quarry is located. It was Mary Quinn and her children who took control of the quarry after their husband died when he fell from the hoist to the rocks below. A family operated the quarry until the mid-1890s. During the 1930s, this quarry supplied granite for the Monterey breakwater. There was once a swimming hole in Rocklin that was a favorite among residents and is sometimes still used as one.
6. Rocklin City Hall
3980 Rocklin Road is the address of this building. It was built in 1912 as a company store by Adolf Pernu, owner of Rocklin's California Granite Company. Granite frontispieces over the front entrance contain the date 1912. As Rocklins quarry businesses faltered during the Great Depression, Pernu's creditors seized the building after Pernu tragically died in a quarry accident in Sequoia National Park in 1931.
Since 1941, the City of Rocklin has occupied this building as Rocklins City Hall. During the early 1940s, Rocklins library occupied the first floor of City Hall, while City Council meetings took place on the second floor. The building was occupied by a market operated by Chung Moon, who came to California from Hawaii some time before 1930. They lived on the second floor until they purchased the home of Dr. Henry Fletcher across the street. It is now the Rocklin History Museum that occupies the Fletcher home.
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