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The French Gulch Hotel was born in the roaring days of
California's gold rush. French Gulch was named for the French Canadians
who mined gold here in
1849. This was the largest gold producing area of the northern
mines and was located on the California Oregon Trail. In its prime, French
Gulch supported 4 saloons, 2 hotels, a post office, 2 mercantile stores,
an assayers office and various livery stables and blacksmith shops. After
the gold played out and the mines closed, and new highways were built,
French Gulch became a tranquil hamlet with only one hotel, one saloon, a
post office and a small store.
The French Gulch Hotel originated as
the Feeny Hotel and was built in 1885 by Richard Feeny. It was operated by
the Feeny's for about 60 years. Originally the hotel had a capacity of 34
rooms. Each room was designed to accommodate a single male boarder and
were 10 x 10 with a single bed, a wash basin and one tall window. There
were no indoor bathroom facilities and no running water in the hotel as it
was first built.
The Hotel also has the Empire Bar (once housed in the Empire Hotel, now
gone). England claims the birthplace of this bar where it was made by hand
by the Brunswick Company. A square rigged sailing schooner braved storms
around South
America's Cape Horn to bring it to San Francisco. Then still in crates and
disassembled, it made its way by horse-drawn wagon to French Gulch.
The French Gulch Hotel has had
several
different owners and gone through many changes
through the test of time. The hotel stands as a monument to western
hospitality and a reminder of the unique culture of the people who settled
in mining towns.