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Site of California's First Grange Hall

California Historical LandmarksCalifornia stubsGrange organizations and buildings in CaliforniaHistory of El Dorado County, California

The Site of California's First Grange Hall, also known as Pilot Hill Grange Hall No. 1, is a historic site that has been designated a California Historical Landmark. The organization was founded in 1870; the building was completed in 1889.The Pilot Hill Grange #1 recently left the Grange family and is now The Cool Community Center in Cool Ca. It is California Historical Landmark number 551 (Located at 1701 State Hwy 193, in the town of Cool, 95614, it was relocated in the 1930s when a family donated land in Cool. Before that time, it was next to the Bayley House located in Pilot Hill, four miles south of Cool.).The approximate location is 38°50′38.12″N 121°0′53.94″W.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Site of California's First Grange Hall (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Site of California's First Grange Hall
Coloma Road,

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N 38.843922222222 ° E -121.01498333333 °
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Bayley House

Coloma Road
95614
California, United States
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Auburn Dam
Auburn Dam

Auburn Dam was a proposed concrete arch dam on the North Fork of the American River east of the town of Auburn, California, in the United States, on the border of Placer and El Dorado Counties. Slated to be completed in the 1970s by the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation, it would have been the tallest concrete dam in California and one of the tallest in the United States, at a height of 680 feet (210 m) and storing 2,300,000 acre-feet (2.8 km3) of water. Straddling a gorge downstream of the confluence of the North and Middle Forks of the American River and upstream of Folsom Lake, it would have regulated water flow and provided flood control in the American River basin as part of Reclamation's immense Central Valley Project. The dam was first proposed in the 1950s; construction work commenced in 1968, involving the diversion of the North Fork American River through a tunnel and the construction of a massive earthen cofferdam. Following a nearby earthquake and the discovery of an unrelated seismic fault that underlay the dam site, work on the project was halted for fears that the dam's design would not allow it to survive a major quake on the same fault zone. Although the dam was redesigned and a new proposal submitted by 1980, spiraling costs and limited economic justification put an end to the project until severe flooding in 1986 briefly renewed interest in Auburn's flood control potential. The California State Water Resources Control Board denied water rights for the dam project in 2008 due to lack of construction progress. Although new proposals surfaced from time to time after the 1980s, the dam was never built for a number of reasons, including limited water storage capacity, geologic hazards, and potential harm to recreation and the local environment. Much of the original groundwork at the Auburn Dam site still exists, and up to 2007, the North Fork American River still flowed through the diversion tunnel that had been constructed in preparation for the dam. Reclamation and Placer County Water Agency completed a pump station project that year which blocked the tunnel, returned the river to its original channel, and diverted a small amount of water through another tunnel under Auburn to meet local needs. However, some groups continue to support construction of the dam, which they state would provide important water regulation and flood protection.