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D.O. Mills Bank Building

1852 establishments in California1852 in California1933 disestablishments in CaliforniaCalifornia Historical LandmarksHistory of Sacramento County, California
J street looking west with Sacramento 1912
J street looking west with Sacramento 1912

Mills Bank Building, also called the D. O. Mills Bank Building, is a historical bank in Sacramento, California built in 1852 in Old Sacramento. The Mills Bank Building is a California Historical Landmark No. 609, registered on May 22, 1957. The Mills Bank was built by Darius Ogden Mills was the oldest and largest banks of early California.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article D.O. Mills Bank Building (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

D.O. Mills Bank Building
2nd Street, Sacramento

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Latitude Longitude
N 38.5827 ° E -121.5042 °
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2nd Street
95814 Sacramento
California, United States
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J street looking west with Sacramento 1912
J street looking west with Sacramento 1912
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Lady Adams Building
Lady Adams Building

Lady Adams Building, is historical building in Sacramento, California. Lady Adams Building is a California Historical Landmark No. 603. Lady Adams Building was built in 1852 for $29,000 ($1 million today) and opened as a store and office building. Lady Adams Building is the oldest building in Old Sacramento. The store specialized in goods from the East Coast of the United States that sailed through the Strait of Magellan in the brigantine sailing ship, Lady Adams. The building architect was Julius Fiedler. The building is at 113 K Street, Sacramento.The Lady Adams Building was as wholesale and import house. Arriving on the Lady Adams in 1849, four immigrants from Germany set up the wholesale store. The wholesale store started by selling good off the ship Lady Adams at the Sacramento River docks as Lady Adams Mercantile Company starting in 1849 to support the California Gold Rush boom. Part of the ships went in to building the K Street Lady Adams Building. Lady Adams Mercantile Co. went bankruptcy in 1861. In 1861 it became the Fogus & Coghill grocery store. The city had a 13-year program in the 1860s and 1870s, to raise the buildings and streets in Sacramento to stop the flooding problem in the city, like the Great Flood of 1862. The Lady Adams Building was raised 15 feet in 1865. In 1868 it became the Mebius & Company Wholesale Grocers. For some year the building was vacant in part of the 1950. The roof collapsed in 1970 from age, but was repaired. For years it has been a Historical Sacramento Evangeline’ store.