Newton Booth Historic Street Marker Walking Tour

Take a walk back in time and discover the origins of the historic Newton Booth neighborhood and the resilient 19th and 20th century Sacramentans who developed a strong community that endures to this day.

Newton Booth Historic Street Marker Walking Tour

Sacramento, California 95811, United States

Created By: NEWTON BOOTH NEIGHBORHOODS ASSOCIATION

Tour Information

*This free walking tour is comprised of excerpts from the pictorial history: Sacramento's Newton Booth and Poverty Ridge, which was authored by a neighborhood resident with support from the Newton Booth Neighborhoods Association (NBNA). This historical guide provides a broad view of the Poverty Ridge and Newton Booth neighborhoods from Gold Rush-era to the early 21st century. All author's proceeds from the sale of the book go to support our local non-profit, the Ella K. McClatchy Library Friends, which helps to organize and raise funds for reading programs and the structural maintenance of the historic Ella K. McClatchy Library branch. Thank you for your support!

The Newton Booth neighborhood is bounded by R Street to the North, Hwy 50 to the South, Business 80 Freeway to the East, and 24th Street to the West. Also within the neighborhood is the Newton Booth Historic District. The neighborhood was named for the Newton Booth School, which was constructed in the 1890s at the intersection of 26th & V Streets as a simple 2-room wooden structure. As the neighborhood continued to develop into the early 20th-century, a much larger brick school was erected in its place. The School was so named in honor of Newton Booth, California's 11th Governor. Booth, a gold rush era merchant headquartered in Old Sacramento, was an active player in the fledgling days of the city. The Newton Booth neighborhood was designated a Sacramento Historic District by the City Preservation Commission in 2014. It is characterized by craftsman bungalows but includes several Four-Squares, Victorians, and Tudors amongst other architectural styles.

Take a walk back in time and discover the origins of the historic Newton Booth neighborhood and the resilient 19th and 20th century Sacramentans who developed a strong community that endures to this day!


Tour Map

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What You'll See on the Tour

Julius Asher was a Northern California-based photographer who operated portrait studios out of San Francisco and Sacramento from the 1870s through the early 20th century. His Sacramento portrait studio was located at 244 J Street. Today, s... Read more
Located at 2014 25th Street, this beautiful prairie-style residence was constructed in 1910. In 1915, newlyweds Adolph Teichert, Jr. and his wife, Augusta, purchased the home. Over the next several years, the Teicherts raised four children ... Read more
The arts and crafts home at 2523 U Street was constructed between 1908-1912. In 1914, Edgar and Eva Boyles purchased the property and moved in with their 2 children. Their youngest daughter, Birdie, was born just 2-years later in an upstair... Read more
In the 1890’s, working class families, running small farms and working in blue collar industrial jobs at local factories, advocated for a school in the area east of 21st and south of R Street, as their children could not afford the electr... Read more
The Newton Booth neighborhood was named for the Newton Booth School, which has existed in the neighborhood since 1896. The School was so named in memorial to Newton Booth, California's 11th Governor, who had passed away just 4-years prior.... Read more
Electric streetcar service began in Sacramento in 1890. In 1895, the massive Folsom Powerhouse began sending electricity 22 miles away to downtown Sacramento.This facilitated the development of California's first “suburb”, Oak Park, and... Read more
The Sacramento First Church of the Nazarene, located at 1820 28th Street, began meeting in a rental hall in downtown Sacramento in the spring of 1922. The ‘Gospel Tabernacle’ was erected at the corner of 28th and S streets in the Newton... Read more
In 1906, Louis and Adelaide Huber constructed the mixed-use structure at 2620 T Street. The entrepreneurial Huber family saw an opportunity to become business owners in the growing Newton Booth neighborhood, and opened a grocery store on th... Read more
The Queen Anne style worker’s cottage located at 2507-09 W Street, was built around 1892 by William and Estelle Uhl. Like many families who operated small farms in the neighborhood in the late 19th century, the Uhls raised poultry for sal... Read more
The Pacific Bell Telephone and Telegraph yard is located at 1821 24th Street in the Newton Booth neighborhood. The shops were built during the early 1920's in the mission revival architectural style, which was popular during the development... Read more

 

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