In northern California, a movement to study and correct local symbols deemed racist is brewing around one of the Bar is an area located within the Folsom Lake State Recreation Area near Sacramento.
At Negro Bar, the Black miners struck gold in 1850, one to 2 ounces for each man on the average per day, according to an article published in the now-defunct Sacramento Placer Times.
Clarence Caesar, a Black historian at California State Library’s California Historical and Cultural Endowment said Negro Bar is the state’s “first Black gold mining site.”
The Sacramento Chapter of Buffalo Soldiers, a history group that pays homage to the U.S. Army’s Black 10th Cavalry of Company G, staged events at Negro Bar for many years, beginning in the 1990s up until the mid-2000s.
Negro Hill, listed No. 570 in California Historical Landmarks Program, was an established community for African American, White, Asian, Spanish and Portuguese miners founded by a Black man named “Kelsey.”