Honigsberger Store - Cooperopolis, CA
Posted by: saopaulo1
N 37° 58.567 W 120° 38.163
10S E 707630 N 4205800
A hostirc building in Copperopolis, CA.
Waymark Code: WMRTG0
Location: California, United States
Date Posted: 08/02/2016
Views: 0
"The Honigsberger Store is a simple one-story, rectangular, brick building with a false front. The brick is laid in a common bond pattern with a corbel table and dentils as a frieze near the top of the front façade. This distinctive Neoclassical brick commercial architectural style was popular in the California Mother Lode during the late 1850s and early 1860s. The use of brick, with simple dentil cornicing, relieving arches over the windows and doors, multi-paned sash windows, and glass and panel double doors with iron shutters reflect a period when simple well-constructed with iron shutters reflect a period when simple well-constructed brick commercial buildings lined the main streets of America.
The original low-pitched metal gable roof was replaced with one that was more steeply pitched sometime before 1905. The front and rear porches, missing since ca. 1905, have recently been replaced and are hung from the original metal brackets.
The building served as an important commercial enterprise in Copperopolis in the 1860s copper boom years, when its mines were the second most productive in the nation and provided copper for shell casings and munitions for the Union side in the Civil War.
From 1905 to 1929, it was the main warehouse for the Union and Calaveras Copper Companies, encompassing the period 1909-1929 when the reorganized company attempted to again bring mining in Copperopolis to an important scale. This effort was assisted by the need for copper for another war, this time for the United States in World War I.
The Honigsberger Store is one of three remaining brick structures in what was the original center of the community, fronting on the Plaza, and is located north of the Armory of the Copperopolis Light Guard and Reed's Store, both brick buildings constructed in the early 1860s. Other than the 1866 Congregational Church, there are no other buildings remaining of the more than sixty which were constructed during the initial copper boom.
Adapted from the NRHP nomination." (
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