Truckee
Truckee, California
(Photo from 1977)
Truckee is an incorporated town in
Nevada County, California, United States. The population was 13,864 at the 2000
census.
Truckee was named after the Paiute chief. The chief's real name was not Truckee.
His Paiute name was Tru-ki-zo. He was the father of Chief Winnemucca and
grandfather of Sarah Winnemucca. The first people who came to cross the Sierra
Nevada encountered his tribe. The friendly Chief rode toward them yelling "Tro-kay!,"
which is Paiute for "hello." The settlers assumed he was yelling his name. Chief
Truckee later served as a guide for John C. Fremont.
Old Truckee Jail
"The Traveler", in his student days
(1949).
was offered a free overnight stay here by the Sheriff
as he was hitchhiking across the U.S.
# The Donner Party was snowbound and
resorted to cannibalism near the site that would later become Truckee. Many of
the area's place names come from this group.
# When Truckee's Chinatown burned to the ground in the 19th century, the local
newspaper jubilantly proclaimed: "Lucky Truckee! Chinatown Holocausted!"
# Prohibition did not stop Truckeans from producing fine whiskey.
# Truckee is famous for its annual rodeo.
# Truckee is the home of Donner Lake and the Donner Memorial State Park
# Truckee grew as a railroad town originally named Colburn Station, starting
with the Transcontinental Railroad. The railroad goes into downtown Truckee and
the Amtrak passenger lines still stop there on the services from Chicago to San
Francisco.
# The historic Donner Pass highway (U.S. 40) has been preserved as a scenic
alternative to I-80, providing frequent places where motorists may stop to view
and/or photograph the spectacular vistas of the area.
# In 1891 Truckee's famous lawman, Jacob Teeter, was killed in a violent
gunfight with fellow lawman, James Reed.
# Many films, including Charles Chaplin's The Gold Rush were filmed in Truckee
locations
Text from Wikipedia