Dogtown is a former settlement in Mariposa County, California, United States.[1] It was located on Maxwell Creek 4 miles (6.4 km) east of Coulterville,[2] at an elevation of 2582 feet (787 m).[1]
Dogtown | |
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Dogtown Location in California Dogtown Dogtown (the United States) | |
Coordinates: 37°42′08″N 120°07′41″W / 37.70222°N 120.12806°W | |
Country | United States |
State | California |
County | Mariposa County |
Elevation | 2,582 ft (787 m) |
Dogtown was a major hydraulic mining center in the late nineteenth century. At its peak, the town boasted numerous hotels, saloons, a dance hall, and a red light district. The town was supposedly named for the many stray dogs that roamed the area during the Gold Rush. A dam failure flooded much of the townsite in 1899; by 1989, only "scattered building foundations and half a dozen wooden structures on the verge of collapse" remained at the site.[3]
Several unrelated communities and mining camps in California also had the name Dogtown during the nineteenth century; including one in Mono County, one in neighboring Merced County,[4] another in Butte County (now Magalia), one in Calaveras County,[5] and a later settlement in Marin County.[6]