Sonora Once Had a
Seamier Side
by Pat Perry
Like many Gold Rush
communities, Sonora was known for its seamier side as well as for a
more civilized society. Prostitution was practiced somewhat openly
from the city’s founding until the 1950s when the federal government
instructed the city fathers either to clean up the town or the federal
government would.
The first official
reference we have of the city trying to control prostitution, but not
abolish it, was when the City Trustees passed Ordinance Number 12, on
August 17, 1853.
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Section 1. That all houses of ill-fame, within the limits
of this City, shall either keep their front doors closed, or have
good and sufficient blinds or screens in front thereof, to hide
anything transpiring within from the view of persons passing on the
street.
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Section 2. Any
keeper or keepers of said house, failing to comply with the first
section of this ordinance shall upon conviction before the Recorder,
be fined in a sum not less than Fifty Dollars.
Because prostitution was quite open in Sonora’s early years,
many residents remembered the “girls.” Bemis Fitch Grant’s family
owned the City Hotel at the corner of Washington and Theall Streets.
Her maternal grandmother, Rebecca Lick, owned a candy store next to
the hotel. In the early 1900s, Bemis remembered the prostitutes
buying candy at her grandmother’s store, and then renting a room in
the City Hotel for a few days to rest up.