
Sacramento is the End of the Line and the start of the next one — the Gold Rush's supply town, the Pony Express finish, the place the transcontinental railroad began, California's capital under a canopy of trees at the meeting of two rivers. Our Sacramento designs gather that into wearable form. Wear the Gold Rush capital. Wear the City of Trees. City of Trees. Capital since 1854.
The Pony Express made Sacramento famous for eighteen months. The relay reached its western end at the J Street terminus and the B.F. Hastings Building, and a tired rider clattering in off the plains was the closest thing the 1860 West had to instant news. On October 24, 1861, the transcontinental telegraph line was joined, and two days later the Pony Express folded — wire could now carry a message coast to coast in minutes. Frontier ambition outpaced by faster technology: the pattern that would run through the whole of Sacramento's story.
Why People Visit Sacramento
Sacramento rewards travelers who want history, rivers, and shade rather than a beach — the Gold-Rush waterfront, the railroad that started here, the capitol, and a walkable grid under a famous tree canopy. People come for Old Sacramento and the Railroad Museum, for the Capitol and the gold bridge, and for an easy California day where frontier history and a leafy capital city sit side by side at the meeting of two rivers.