Nevada Historic Markers in Douglas County

Nevada Historical Marker 117
Kingsbury Grade
Foothill Road at Old Kingsbury Road
South of Genoa

Nevada State Route 206 Near the Base of Kingsbury Grade
State Route 206 Near the Base of Kingsbury Grade

Nevada Historic Marker 117: Kingsbury Grade
Nevada Historic Marker 117: Kingsbury Grade

24 February 2007
(Click Photo to Zoom)

Kingsbury Grade

Dagget Pass Trail, named for C.D. Dagget, who acquired land at its foot in 1854, was earlier called Georgetown Trail. Replaced in 1860 by the wagon road built by Kingsbury and McDonald, for which they received a Territorial Franchise in 1861, it shortened the distance between Sacramento and Virginia City by 15 miles.

The road cost $585,000. Toll receipts were $190,000 in 1863. Heavy eastward travel occurred 1860 to 1868. The toll for a wagon and four horses was $17.50, round trip from Shingle Springs, California, to Henry Van Sickle's station near the foot of the grade. Van Sickle, who helped finance the road, eventually acquired it and sold it to Douglas County in 1889 for $1000.

Horse-drawn water carts sprinkled summer dust, and sleds packed winter snow, providing a year-round hardsurfaced road.

Pony Express and the line of the Humboldt & Salt Lake Telegraph Company followed Kingsbury Grade.

State HistoricalMarker No. 117
Nevada State Park System
Carson Valley Historical Society

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