Reading's Bar
| Reading's Bar Clear Creek Diggings Horsetown | |
|---|---|
Clear Creek near Horsetown | |
| Location | Clear Creek Road, Reading, California |
| Coordinates | 40°29′37″N 122°29′36″W / 40.4937°N 122.4933°W |
| Built | May 1848 |
| Architect | Gold Find then 49 mining town |
| Designated | August 1, 1932 |
| Reference no. | 32 |
Reading's Bar is a historical site in Redding, California in Shasta County. Reading's Bar is a California Historical Landmark No. 32 listed on August 1, 1932. Reading's Bar was named after Major Pierson Barton Reading, who discovered gold on the Clear Creek bar in May 1848, starting a California Gold Rush in the surrounding area. Later he found gold on a sandbar on the Trinity River that started the Trinity Alps Gold Rush. Reading's gold discovery was a major part of the California Gold Rush and news of the find created a rush of gold prospecting in Northern California, well north of the better-known gold fields of the Sierra Nevada foothills.
Following the Reading's Bar gold discovery, a number of small mining towns grew up on and north of the Clear Creek including: Horsetown, Briggsville, Muletown, Lower Springs, Texas Springs, Middletown, Piety Hill, Igo, Larkin, Jackass Flat, Ono, Bald Hills, Janesville, and to the north Whiskeytown, Shasta, Tower House, and French Gulch.