Set in the Central Valley just a couple of hours from the coast, Sacramento has an enviable position – there are tons of fun things to do in the city itself, and it's also a perfect base for day trips to San Francisco, Lake Tahoe and Yosemite National Park.
Is the California capital worth visiting? We’ll let its top attractions speak for themselves.
Old Sacramento was not only a center for the new state’s government but also an important communication and transportation hub for the entire country. The cross-country Pony Express horseback mail service had its western terminus at 2nd and J streets, now commemorated with a statue of a galloping horse, and the 1869 transcontinental railroad between Sacramento and Utah connected California to the rest of the United States along Front St, where tracks and a train depot still stand.
Today, cobblestone streets and raised wooden boardwalks lead visitors around a district with some 125 restaurants, bars, cafes and shops. Pick out a new personality from Evangeline's Costume Mansion, which sells gag gifts, wigs and outfits in Sacramento’s oldest still-standing building, constructed by German immigrants using wood and brick from the ship they sailed over on in 1852. For the activity-oriented, Old Sacramento has the California State Railroad Museum, the Sacramento History Museum, escape rooms and mini golf.
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You can spy the city’s original footing in the sunken brick courtyard at 2nd and I streets, but to truly dig below the surface, join an Underground Tour put on by the Sacramento History Museum, which takes you into the basements with a guide who explains just how all of the buildings were taken up a notch.
While some of the newly underground levels were used as shops and saloons, other sections were turned into outhouses and garbage dumps, revealing a fascinating insight into everyday life in early Sacramento. Don’t miss the display of cheater’s dice that were discovered in the trash heap – an unscrupulous gambler added weights into them but must have been caught or come clean.
River City Queen runs lunch and dinner cruises peppered with historical narrative, as well as cookies and ice cream trips that are suitable for the whole family. Thrill-seekers should sign up for a ride with Sacramento Jetboat Excursions, which offers sightseeing commentary with a side of speed – they say, “You will get wet. You might get soaked!” so dress appropriately.
Beer lovers who have already done a brew bike can try out Sacramento’s twist on the theme: the Sac Brew Boat, a BYOB pedal-powered rig that crawls along the river while you “cycle” by the scenery.
The oldest gallery west of the Mississippi, the Crocker Art Museum has an astounding assembly of work from across California, plus pieces from European masters and ceramics from around the world.
The Crocker collection spans both time – with modern works and temporary exhibitions – and space. The gallery is spread across two buildings: a huge, modern three-floor addition as well as the original space inside the Crocker home, an 1872 Italianate mansion fitting of a judge and railroad baron. The architecture of the Victorian side of the gallery is just as entrancing as the art on display, with painted coffered ceilings, shining parquet floors and a colorfully tiled entry.
The whitewashed fort became a commercial lifeline for traders and travelers, including the famously ill-fated Donner Party. (A doll saved by an 8-year-old member of the group is sometimes on display in the fort’s small museum.) It was soon abandoned, then reconstructed in the 1890s. Today, this State Historic Park has recreated rooms showing the work carried out during the fort’s heyday. Once several miles outside the town, Sutter's Fort is now in the hip Midtown neighborhood, standing as incongruously as the Alamo in the middle of the city.
The gift shop is one of the best places in Sacramento to pick up a souvenir, and you’ll find Native-made jewelry, dolls and carvings, frybread mix and a huge selection of books about Native people.
September sees an entire Farm-to-Fork Festival, with live music, local wine tastings and dinner on the iconic Tower Bridge, which is closed to traffic and set up with tables.
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