Nevada City
Kidd-Knox Building
The Kidd-Knox Building, a massive, two-story
iron-shuttered brick structure, was built in
1856 on the site where Hamlet Davis opened the
first store on Broad Street in 1850. The general
merchandise business was so good that Davis took
in a partner and replaced his tent store with a
two-story frame building that August. The first
floor housed the store, while upstairs the
patrons could rent newspapers and periodicals from
“The States.” Reading material was always in
short supply and a newspaper or magazine,
regardless of age, was almost worth its weight in
gold
to the miners. Destroyed by the fire of 1856, as
was the city’s first brick structure located
next door, the present building was erected
shortly after. The wrap-around wrought iron
balcony
adds a look of distinction to this old place which
has long been one of the town’s major
commercial buildings. It has also housed the
offices of many lawyers and judges who worked in
the
courthouse just up the hill. It is located across
from Schreiber’s Corner.
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