Contact Number

  • (530) 273-8522

Park Accessibility Information

Park Hours

  • Historic Grounds are open daily.

    Winter hours (Nov. 1 - Feb 28): 10AM - 4PM

    Summer hours (Mar 1 - Oct 31): 10:00 AM - 5:00 PM

    The grounds are closed Thanksgiving Day, Christmas Day, & New Years Day.

    Park trails and the Penn Gate parking lot are open from sunrise to sunset.

Park Activities

Yes
Dogs allowed on roads and trails, within the Empire Mine State Historic Park Visitor Center, as well as the grounds within the historic zone of the park. Except for service animals, dogs not allowed inside historic buildings or in mine shafts.
Historical/Cultural Site
Picnic Areas
Env. Learning/Visitor Center
Exhibits and Programs
Guided Tours
Interpretive Exhibits
Museums
Family Programs
Hiking Trails
Horseback Riding

Park Facilities

Parking
Restrooms
Drinking Water Available

Brochures

Park Directions

Get directions through Google Maps

Drive 24 miles north of Auburn on Highway 49 to Empire Street exit in Grass Valley. The park is located in Grass Valley at 10791 East Empire Street.

Visit Empire Mine!

Empire Mine State Historic Park is the site of one of the oldest, deepest, and richest gold mines in California. The park is in Grass Valley at 10791 East Empire Street. In operation for more than 100 years, the mine extracted 5.8 million ounces of gold before it closed in 1956. The park contains many of the mine’s buildings, the owner’s home and restored gardens, as well as the entrance to 367 miles of abandoned and flooded mine shafts. The park encompasses 856 acres of forested backcountry and fourteen miles of trails - including easy hikes (for hiking, mountain biking and horseback riding) - in the park.

The "Secret Room"

To keep track of the mine's 367 underground workings, a place called "The Secret Room" (named for its blacked-out windows) was built. In it, the entire room was filled with a scale model of the mine's below the surface workings. Few people knew the room existed while the mine was in operation. Today, visitors to the park can see it in the Visitor Center. The model represents five square miles of underground workings. When the visitors go down the actual shaft in the park, they have journeyed only "one inch" on the model. Anything past "two inches" on the model is underwater in the actual mine.

 

Come along on a Park Tour!

45-minute guided tours to see highlights of the historic grounds are included in your entry fee. Tours have limited space and are first-come, first-served; early arrival is encouraged. Sign up at the Visitor Center when you arrive (groups of 10 or more must book a private tour). 

 Please Note: 

  • We cannot guarantee that all scheduled public tours will be offered, as our knowledgeable Tour Guides are volunteers. You may call the Visitor Center prior to your visit to confirm that your tour of interest is scheduled.
  • Weather can be unpredicable in any season, so please wear weather-appropriate clothing and be aware that inclement weather may cancel. 

Estate Tours

This guided tour of the landscaped grounds and historic buildings gives you a peek into the lives of the owner and the manager of the mine, and their families. Step into the early 1900's mansion and clubhouse, and learn about their significance in the heyday of hard rock mining.

November-April: 11 a.m. Daily, 1:00 p.m. Friday-Sunday
May - October: 11:30 a.m. Daily, 1:30 p.m. Friday-Sunday

Mineyard Tours

This tour introduces the equipment and hard work needed to extract and process gold from a hard rock mine. Afterwards is a great time to stop by the blacksmith shop and see our craftsmen at work. Hot weather may cancel; if temperatures are over 90 degrees, the scheduled mine yard tour will become a second Estate Tour and the blacksmith shop may close early.

November - April: 12:00 p.m. Daily, 2:00 p.m. Friday-Sunday
May - October: 12:30 p.m. Daily, 2:30 p.m. Friday-Sunday

Garden Tours

See highlights of the beautifully landscaped historic gardens. Tour guides will enlighten you to the unique vintage varieties of roses and other botanicals.

May - October: Wednesdays and Saturdays, 10:15 a.m.


Filming Videos and Still Photography in State Parks

Image of couple at Torrey Pines SBCalifornia State Parks thanks you for choosing our beautiful parks for your photographic activities and sharing the wonders of our park units with the world. However, in order to maintain the beauty of our parks and its natural and cultural resources, we require that all commercial, still and motion picture photographers obtain a film permit from the California Film Commission.

California State Parks requires an approved film permit for:
  • All commercial still photography and videography
  • Professional photographers offering private services
  • Student photo/film projects
  • Professional development projects

Drones are not permitted unless a special permit is granted. To learn more, please visit our blog here.

For specific film permit information at Empire Mine State Historic Park, Malakoff Diggins State Historic Park or South Yuba River State Park, please review Sierra Gold Sector Film Permit information.
 

Land Acknowledgement

California State Parks acknowledges the Nisenan People were here in this State Park since time immemorial. The Nisenan People are still here today, though they are nearly invisible.

The Sierra District of California State Parks includes their story in our interpretation and education here at the Empire Mine State Historic Park. We understand we are on Nisenan Land and that the original Tribal Families have yet to recover from the near genocide of their people during the California Gold Rush.

California State Parks supports the Nevada City Rancheria Tribe in efforts to stabilize their people as well as the campaign to restore Tribal sovereignty through Federal Recognition.

 

Location-Directions

Drive 24 miles north of Auburn on Highway 49 to Empire Street exit in Grass Valley. The park is located in Grass Valley at 10791 East Empire Street.

 

instagram icon facebook icon