




The Shasta County Arts Council (SCAC) was established in 1981 as a non-profit corporation to promote artistic awareness and participation in the
As part of the California Arts Council's State/Local Partnership Program and under resolution from the Shasta County Board of Supervisers, SCAC has consistently fulfilled this position, especially as a liaison between local artists, arts organizations, government agencies and the community.
Based upon an initial Arts Plan developed in 1980-1981, the SCAC began in an office on the second floor of
SCAC relocated its offices to Mistletoe Lane in
Coming full circle, SCAC re-entered the newly renovated Old City Hall Gallery and Performing Arts Center in March, 1987, as designated stewards of the facility for the City of
Historically Significant - Culturally Active
Truly a monument to the colorful history of
The Shasta County Arts Council (SCAC) acts as steward of the historic Old City Hall Arts Center.
The facility houses a gallery, gift shop, classroom, performance hall, green room, video production studio, and offices for SCAC. It is surrounded by a small city park, and employs a bricked courtyard for receptions and gatherings.
The gallery offers professional exhibition space to local and regional (Shasta, Siskiyou, Trinity, and Tehama counties) artists, and the upstairs performance hall is perfect for intimate concerts (seating 150), workshops, and receptions.
Built in 1907, this historic building once housed
the city's offices, council chambers, and a police department. It still contains one of the original jail cells. Renovated in 1987 to coincide with 
There apparently were no celebrations when the
8,400 square foot
It was a point of controversy at the time -- the location was thought to be too far from the commercial center of the town (population 3,000), then on California Street. Opponents "pointed to the county courthouse, built in 1888, as a sad example of bad planning," the Record Searchlight wrote in 1961. "The county had made the mistake of building way up on the plains' and obviously would never be in the hub of the town's activity."
Eventually the City Council approved the building,
3-2, and authorized purchase of the land (on which sat the home of Dr. Sherman White) with $5,000 in gold coin. The year the building opened, the council accepted the offer of seven palm trees from the Women's Improvement Club. Two remain today and they tower over the building. The building's original bell and tower were removed in 1920 after clerks in the building complained that the cupola was making the roof leak.
A facsimile of the cupola was added to the
building during its renovation in the late 1980s. In early 1907, the City Council debated issues that sound familiar today -- "deciding what to do about
The city jail on the building's first floor featured
two iron cells manufactured by a local blacksmith, said historian and