In the fall of 1863,
Mohave chief
Irataba created a storm when he walked down Jackson Street, dressed in what
Arthur Woodward described as "the full civilized costume" typical of European Americans, which Irataba soon preferred to traditional Mohave clothing. The press documented his every movement and wrote extensively about his physical size and strong features. In February 1894, the two cable car lines on the street were extended. In the 1990s, the
Jackson Street Boys criminal gang gained notoriety.
Jackson Square Historic District The section of Jackson Street between Montgomery and Sandsome Avenues is of historical interest. It contains several 19th-century buildings that were built after the 1851 city fire and survived the
1906 earthquake. The Lucas, Turner & Co. Bank, also known as the "Sherman's Bank" was opened by William Tecumseh Sherman on the corner of Jackson and Montgomery in 1854. Ghirardelli Chocolate operated a factory in Nos. 415-431 between 1853 and 1894. The Hotaling Whiskey Warehouse, at Nos. 451-455, was built in 1866. In the aftermath of the earthquake, the Army decided not to demolish the buildings on this block for fear of detonating the barrels of whiskey in the warehouse, which would cause an explosion. The
Hotaling Building at 466 Jackson Street was built in 1866. ==Notable landmarks==