Sandy Gulch is a small community in Calaveras County, California, just southwest of West Point on State Route 26.
The settlement, in an area that was home to many Miwok Indians, was named after the gulch where William and Dan Carsner found large nuggets of gold embedded in the coarse sands.
Water for mining was brought from the middle fork of the Mokelumne River through Sandy Gulch and Kadish Ditches.
Quartz mining began in the early 1850s, and the first custom stamp mill in the district was located at the head of Sandy Gulch.
School and election precincts were established early, and one of California's many Hangman's Trees stood near the center of town.