Gold has always been a beloved and highly sought after commodity. Even the word gold brings people running to get their hands on it due to their greed and the power and money associated with gold. Prior to 1848 though, whenever gold was obtained, it was directly given to the king, pharaoh, czar, or the ruler of the nation in which the gold was discovered. The people would dig and dig for the gold and be rewarded with nothing. Then, on January 24, 1848, James Marshall struck gold, and this time there was nobody demanding they get their hands on it. He could just take the gold and enjoy it himself. This fact lead to thousands of people migrating so they could get rich in America, and that lead to vast industrial growth and ultimately helped make America a …show more content…
There were even people from as far away as China. Soon, to accommodate the miners, merchants migrated to San Francisco and bought and ran mines and shops which led that to becoming the cosmopolitan center in the world, when just four years prior there were around 12,000 non-Indians living in the California area. The population quickly grew while the Indian population shrunk with the whites shooting them for sport and out of fear. The Gold Rush definitely changed America for the better, from spreading its population, leading to a railroad, and starting the idea of obtaining the “American dream” of becoming rich and living in the land of free. Anybody could come in, from any nation and get rich. They could start a shop and get money rather than being oppressed by their home country. California quickly rose in population and consequently job opportunities opened up and the economy of California and the United States grew. It became evident that there should be a quicker way to travel from Boston to San Francisco and vice versa, so the building of the transcontinental railroad was
This included the issuing of fiat greenbacks, not backed by gold, but were required to be accepted for the payment of federal debt. It was generally believed that the U.S. Government would ultimately redeem the "greenbacks" with gold. In 1869, a group of speculators, headed by James Fisk and Jay Gould, sought to profit from this by cornering the gold market. Gould and Fisk first recruited Grant 's brother-in-law, a financier named Abel Corbin. They used Corbin to get close to Grant in social situations, where they would argue against government sale of gold, and Corbin would support their arguments.
These were such cities as California capital Sacramento, San Francisco and Oakland. The gold rush would lead to California eventually becoming a state more immigrants came to America and settled in different places not just on
The textbook first begins with an explanation on the Cariboo gold rush, specifically identifying how it had an impact on British Columbia; delving in to the California Gold Rush later on. Notably, it describes how the rush to claim land in BC and mine it for Gold aided the early development of the province. However, the California Gold Rush is given more detail into its origins, detailing how Gold attracted upwards of thousands of people to search for gold along the Sacramento River. Henceforth, prospecting for gold became necessary in the field, which was commonly disappointing, for many staked claims on land to mine, while the best claims were already taken. Accordingly, many who went to mine were unemployed when the gold was all gone.
A: We have to get some more gold to feed our people, and pay for our people and military. Hmmm, maybe we can “borrow” some gold from Country B. People of Country A: All we have to do is sneak some gold from the country. Tomorrow, when sundown occurs, we will run across the border, and steal their precious gold from them. King of Country
The California gold rush was something that got our country’s back then. In 1848, James Marshall had discovered gold in California right along the American River. Once people found out about it, they started moving to California in hopes of finding gold as well. I was one of those people who decided to venture there hoping against all doubt and be one of the lucky few to find any. It took me a few months to save up money to go on the trip to California but once I did, I began my journey.
In the second half of the 19th-century migration to California increased due to railroad-inspired land boom. However, migration to California was not welcoming and tolerant to one specific group of migrants, and this group was the Chinese. As new rails were being built there was a demand for workers to build railways throughout California and eastward to connect the Transcontinental Railroad with Union Pacific (Textbook, 269). Big railroad industries, such as Central Pacific hired Chinese immigrants as part of their workforce. The Chinese worked tirelessly and through tough environmental conditions and earned low wages.
The California gold rush was the largest mass migration in America history since it brought .about 300,000 to California it all started January 24 1848 when James w Marshall found gold. On his piece of land at sutter mill in Coloma the news of gold spread quickly around people. From Oregon sandwich island now Hawaii at Latin American were first to here the breaking news. So they were the first to arrive in order to test their luck in California by the end of 1848.
The California Gold Rush of 1848 brought gold-seekers from the eastern United States and Chinese immigrants from abroad to the California frontier, a move that established San Francisco as the west coast urban center of commerce and trade. The conclusion of the Civil War and the abolition of slavery left a void in the Southern states’ economy as southerners struggled to keep up with the demands of their formerly slave-worked plantations. As San Francisco was making strides mimicking American imperialism over its surrounding land and resources, slavery was not an economic commodity that previously existed in the west. The population of Chinese immigrants had been rising well before the influx of people traveling west in search for gold also. The introduction of 13th Amendment had forced whites to morally equalize human rights to apply to blacks, which had never been of equal status before.
The rush for gold did not occur until the fall of 1897 when it became sudden and overwhelming. At the beginning of 1896, only several thousand non-Indian miners, traders and missionaries resided in the Yukon. Two years later, the territory was overrun with tens of thousands of newcomers who quickly wrought serious and far ranging changes to the land. The federal government, concerned primarily with maximizing resources extraction, did little to ensure environmental protection. Sadly, and for the most part, Alaska and the Klondike were places to exploit, reap the harvest and ignore the consequences, so few bothered to make observations about the environmental impact.
the city San Francisco “became the most cosmopolitan city in America, with large numbers of French, Germans, Americans, Mexicans, and Chinese,” (Gillon 69). This shows that the Gold Rush attracted immigrants from all around the world to California which caused the city to become more diverse and more cultures were practiced throughout California. California became more diverse because of the Gold Rush. In conclusion, the Gold Rush had a positive impact on American History because Americans grew in wealth and California became more diverse.
I’m at Michigan I found out that the gold I mine was fools gold I was mining for worthless ore that was disguised as gold i 'm still rich but I feel empty thinking about fools
The California Gold Rush was a rush of people in search of gold in California. The gold was discovered in the Sacramento Valley in early 1848 which sparked the gold rush. The rush was a huge influence in how America was shaped into what it is today. It shaped California into what it is today. Without this gold rush California would be like it is today but it would have taken way more years and it wouldn’t be such a diversely populated state.
Gold comes from being mined from the earth. Gold has been used to buy other things. As stated in the article The Allure of Gold, the California gold rush was a big deal. People thought they were going to get rich.
On the day of January 24, 1848 James Wilson Marshall, found flakes of gold in the river of Sierra Nevada. Marshall and his partner John Sutter at the time were working on a water-powered sawmill in the mountains of Coloma, California. They tried to keep the news of gold being found to spread, but it was too late, word got out. Immigrants of Hawaii, Mexico, Chile, Peru, and China were the first to hear the news of the Gold in California and only later on did the east coast of U.S. hear the news. According to the article “The Gold Rush of 1848” people during the time would leave everything behind and travel to California in the hope of finding wealth and returning to their family back home afterwards.
After the Civil War, railroads were built to the West for economic development. There were white settlers that were transferred from the East to Mississippi so they could work on mines, farms, and ranches. Another group of settlers were African-Americans who came from Deep South with the promise that they will find prosperity in the West. Later on, Chinese workers also contributed with railroad