jeudi 26 mars 2015

GOLD RUSH

THE GOLD RUSH



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                                                         TRAILS TO THE WEST ( map)

 http://www.eduplace.com/ss/maps/pdf/trailswest.pdf


C
alifornia – Gold Fever

In the early 1840s, California was a distant outpost that few Americans had seen. John Sutter was a Swiss emigrant who had come to California in 1839 with the idea of building a vast empire. At the end of 1847, Sutter sent a group of men, including James Marshall, to build a new sawmill near the river. The sawmill was nearly complete when, on January 24th 1848, Marshall spotted something shining in the river.

John Sutter
The metal was tested and confirmed as gold. However, Sutter wanted the area to be his empire and did not want to attract others to the area so it was decided to keep the discovery secret. But it was not long before news of the discovery leaked out. The gold rush that followed was to make California the richest state.

James Marshall

Travelling to California

Via South America

Six months of seasickness, rotten food, rancid water and boredom.
Via Panama
The quickest option but travellers risked malaria and cholera.
Overland – The California Trail. A 2000 mile walk in sweltering heat with little food or water.

Get rich quick

The road to poverty

Road to sickness

Sam Brannan was a San Francisco merchant who spread news of the discovery throughout San Francisco. He also bought every pickaxe, shovel and pan in the region. A metal pan that had cost 20 cents was sold for 15 dollars. In nine weeks Brannan made 36,000 dollars.
Many overland travellers were not prepared for the harshness of the journey. Supplies ran out very quickly and replacements were expensive. Sugar rose to $1.50 per pint, coffee $1.00 per pint, alcohol $4.00. Many were forced to pay $1, $5 or even $100 for a glass of water. Those without money died.
The routes west became crowded with wagons. Dust was kicked up by those in front, making it difficult to see and breathe. Wagons camped together overnight and dug toilet pits, often close to rivers resulting in polluted water supplies, diarrhoea, illness and death.