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Gold Fever
A frenzy seized my soul... Piles
of gold rose up before me... castles of marble, thousands of slaves...
myriads of fair virgins contending with each other for my love -- were
among the fancies of my fevered imagination....In short, I had a very
violent attack of the gold fever.
Hubert Howe Bancroft
The first gold had been found on the land of a Swiss-born
adventurer named John
Sutter, who had already created a 50,000-acre empire for himself in
California. If he could keep the discovery quiet, he believed, it would
make him rich beyond his wildest imaginings. But rumors began to
spread.
One person who heard them was a Mormon elder named Sam Brannan. He had
been sent to California to establish a colony for the church, but the
rumors of gold led him to Sutter's Mill. There he saw an easier path to
riches than working the streams: he opened a store next to Sutter's
sawmill, fully stocked with picks, pans and shovels to cater to the
needs of the treasure-seekers he knew would rush to the gold fields
once word got out.
"Well,
Brannan gathered together enough gold dust from various sources to put
into a vial, took the next boat down to San Francisco, landed in San
Francisco, still called Yerba Buena in those days, and strode up and
down then-Montgomery street waiving the vial of gold over his head
crying, 'Gold! Gold from the American River!' It worked perfectly.
People spilled out of the saloons. They pass the vial around, hold it
in their hands, feel its weight, look at it, and it absolutely
entranced them."
T. H. Watkins
The Gold Rush had begun. By the middle of June, three quarters
of the men living in San
Francisco had left town to dig for gold. From Mexico -- where the
Spanish had been mining gold for three centuries -- so many men headed
north, one American reported, that "it seems as if the entire state of
Sonora is on the move." Thousands more set sail from every port in
South America. And as word spread across the Pacific, Hawaiians and
Chinese came to work the streams.
For those who got there early, gold seemed to be everywhere --
lodged among rocks, glittering in sandbars, swirling in pools and
eddies, there for the taking. Some made fortunes using nothing but
spoons or jackknives to scoop it up. Others hired Indians to do the
work: seven miners employing 50 Indians dug out 273 pounds of gold in
just two months.
Prospectors liked to say that the name "California," came from
a combination of the Indian word kali, which meant "gold" and fornia,
which meant, "wouldn't you like some?"
"The tremendous success of that summer of 1848 spread by
way of letters and government reports. The President in his State of
the Union speech announces that the astonishing news from Sacramento is
true. So the news is coming not only from the President, but most of
all from these people who are writing these vivid reports. A guy writes
home and he says, he says, 'You remember Dickson? He used to work for
Ebeneezer?' He says, 'He has dug enough gold to weigh down a mule.'
Now, that means something to people. A mule."
J. H. Holliday
"Everyone knew California was valuable, but nobody could
have imagined that it would be a place of such immense riches, and
riches to be harvested so quickly and seemingly so easily. It's an
incredible boon, an incredible stroke of good fortune, and it just is
one of those senses in which to the rest of the world it must have
seemed that everything was just falling in the path of Americans, all
they had to do was stoop and pick it up.
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