|Students will develop an understanding of the creation of Australian identity between 1788 and 1901. The Intel Visual Ranking Tool is used by students to |…
We are going to start with Stanley Pearce. Call of the Klondike is a true account of the Klondike Gold Rush. The text is based on primary sources, including the diary of Stanley Pearce, a gold miner. The authors describe the hardships that Pearce and other miners faced to pursue their dream of striking it rich. Pearce wrote that "every man that could raise the necessary funds for a year's grub stake was rushing... to start by the next boat for the promised lands, where the dreams of all should be realized. As a consequence, many miners became “engaged on schemes to fleece the…
The California Rush began on Jan 24, 1848. The founder of its first majestic gold was James W. Marshall. That was the beginning of optimism and daring change for many Americans. By the 1850’s a large population of 300,000 newcomers traveled and settled in California. One of those ambius Americans was Chandler, he was a well rounded minor who settled and worked very hard to get to the top. Chandler proclaimed many obstacles in a bundle of letters, whom he wrote to his wife. Chandler was a typical gold miner, with regards women and Indians, his views were very different to how history portrayed them. Chandler’s perspective on the Gold Rush was drastically different because he talks very highly of Californian women because they had rights, and were much younger, and successful. Moreover, when Chandler wrote about Indians he had a distinctive contradicting feelings, Chandler expressed sympathy and anger towards them.…
The California Gold Rush was sparked when gold was found at Sutter’s mill in 1848. Many people from all over soon poured into the area for chance to become a wealthy miner. However, many people found that it was easier to make a living by servicing the miners. Just as much money was in this business. As miners poured into California businesses and towns would need to be made to help the miners and local economy of the area. The Gold Rush united a nation that was separated into east and west. Not only did the Gold Rush unite a nation it created jobs for many ethnic groups and offered people the chance to become…
While the social aspect of each population played a huge part in the success or failure of a community, the monies that changed hands for goods and services by both locals and wayward wanderers were directly related to the prosperity of a town. Successful mining ventures boosted the economy, but once the natural resources had been depleted, the thriving economy often accompanied gold seekers to their next destination. Immigrants who ventured to America for a chance at a better life often found themselves suffering a rude awakening upon arrival in California. The ebb and flow of the economy during the earlier gold rushes in the South, primarily Georgia and California, was largely dependent upon the population, the availability of resources,…
Did you know that over 90,000 people all from around the globe traveled to California in 1849 in search of their fortune? James Marshall discovered the first nugget of gold on his small farm in the small town of San Francisco. He ran through the streets yelling,” Gold!, Gold!, From the American river!”. Some miners even considered him the founder of the gold rush, but not all people were as successful as James Marshall was. The shortage of gold and the lack of money were two reasons why the California Gold Rush was unsuccessful, but the miners also had a hard time getting there.…
The gold rush of California benefited San Francisco because it got on the map and the end of the transcontinental railroad was made in that city. More people came to California and more settlements and towns were made and grew because of the gold rush.…
Getting to California, fining the gold, and unfair merchants were some challenges for individuals during the California Gold Rush. No matter if you were a ‘49er or if you were just a citizen of California, the Gold Rush was a challenging time in history. Now imagine what it would be like living in California during the Gold…
The gold rushes from 1851 until the early 1900s were very important to Australia’s History. Up to that time, Indigenous Australians occupied most of the country, although some had already been pushed off their lands. In 1788, the first settlers from Europe, mostly English and Irish, arrived and established new towns along the cost.…
The author of the article “Klondike Gold Rush” starts his story from when the gold rush started and how it started. In the article it says that it all started when two ships docked in San Francisco and Seattle carrying miners with bags of gold. When the word got out to the press then everyone wanted gold. A lot of different people went to the gold fields. Some were big and some were small. These miners were called stampeders. Within 6 month about 100,000 gold seekers started there journey to the Yukon. Only about 30,000 gold seekers completed the journey.…
The California Gold Rush, which lasted from 1848 to 1855, started when gold was discovered by James W. Marshall in Sutter’s mill. As the news of discovery spread, thousands of prospective gold miners gave up their professions and flocked to California by land and by sea, hoping to make a fortune from digging gold. Reverend Mr. Walter Colton, then the alcalde (chief magistrate) in Monterey, witnessed the rush to California by gold miners and wrote, “The blacksmith dropped his hammer, the carpenter his plane, the mason his trowel, the farmer his sickle, the baker his loaf, and the taster his bottle. All were set off for the mines, some on horses, some on carts, and some on crutches, and one went in a litter.” Although these miners were in the…
But the point is that overall, violence in the Gold Rush was much more commonplace than anything Americans had ever seen before in peacetime. The California Gold Rush was one of the most important American events of the nineteenth century and its influence on migration, economic development, politics, and culture was deep and lasting. It was the prototype for all gold and silver rushes to follow. From these rushes brought the booming frontiers in mining, cattle, and land, which, within the space of two generations, would settle the west and eventually close the frontier. And so now, when California is thought of and remembered, let it be remembered as the West.…
gold seekers that have taken different routes by land or water to reach California. The…
During the gold rush period, immigrants from all around the world came to Australia to find wealth and riches in the gold fields. The majority of these immigrants came from England, Ireland, Scotland, Wales, America and Germany. But the largest foreign contingent was China with over 40,000 coming to work in the gold fields. The Chinese worked in large groups with one leader who was in charge. They worked hard and lived simply, they were feared by the other miners due to the extensive work they did. With the money they earn they would send back to their families in China. The Chinese also saw other opportunities to make money and work at other jobs around digging such as washing clothes, selling food and more. The locals and European diggers saw the Chinese diggers a very strange and different due to the way they looked, their religion, their culture and their way of life, this made them all a target of racism. In an attempt to limit the number of Chinese at the gold filed a law was passed in 1855 that any Chinese person entering Victoria would have to pay 10 pounds taxes and another pound of protection fee, the right to mine and to live in a colony. No one from any other country had to pay this fee only the Chinese. The tax however did not reduce the amount of Chinese in Victoria. After the gold rush same Chinese went home but many of them stayed starting up a business and bring their family members over to Australia. Over time the Chinese became respected and appreciated group they are today in Australia. But it was not only the Chinese who stayed in Australia after the gold rush. Many of the other immigrants for all the other countries set up their own business, brought their families over and settled in Australia. The gold contributed largely to the multicultural nature that is Australia…
Ghana has been blessed with a lot of minerals including gold, diamond and bauxite. These have been mined over the years in various ways for the development of the country. Ghana’s huge mineral wealth is well known as the country is ranked ninth in the world for recognised gold deposits.…