I searched the Esko High School on-line Card Catalog for hope as a subject and only one book came up. The fiction book is called Hobart, and the interest level is for children grades three through six. I then searched a related word (faith) as a subject entry, and it showed fifty-five results. I think more results came up for faith then for hope because faith is more commonly associated with religion than hope is. I then looked up hope as a keyword and over two-hundred results popped up; there were mostly fiction books for children grades three to six. One book that I clicked on is called Seeds of Hope: The Gold Rush Diary of Susanna Fairchild; it's "a diary account of fourteen-year-old Susanna Fairchild's life in 1849." Her mother has just…
Was it important? Explain. "Californy Gold" 31. Did the California Gold Rush make people rich? Explain.…
Throughout the length of the war and afterward George Marshall was one of the most important American officials of the time. As Army Chief of Staff he orchestrated the defeat of Germany in WWII, because of his Marshall Plan Europe was able to heal itself more rapidly and protect itself against Communism, and through his work as an ambassador in China he deemed that we shouldn't get involved and leave them to their own…
In January of 1848, James Marshall had a work crew camped on the American River at Coloma near Sacramento. The crew was building a saw mill for John Sutter. On the cold, clear morning of January 24, Marshall found a few tiny gold nuggets. Thus began one of the largest human migrations in history as a half-million people from around the world descended upon California in search of instant wealth.The first printed notice of the discovery was in the March 15 issue of "The Californian" in San Francisco. Shortly after Marshall 's discovery, General John Bidwell discovered gold in the Feather River and Major Pearson B. Reading found gold in the Trinity River. The Gold Rush was soon in full sway.…
John Marshall was born on September 24, 1755. He was an American jurist and statesman who shaped American constitutional law and made the Supreme Court a center of power. John Marshall was born in a log cabin near Germantown, a rural community on the Virginia frontier, in what is now Fauquier County near Midland, Virginia to Thomas Marshall and Mary Randolph Keith. The oldest of fifteen, John had eight sisters and six brothers. Also, several cousins were raised with the family. From a young age, he was noted for his good humor and black eyes, which were "strong and penetrating, beaming with intelligence and good nature. Thomas Marshall was employed by Lord Fairfax. Known as "the Proprietor", Fairfax provided…
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…
This increased demand for gold was during 1848 when James W. Marshall discovered gold in California. The gold in California began to be discovered in much greater quantities than in North Carolina. During the next year in 1849 over 300,000 people rushed to California with the hopes of finding gold and becoming rich. This is how the “Gold Rush” name was formed and still used to this current day. Since the gold rush began in 1849, the term “49ers” also originated and the name still remains used to this day in california by sports teams and many other traditions in San Francisco and throughout California.…
(1848-1859). The Gold Rush was one of the most significant events in California history. It brought people from all over the United States and the world in search for gold.…
During the late 1800’s and early 1900’s the gold rush had a great deal to do with the influx of immigrants and transplants coming from other states into the state and calling California their home. Prior to this, Native Americans and Mexican Americans had a heavy influence on the entire state. By 1850, the U.S. Navy started making plans for a west coast navy base at Mare Island Naval Shipyard. The greatly increased population, along with the new wealth of gold, caused: roads, bridges, farms, mines, steamship lines, businesses, saloons, gambling houses, boarding houses, churches, schools, towns, mercury mines, and other components of a rich modern (1850) U.S. culture to be built. The sudden growth in population caused many more towns to be built throughout Northern, and later Southern, California and the few existing towns to be greatly expanded. The first cities started showing up as San Francisco and Sacramento exploded in population.…
The President of the United States, responsible for the execution and enforcement of the laws created by Congress, Chief of the Armed Forces, and face of the nation, an unsurmountable amount of pressure, reliance and demand to be the best leader possible. It is no wonder why some men could not handle the task and fall short. The “Gilded Age," coined by Mark Twain as a time of great corruption, is the time period after the Reconstruction era of America after the Civil War, to the beginnings of the 1900s. It is a time littered with corruption, rapid economic growth and social conflict. Strife riddled poor immigrant workers hailing from…
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.…
The admittance of California as a territory to the United States of America had a tremendous effect on the aborignals bands living in the newly claimed land. Already suffering from the strife caused by the two previous colonizing nations which held control over them for the previous seventy-two years, the natives of California were subjected to disease, stravation and violent campaigns by American settlers intent on exterminating entire native populations through the use of fire and steel. The gold rush in 1848 was the impetus which propelled this narrative into reality. With the thousands upon thousands of new immigrants coming from all over the world looking for gold the destruction of California's natural resources was inevitiable. Salmon…
A body found at Marshall Plantation And the body was confirmed to be Beau baton. Candy Marshall, the partial owner of the marshall Plantation. They assume that Mathu has killed Beau- a white farmer and son of a powerful Cajun-Fix Bouton.…