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    • Julius Popper

      10 Gold Rushes You Should Know About | RealClearHistory
      • The Tierra del Fuego Gold Rush is perhaps most famous thanks to the violent rise of Julius Popper, a Romanian-born Argentine who managed to make enemies of everybody on the archipelago (he died at the age of 35 under “sudden” circumstances).
      www.realclearhistory.com/articles/2018/07/12/10_gold_rushes_you_should_know_about_335.html
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  2. This is a list of people associated with the California Gold Rush in Northern California during the period from 1848 to 1855. Charles H. Bennett, present at the first discovery of gold. Samuel Brannan. R. C. Chambers.

  3. Jun 7, 2024 · The people who really made money on the California Gold Rush were merchants. Take Levi Strauss. When he heard news of the California Gold Rush, he headed to San Francisco where he established his wholesale dry goods business in 1853. Then in 1872, Strauss partnered with one of his customers, a Reno, Nevada, tailor named Jacob Davis, who was ...

    • Oisin Curran
    • Parker Schnabel. When it comes to gold yields, Parker Schnabel is head and shoulders above the rest. Since starting work on one of his grandfather's old claims while still a teenager in Season 2, Schnabel has mined an incredible 39,910 ounces, worth $67.8 million.
    • Tony Beets. Colorful Dutch miner Tony Beets first appeared on the show in Season 2, when the Hoffman crew relocated to Dawson City, Yukon, and soon became a fan favorite.
    • Todd Hoffman. After 12 seasons and counting, it's interesting to revisit Season 1 of "Gold Rush" and see how much of it is dedicated to Todd Hoffman's inexperience and failure.
    • Rick Ness. Rick Ness put in his time in the mines and on the show as Parker Schnabel's longtime operator and foreman before striking out on his own in Season 9, replacing the departed Todd Hoffman as the third leg of the show's three-team structure.
  4. The California gold rush (1848–1855) was a gold rush that began on January 24, 1848, when gold was found by James W. Marshall at Sutter's Mill in Coloma, California. The news of gold brought approximately 300,000 people to California from the rest of the United States and abroad.

    • Overview
    • How California was transformed by the Gold Rush
    • The Gold Rush’s lasting legacy

    Their work was hard and dirty. Disease spread quickly. Native populations were displaced and murdered. This is the story of how California became the Golden State.

    One of James K. Polk’s last major acts as president was also one of his most consequential: He helped set off the California Gold Rush.

    Polk’s deed came during his final State of the Union in December 1848. After discussing the recently concluded Mexican-American War, the president got to the point: There was gold in those California hills. A sawmill worker named James Marshall had spotted flecks of metal in a stream bed, and word was starting to get out.

    “The accounts of the abundance of gold in that territory are of such an extraordinary character as would scarcely command belief,” Polk told Congress. 

    There were already at least 4,000 gold prospectors in California, he reported. There would soon be many more. His announcement helped spark a mad dash for riches that would transform the distant American territory into the “Golden State” and leave an imprint on the national consciousness that lingers today.

    But most of those prospectors—the so-called 49ers who came to California at the Gold Rush’s height in 1849—didn't get rich from their finds. This is their story.

    One way to measure the impact of the Gold Rush is by population. In 1850, just over a year after Polk made his announcement, the Census Bureau made its first-ever count: It found 92,597 residents (excepting Indigenous populations, which were not counted as American citizens at the time). 

    A decade later, that number had nearly quadrupled.

    “All sorts and conditions of men, old, young, and middle-aged ... were relinquishing their existing pursuits and associations to commence a totally new existence in the land of gold,” the Edinburgh-born artist J.D. Borthwick wrote in his memoir. Borthwick had been living in New York in 1851 when he “was seized with the California fever” and joined the crowds headed west. 

    They didn’t find unclaimed land, though: California had long been home to a number of Native nations—and the state’s new leaders declared war on them. That war “will continue to be waged between the races until the Indian race becomes extinct must be expected,” Gov. Peter Burnett said in his 1851 State of the State address. 

    In the wake of this open call for the genocide of Indigenous communities, the overall Native population was decimated by disease, forcible displacement, bounty hunters, and local military, dropping from estimated at 310,000 in 1769, to just 30,000 by 1860.

    For many newly minted prospectors, though, hopes of striking it rich faded quickly. Life could be hard: Miners often ate bad food and lived in crowded, shabby quarters where disease spread easily. In Sacramento, the cholera epidemic killed 1,000 people in three weeks in 1850. The work of panning and digging for gold was hard and dirty, but wasn’t often productive. Luck was a bigger factor than effort.

    The heyday of the California Gold Rush was short-lived. "Now we hear of the complete exhaustion and abandonment of many of the diggings,” one newspaper lamented in 1851. Earnings among miners dropped from about $20 a day in 1848 to less than $8 a day three years later. Once an individual enterprise, mining quickly became an effort dominated by corporations—miners began to organize themselves into companies as it became clear that there were more people than working gold claims—and machines. Starting in 1853, hydraulic mining operations that used high-pressure jets of water to blast away at mountains to uncover gold devastated the environment. The process dirtied lakes, cut down forests and dammed up rivers. 

    During the five years between Marshall’s discovery and the onset of corporatized mining, an estimated 750,000 pounds of gold was extracted from California’s mountains, rivers and streams—peaking with an estimated $81 million in value in 1852. By then, the rush had permanently altered the state. In many territories, Borthwick noted in his memoir, European settlement had been a gradual process. But in California “the process was much more abrupt,” he wrote. “Thousands of men, hitherto unknown to each other, and without mutual relationship, were thrown suddenly together.” 

    They kept on coming. 

    After quadrupling between 1850 and 1860, the state’s population more than doubled again over the next 20 years and continued to grow rapidly from there—making the state an anchor for the westward trek of the American population that may only now be petering out. 

    Today, California has the fifth-largest economy in the world, driven by the agriculture, tech and entertainment industries, and may soon pass Germany for fourth place. And 168 years after Burnett delivered his genocidal address, California governor Gavin Newsom issued an executive order apologizing for the atrocities committed against Native peoples, which now number 1.4 million in the state. California has produced a lot of riches for a lot of people—and gold was just the start.

    Editor's note: This story has been updated.

    • Joel Mathis
  5. Apr 6, 2010 · The California Gold Rush was sparked by the discovery of gold nuggets in the Sacramento Valley in early 1848 and was arguably one of the most significant events to shape American history...

  6. Jun 17, 2024 · The California Gold Rush started when James W. Marshall found gold at Sutter’s Mill on January 24, 1848. While working on a water-powered sawmill for John Sutter, Marshall found gold nuggets in a pool of water, leading to the news of the gold discovery spreading rapidly.

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