California Gold Rush Essay

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    Mexican California in the Gold Rush Moe Bamdad San José State University October 29, 2014 During the last half of the 19th century, relations between the United States and Mexico were just beginning to come together after ending the Mexican-American War (1846-1848). On January 24, 1848, James Marshall discovered gold along the American River, in Sutter’s Mill, California. Less than two weeks later on February 4, 1848 the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo was signed

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    the discovery was gold in California. It was in this vastly unoccupied territory that the American dream was forever changed and California emerged as a powerful state busting at the seams. The California Gold Rush shaped California into the state that it is today. California is defined by its promise of entrepreneurial success and its acceptance and encouragement of obtaining the American Dream. During the

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    The California Gold Rush The California Gold Rush was the biggest and the richest of them all, but it was no different from any of those that followed in providing the majority of its participants with much rushing and little gold. When forty-niners reminisced through beards grown longer and whiter, the strikes of the past became richer and the nuggets bigger, but the mournful truth is that most gold hunters would have done better financially staying at home and been

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    California Gold Rush of 1848 The California Gold Rush happened January 24th, 1848. James Wilson Marshall was working one day as usual when he seen a shine from the “icy winter water.” He thought it was just a trick of the California sun. Becoming Anxious he then went to go check it out, he found five shiny nuggets. Marshall went back to his station and hammered the nuggets changing its shape but not breaking it, he found gold. The founding of gold by Marshall brought prospectors, immigrants, and

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    “Gold! Gold! Gold! California Gold Region Seems Inexhaustible!” - was the headline of many newspapers during the California Gold Rush. The California Gold Rush began on January 24, 1848 when James Marshall discovered gold while building a water powered mill for John Sutter at Sutter’s Mill in Coloma, California. Marshall spotted the piece of gold coming down the mill’s trail race and went to tell John Sutter about it. Sutter stated in an entry entitled “The Discovery of Gold in California”, “In a

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    The California Gold Rush was a spectacular event in California’s history. It occurred from 1848-1855. Many, many people migrated to California to find the gold that was said to be there. This changed California from a dreary and unpopulated place to a thriving and happy place to be. Not everyone struck it rich, though, not even the person who discovered it, James W. Marshall. California’s motto, Eureka, is a reference to the Gold Rush. The California Gold Rush was a life-changing event for many people

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    The discovery of the California Gold Rush took place by chance. Mainly the amount of the world’s gold is deep underground and embedded in hard rock. Unlike anywhere else in the world at that time the gold in California was simple to dig up, free for the taking and required little tools to acquire any gold. Only things required: a pick or shovel and a pan to shift out the gold from the rock, sand and debris. The Gold Rush affected not only California, but the outcome of the nation. Creating the expansion

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    The California Gold Rush The California Gold Rush of 1849 is one of the most interesting and exiting events of the United States. From the wild stories of men striking it big, to the heart wrenching tales of people losing everything, these are what make it so alluring. There are many aspects of the California Gold Rush; effects on California; individual stories of struggle; and effects on the United States as a young country looking for stability. San Francisco was a small town of a few hundred

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    Many still tell the stories about the old west. These tales of the gold rush with gold nuggets the size of boulders, visions of the railroad cutting across the continent with civilization nipping at it heels, epic battles between settlers, soldiers, and Indians, or tales of cowboys, bandits and shootouts continue to capture the imagination of the young and old alike. Most of these fantasies boast of the riches any man could accrue, and of boundless opportunity for anyone willing to leave everything

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    The California Gold Rush was an extraordinary event that made everyone crazy for gold. This event took place in Coloma, California. When storekeeper, James Marshall, found gold at John A. Sutter’s Sutter Mill on January 24, 1848. He discovered that the rivers were filled with gold and tried to keep the secret to himself. People soon grew suspicious of the man so they took a trip to the sawmill. The men who when to the sawmill came back with gold dust. Once they heard that someone had found gold anyone

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