Imagine going to find gold and ones you find then the next day it’s gone. In Yukon Territory 1897 It tells you that how people were looking for gold and how they got there. In the passage From A Woman Who Went to Alaska it talks about how people had to get an license and how you must tell the office of the state. In the article “Klondike Gold Rush” it talked about how the weather was and the miles they had to take. Only a couple of people made the trip. In the article it says “...approximately 100,000 gold-seekers set off for the Yukon. Only 30,000 completed the trip.” This quote explains that many people didn’t not make the tip. Sometimes the temperature reached -60F and that caused many problems for people who needed to mine gold. In the
Drilling in Alaska will not help stop the oil crisis. Many colonial Americans weren’t concerned about protecting natural resources because they thought they had a lot but they also knew that they needed to preserve the oil. Should the United States drill for oil in Alaska’s wilderness? America shouldn’t drill in Alaska because of the environment wilderness, protecting environment, and economics.
In the text, “Klondike Gold Rush” and “A Woman Who Went To Alaska”, both share many different things. In this case their point a view was different. That is what I will be discussing today!
Contextual information about the Klondike gold rush helps readers understand Jack London’s story and his purpose in the excerpt from “To Build a Fire”,by setting a good background for the reader to place the character and his story in. Without the contextual information provided, the story would seem rather disconnected and empty. It would not make sense. For instance, if the author had not provided information about the temperature, why the protagonist needed to start a fire, or why he was running around, it would make the story quite confusing. However when detailed information about just how the frigid temperatures affected the protagonist and his surroundings, the plot of the story become much clearer.
The California Gold rush of the years 1848-1849 changed the America financial status and the American population. It all started when James Marshall found some shiny metal near the river and he took this to his boss John Sutter and after testing of this metal they found out that this was Gold, But Sutter advised Marshall not to tell anyone about this because this might ruin Sutter’s chance to build a successful agricultural empire in California. But there were rumors and whispers that there was gold in the hills, and this all came to an end when a merchant named Samuel Brannan took some of the gold from the river and showed it to the town of San Francisco, and this caused almost all the residents in San Francisco to move to the hills to find
The environment in the Klondike Gold Rush had very harsh conditions on the people. In a nutshell, the Klondike Gold Rush was a movement, where people would travel to the North, which was Yukon, in search for gold. Prices of gold were very high at that time, so the people decided to start on the harsh journey of the Klondike. This all started when three men by the names of Jim Mason, Tagish Charlie, and George Carmack found gold in Dawson City on the August of 1896. Eleven months after that, in 1897, a steamship travelled home from Yukon, carrying "more than a ton of gold", according to a local newspaper, and so it began.
Shaun Callarman said in his argument that Chris McCandless had no common sense and that he had no business going into Alaska. I recall in the film by Sean Penn “ Into the Wild”
The California gold rush was a major event that affected not only California, but also the entire outcome of our nation. This all started January 24,1848 when James Marshall, discovered a shiny metal in the American River.
When gold was exposed in 1848, people moved to California to get to the "golden mountains."At the elevation of the gold rush the atmosphere in the mining country was of intense frenzy and selfishness.The shock of the gold rush, however, hurt much father than the soil of the Sierra Mountains.Many forty-niners did became wealthy from the mining of gold, but many didn't get zoo lucky. Most people became wealthy through other power other than mining.
The California Gold Rush was a huge part of California's history due to the fact that it brought people from all over the world, which is partly why we have such a diverse group of people today.
The California Gold Rush (1848–1855) was a period in American history which began on January 24, 1848, when gold was found by James W. Marshall at Sutter's Mill in Coloma, California.[1] The news of gold brought—mostly by sailing ships and covered wagons—some 300,000 gold-seekers (called "forty-niners", as in "1849") to California.[2] While most of the newly arrived were Americans, the Gold Rush also attracted some tens of thousands from Latin America, Europe, Australia, and Asia.
The struggles of the California Gold Rush You are in California hoping to become wealthy. You see a small, yellow, shimmery pebble sparkle out of the corner of your eye, you pick it up. The California Gold Rush was a world wide rush to get to California to seek its riches beneath its rich soil. It all started on January 24, 1848 when James Marshall discovered gold in California.
The California Gold Rush After the United States had become an independent nation, mostly everybody lived on the east coast. There was little thought of traveling west. As the 1800s started to come along, the thought of traveling west occurred to the colonists. The Louisiana Purchase expanded the country, and new and improved forms of transportation helped make the transportation of goods and people easier to the west coast.
The first topic I will be teaching you about is the California Gold Rush. California was a crazy, not that populated place. Gold was first found by James Marshall at Sutter's Mill. James Marshall told John Sutter and they didn’t want anyone to know, but word spread to fast and everyone was coming from 100 miles away to 10 feet away. Everyone at San Francisco went find gold except women, children and 5 men. Women took all of the men's jobs because there were no men. Everyone wanted to get more gold in a shorter amount time, but the fastest route was through a jungle where many died from animal attacks, yellow fever and malaria. A miners diet was beans, biscuits and preserved meat and since the lack of fruits and veggies many died from scurvy. Miners used lots of their money gambling and buying drinks from a saloon. Miners, at first, they used methods like panning for gold in the river, mining with
When gold was discovered in 1848, people entered California to prospect the "golden mountains." At the climax of the gold rush the attitude in the mining country was of anticipation and greed. The effect of the gold rush, however, went much deeper than soil of the Sierra Mountains. Many miners did become rich from the mining of gold.
Captain was also captured and executed. The significant of the war is that their conflict was taken by John Forster to the American court against Pio Pico, the last Mexican Governor and leader of the forces in California, Pico lost claim to the land of Santa Margarita Rancho and given the interest to Forster. The war was over, but the entanglement and court battles of the US against the Californios and Indians continue, some lost their lands while some are waiting patiently for their claims (Sandos, 2000, p. 86-90).