13-4 The
Ø Gold was found in
Ø The gold rush made

Luzena Wilson said of the year 1849,
"The gold excitement spread like wildfire." The year before, James
Marshall had discovered gold in
Shortly after she arrived, a miner offered her five dollars
for the biscuits she was baking. Shocked, she just stared at him. He quickly
doubled his offer and paid in gold. Luzena realized
she could make money by feeding miners, so she opened a hotel. Like the
Before the forty-niners came,
When
One day
News of

A gold rush occurs when large numbers of people move to a
site where gold has been found. Throughout history, people have valued gold
because it is scarce, beautiful, easy to shape, and resistant to tarnish.
Miners soon found gold in other streams flowing out of the
1. Sail 18,000 miles around
2. Sail to the narrow
3. Travel the trails across
Because the adventure was so difficult, most gold seekers
were young men. "A gray beard is almost as rare as a petticoat,"
observed one miner. Luzena Wilson said that during
the six months she lived in the mining city of Sacramento, she saw only two
other women.
The mining camps had colorful names like Mad Mule Gulch,
Hangtown, and Coyote Diggings. They began as rows of tents along the streams
flowing out of the Sierra Nevada. Gradually, the tents gave way to rough wooden
buildings that housed stores and saloons. Mining camps could be dangerous. One
woman who lived in the region wrote about camp violence.
In the short space of twenty-four days, we have had murders, fearful
accidents, bloody deaths, a mob, whippings, a hanging, . . . and a fatal duel.
Louise Clappe,
quoted in Frontier Women
The mining life was hard for other reasons. Camp gossip told
of miners who grew rich overnight by finding eight-pound nuggets, but in
reality, such easy pickings were rare. Miners spent their days standing
knee-deep in icy streams, where they sifted through tons of mud and sand to
find small amounts of gold. Exhaustion, poor food, and disease all damaged the
miners' health. Not only was acquiring gold brutally difficult, but the miners
had to pay outrageously high prices for basic supplies. In addition, gamblers
and con artists swarmed into the camps to swindle the miners of their money. As
a result, few miners grew rich.
About two-thirds of the forty-niners were Americans. Most of
these were white men-many from New England. However, Native Americans, free
blacks, and enslaved African Americans also worked the mines. Thousands of
experienced miners came from Sonora in Mexico. Other foreign miners came from
Europe, South America, Australia, and China. Most of the Chinese miners were
peasant farmers who fled from a region that had suffered several crop failures.
By the end of 1851, one of every ten immigrants was Chinese. Used to
backbreaking labor in their homeland, the Chinese proved to be patient miners.

They would take over sites that American miners had
abandoned because the easy gold was gone. Through steady, hard work, the
Chinese made these "played-out" sites yield profits. American miners
resented the success of the Chinese and were suspicious of their different
foods, dress, and customs. As the numbers of Chinese miners grew, American
anger toward them also increased.
Conflicts Among Miners
A mixture of greed, anger, and prejudice caused some miners
to cheat others. For example, I. B. Gilman promised to free an enslaved African
American named Tom if he saved enough gold. For more than a year, Tom mined for
himself after each day's work was done. When he finally had $1,000, Gilman gave
him a paper saying he was free. The next day, the paper suspiciously
disappeared. Even though Tom was certain he had been robbed, he couldn't prove
it. He had to work for another year before Gilman would free him. Once the
easy-to-find gold was gone, American miners began to force Native Americans and
foreigners such as Mexicans and Chinese out of the gold fields to reduce
competition. This practice increased after California became a state in 1850.
One of the first acts of the California state legislature
was to pass the Foreign Miners Tax, which imposed a tax of $20 a month on
miners from other countries. That was more than most could afford to pay. As
the tax collectors arrived in the camps, most foreigners left. Driven from the
mines, the Chinese opened shops, restaurants, and laundries. So many Chinese
owned businesses in San Francisco that their neighborhood was called Chinatown,
a name it still goes by today.
The Impact of the Gold Rush
By 1852, the gold
rush was over. While it lasted, about 250,000 people flooded into California.
This huge migration caused economic growth that changed California permanently.
The port city of San Francisco grew to become a center of banking,
manufacturing, shipping, and trade. Its population exploded from around 400 in
1845 to 35,000 in 1850. Sacramento became the center of a productive farming
region.
However, the gold rush ruined many Californios. The
newcomers did not respect Californios, their customs, or their legal rights. In
many cases, Americans seized their property.

For example, Mariano
Vallejo lost all but 300 acres of his huge estate. Even so, their Spanish
heritage became an important part of California culture. Native Americans suffered
even more. Thousands of them died from diseases brought by the newcomers. The
miners hunted down and killed thousands more. The reason was the Anglo-American
belief that Native Americans stood in the way of progress.
By 1870, California's Native American population had fallen
from 150,000 to only about 58,000. A final effect of the gold rush was that by
1849 California had enough people to apply for statehood. Skipping the
territorial stage, California applied to Congress for admission to the Union
and was admitted as a free state in 1850. Although its constitution outlawed
slavery, it did not grant African Americans the vote. For some people,
California's statehood proved to be the opportunity of a lifetime. The enslaved
woman Nancy Gooch gained her freedom because of the law against slavery. She
then worked as a cook and washerwoman until she saved enough money to buy the
freedom of her son and daughter-in-law in Missouri. Nancy Gooch's family moved
to California to join her. Eventually, they became so prosperous that they
bought Sutter's sawmill, where the gold rush first started.
On a national level, California's statehood created turmoil.
Before 1850, there was an equal number of free states and slave states. Southerners
feared that because the statehood of California made free states outnumber
slave states, Northerners might use their majority to abolish slavery.

Chapter
13-4 Quiz Chapter 13-4 Quiz
1.
____________________were settlers of Spanish or
Mexican descent.
2.
James Marshall was the discovered gold in
____________________at Sutter’s Mill.
3.
The rapid migration of people in to
4.
Those that rushed to
5.
A forty-niner
who wished to reach
6.
Sail 18,000 miles around _______________and up the
Pacific coast-suffering from storms, seasickness, and spoiled food.
7.
Sail to the narrow _______________cross overland (and
risk catching a deadly tropical disease), and then sail to
8.
During the California Gold rush _____________people
flooded into the state.
9. The port city of ___________grew to become a center of
banking, manufacturing, shipping, and trade.
10.