California Gold Rush
Submitters name:
Timothy Braden
Essay Title: "California
Gold Rush"
Age Group:
Adolescent and Beyond
Date Written: 12/07/2006
The California Gold Rush Shortly after
the acquisition of California from Mexico a man by the name of John Sutter
arrived in East San Francisco Bay in 1839. Born in Germany he had to leave
because he was unable to pay his creditors. With plenty of charm and letters
from friends he convinced the Mexican governor of California to award him a land
grant of more than 50,000 acres. John Sutter built a stockade and a fort and
soon after became referred to as Captain Sutter, and his riverbank establishment
Sutters Fort. Sutter chose a location on the south fork of the American River,
50 miles to the south of his fort, to build a sawmill. A millrace was dug and
wooden gates were opened periodically so that the current would widen and deepen
the channel. During his inspection on January 24, 1848 James W. Marshall found
the first piece of gold at the end of the race. Over the next decade his
discovery would have a profound effect on the experiences of hundreds of
thousands of individuals, their families, their communities, and ultimately the
nation as a whole. By the winter of 1848, whispers of a gold strike had drifted
eastward across the country but few easterners believed it. The gold discovery
needed validation, and President Polk was just the one to deliver it. In his
opening address to Congress on December 5, 1848 Polk said that at the time of
the California acquisition it was known that "mines of the precious metals
exsisted to some extent. Recent discoveries render it probable that these mines
are more extensive and valuable than was anticipated. The accounts of the
abundance of gold in that territory are of such an extraordinary character as
would scarcely command belief were they not corroborated by authentic reports."
. With Polk's address making headlines around the world Gold Fever had begun.
The future forty-niners now under the influence of Gold Fever had to overcome a
cruel journey, miserable living and working conditions, and coming home boom or
bust. The trials and tribulations they faced are many and forever carved into
American history. Polk's simple words, backing up the claim of gold in
California, were a powerful call to action. Farmers left their fields, merchants
closed their shops, soldiers left their posts, and all made plans for
California. The departing gold seekers faced an immediate problem. There was no
railroad to take them there, nor was there a river route. The journey proved to
be a incredible test of endurance.
There were two ways to get to California either by land
or by sea. By land they faced a 2,000 mile trip across rugged landscape. Almost
everyone going to California overland traveled with a group, which were
democratic in nature. Contracts were signed that spelled out rules of conduct,
especially with respect to participation and sharing of duties. The journey
across the plains varied in length and difficulty, and because it was so severe
a test it was one the gold seekers would never forget if they survived it. There
were tens of thousands of men and women on the trail and all they could think
about was gold as they crept along at two miles per hour on the dusty trail. At
first it was an adventure, but as they pushed farther westward their enthusiasm
turned to fear of the Indians along the trail. The real danger of the overland
journey wasn't the Indians, but the lack of water especially the last 200 miles
through the deserts of Nevada. Goods and food were cast aside along the trail to
lighten the load. "At the beginning of the final stage on the Humboldt River,
many 49ers left their wagons and proceeded on foot, using as pack animals the
stock horses they had brought for breeding." The journey by land was rough but
so was the sea voyage.
The sea route around the tip of South America often took
more than six months and seasickness was rampant in the beginning. The
accommodations were severely overcrowded "men were accommodated in tiered
berths, usually three men sleeping abreast on platforms barely two feet apart,
one above the other.".
Boredom soon took over and the men took
to gambling from morning to night. "Cards and gambling not only drew veteran
players, but also rapidly seduced those heretofore innocent of such vices." .The
food was often full of bugs, and the meat was often rotten. Water stored for
months in the ships holds took on a foul taste, and was often diluted with
molasses or vinegar so it could be kept down. The weather in the Cape passage
was very perilous. The sea was very rough and it was bitterly cold. At night the
passengers wore all their clothing and shivered in their bunks, praying they
would make it through the night. There was another route that was partly by sea
and partly by land. By sailing across the Atlantic Ocean to Panama the
forty-niners could then cross over the narrow land bridge between North America
and South America. Finally continuing their journey by sailing the Pacific Ocean
to California. This was not as easy as it sounded though for crossing the
jungles of Panama many travelers picked up aches and fevers including cholera
and malaria. For those who remained well and luck was on their side the journey
took about five days. The first leg of the crossing was by canoes, navigated by
the natives, on the Charges River. After traveling as far as they could by canoe
they finished the trip on foot to Panama City. Waiting in Panama City for
passage to California could take several weeks and the numbers of gold seekers
piling up in Panama City was staggering. There were simply not enough ships to
handle the mass of people waiting to go to California. Many ships would take a
load of passengers to California and the crew would stay leaving the ship
abandoned in San Francisco Bay. By the mid 1850s more than 500 ships lay rotting
in the bay, many still full of cargo that no one had taken time to unload.
Regular steamer service between Panama and California helped relieve the
situation in Panama but never remedied it. After securing passage to California
the journey was over but few men had any idea of the hardships they were going
to face. Prior to the gold rush California had little community life on which to
build on. When thousands began flowing into California settlements sprang up
overnight in the mining fields. According to Paul, "The most common was the
camp: a straggling settlement that might vary in size from a few houses to a
small town. A more impressive place was the mining town, a community that was
larger in size than the camp, and usually had a few buildings that could make
some pretensions to substantiality." In the beginning nearly everyone was
camping out, under shelter of a tree, a crude tent, or a lean to made of canvas.
By 1850 log cabins were being built in the developing settlements. For the
common miner construction costs were so high that most buildings were made of
wood frame with canvas stretched over it. Such methods of construction produced
communities that were wiped out by fires several times. Miners set up a camp
close to where they were digging, it could be set up in a few hours and taken
down in even less time. This was an important part of their lifestyle since they
were constantly on the move from one location to another. If the daily living
was rough the work was then severe. Work began on the streams at daylight, and
as the miners dressed and prepared them- selves for a hard day of labor the cook
made their breakfast. After breakfast the miners made their way down to the
streams with their picks, shovels, pans, and buckets. After arriving at the
claim the miners began the routine of digging, shoveling, carrying, and washing
until sunset. This routine was carried out at least six days a week and often
seven. Often men would be removing the sand knee deep in ice-cold water for
hours on end. One miner summarized the labors of mining in these terms: "Mining
is the hardest work imaginable and an occupation which very much endangers
health.
A weakly man might about as well go to digging his grave
as to dig gold." Few forty-niners were prepared for the incredibly hard work.
Working fifty pans of dirt in a ten hour day was a reasonable goal. But digging
the dirt to fill those pans, sorting it out, and panning for the gold became
more work than most gold seekers had anticipated. For a man who could endure
hardships, could handle the incredible amount of labor, and could handle the
sorrows of disappointment, there was never a better opportunity in the world to
make a fortune. There was a great number of men who barely knew how to pick up a
shovel including doctors, lawyers, preachers, bookkeepers, and other
white-collar workers, few of them prepared for the hard life of mining. As much
as a thousand dollars worth of gold could be washed from a single pan, but few
miners ever had that exhilarating experience. A half an ounce of gold a day was
generally recognized as the bare minimum a miner must make to keep himself
working due to the inflated prices in the camps. Prices were so high in the
camps that had the miners been making what they did per day anywhere else in the
world the majority of them would have become rich. As it was though many miners
barely made enough to get by on a day to day basis. A tin pan that could be
bought for fifteen cents anywhere in the United States sold for eight dollars in
the gold fields. Everything was sold at unbelievable profits such as shovels for
two dollars, frying pan for two dollars, a mule for two hundred dollars, a box
of sardines for sixteen dollars, one pound of hard bread for two dollars, one
pound of butter for six dollars, a bottle of ale for eight dollars, a half pound
of cheese for three dollars, flour for fifty dollars a barrel, potatoes for
three dollars a pound. Not just the price of goods was high services were
equally severely inflated, for example a full time house servant would receive
around one hundred dollars a month, clothes washing could bring one hundred
dollars per week, a cooked meal cost around five dollars, women could receive
more than one hundred and fifty dollars a month for house cleaning. These high
prices were paid for by the average miner working day in and day out under
miserable conditions and poor health.
In the late eighteen hundreds at the time of the gold
rush men and women were accustomed to hard physical labor, but the intense labor
required by mining eventually wore down even the most optimistic and the
physically and mentally tough. "Wealth was the dream; grinding toil was the
reality that for many made it into a nightmare.". In the face of such demanding
physical conditions, men aged rapidly in the mines. Their hair turned gray,
their teeth rotted, their aching backs cried out for relief from the daily labor
of digging and carrying. The faces of miners were lined by hard labor, hot sun,
and continuing exposure to the weather of all kinds. In addition to the dangers
associated with mining was the communal living and poor sanitation. Baths were
infrequent and the men did not have enough clothes to change on a regular basis.
Epidemics of smallpox and dysentery afflicted the mines each season, and to make
things worse as prospects in the mines diminished cheap basic foods was all the
miners could afford. These cheap meals lacking in vegetables and fruits, made
the miners susceptible to scurvy. Even with all the hardships and miserable
conditions most of the miners made it through and now faced the most difficult
task of returning home. Few miners found more than enough gold to cover their
daily living expenses, and fewer still had any left over after gambling and
drinking. By the year of 1853 the big gold rush was at an end, the placer
deposits were virtually exhausted, earlier stakes had been worked over several
times, and now the miners had to face the reality of going home. How could the
forty-niner justify his long absence when he returned with no more than he left
with? For those that stayed to the end and had still not struck it rich, there
was the belief that they had done all they could to make their dreams come true.
If they had left after a couple of years they would have been forever looking
back and wondering if they had just missed the mother lode. In a way, coming
home was the coming to terms with failure. Many of the forty-niners who
disappeared into the countryside of California did so because they couldn't
return home empty-handed and face relatives and loved ones. How much gold would
a returning miner have to
possess to measure up as a
success? "Ten thousand dollars was frequently mentioned as the standard in
newspaper articles”. For many a few thousand dollars would be enough, and for
others just being able to square up accounts was enough. Many forty-niners did
strike it rich as is the case of John and Daniel Murphy who came to California
in early 1848. By the end of the year the brothers hade made one and a half
million dollars. John became a politician and Daniel ended up buying three
million acres of land in California. John Birdwell also came to California in
1848 and within six months had made a fortune and became one of the richest and
most respected men in California. A man named Dye in less than two months mined
more than seventy-six thousand dollars worth of gold. Generally unless a miner
found a lot of gold quick and then left, he would eventually spend it all
looking for more gold. The men who did not make their fortunes in money did gain
wealth in their memories of taming the wild land called California. Captain
Sutter prior to the gold rush wanted nothing more than to start an empire in the
new land in which he had received two hundred and thirty square miles. His land
turned out to be the gold fields, but Sutter turned out to be careless about his
business dealings. His workers went after gold along with the miners and left
his fields and cattle unattended. Sutter tried mining but soon began drinking up
all the gold he could find. By the end of his life Captain Sutter had sold all
the land he had acquired and was a poor man. James Marshall, who found the first
nugget, never made anything off of the gold discovery. He actually lost his mill
as forty-niners overrun his land looking for gold. He tried panning for gold but
never had any success. James Marshall ended up dying penniless and bitter over
the way his life turned out. Of the nearly four hundred thousand men who crowded
into California in the decade after the find at Sutter's Mill the vast majority
neither prospered or starved. For them it was a grand adventure that they would
never forget. For many it didn't end in California when the diggings tapered
off. Many men loaded up their tools and moved on to new gold fields such as the
Black Hills, Montana, Oregon, and even as far as Australia. Still other men
simply packed up and went back home, for the most part looking back with
fondness on California and their experiences searching for gold. Many decided to
stay in California and take up trades staying close to the land they had grown
to love.