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California gold rushFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
The California
gold rush was a period in history marked by hysteria concerning a
gold
discovery in
Northern California. The period is also marked by mass migrations into
California by people, almost exclusively men, seeking an easy fortune. Most,
however, only found enough gold to barely pay for their daily expenses. The rush
started at
Sutter's Mill near
Coloma, California on
January 24,
1848
when
James W. Marshall, an employee of
Sacramento agriculturist
John Sutter, found a gold nugget. Sutter
On February 2, 1848 the first ship with Chinese emigrants seeking fortune in California's gold country arrived in San Francisco. On August 19, 1848 the New York Herald was the first newspaper on the East Coast of the United States to confirm that there was a gold rush in California. The gold rush prompted considerable development in California, and sparked the building of the Panama Railway. It is generally considered that the California gold rush ended in 1858, when the Colorado gold rush began. |