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A study of the mining
techniques used during the California Gold Rush reveals more than just
information of how to extract gold from the earth. The various types of
mining techniques also show the cultural melting pot that was then and
is now California and they reveal the myth behind the history of the Gold
Rush.
The Gold Rush brought many people from all over the globe to the newly
American land of California. While most of the Americans who came were
Eastern farmers hoping to strike it rich quickly and return home to their
families, many foreigners came with previous mining experience. These
men (they were mostly men) were needed to educate the ignorant in the
ways of mining. Chileans and Mexicans had experience and taught many whites.
Chinese miners demonstrated the value of persistence. They did not bring
new techniques but they determinedly worked sites previous abandoned by
white miners and found new riches through sheer effort. Of course, all
these mine sites were not on empty land, but in places occupied by Native
Americans. The early miners' lack of experience proved detrimental for
Native Americans, as they overran more and more land in search of gold.
The California Gold Rush was a multicultural place and without the knowledge
of people who knew how to mine, it may have ended much earlier.
The mining techniques used in the Gold Rush evolved over time. This evolution
tells a much more complex story than it seems at first glance; the change
in mining techniques reveals the myth of the Gold Rush. In legend, the
Gold Rush was where a poor farmer from New York or Pennsylvania could
go, "strike it rich", and return home a wealthy man. Of course,
this rarely happened and most men returned home with less than they had
when they began their journey. However, as mining techniques changed,
even this possibility was lost. The change in mining techniques is really
the story of the evolution of the Gold Rush from an individual to a corporate
phenomenon.
A few years after 1849, when hydraulic jets were the main mode of mining,
an individual could no longer go to California to "strike it rich."
Large corporations essentially ruled the Gold Rush and literally had the
power to move mountains - or at least blast water into them and alter
their contours. Mining itself changed. No longer was it a risk, a hope,
a chance to get rich quick. Mining became just another job, and miners
were paid labor. Some corporations made money while others did not, but
the risk and reward was now in the clean hands of wealthy businessmen,
not in the dirty hands of lone miners who relied on skill, effort, and
luck to make a fortune.
Standards:
4.4 Students explain how California became an agricultural and industrial
power, tracing the transformation of the California economy and its political
and cultural development since the 1950s. (4.4.2)
8.8 Students analyze the divergent paths of the American people
in the West from 1800 to the mid-1800s and the challenges they faced.
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