Introduction
"It was a clear cold morning I shall never forget," wrote James Marshall in his diary on January 24, 1848 (as quoted in Rosalyn Schanzer's Gold Fever!). "My eye was caught with the glimpse of something shining in the bottom of the ditch. I reached my hand down and picked it up; it made my heart thump, for I was certain it was gold. Then I saw another piece. Putting one of the pieces on a hard river stone, I took another and commenced hammering. It was soft and didn't break; it therefore must be gold." With these words, carpenter James Marshall recorded his discovery of the mineral that would change California from a sleepy Mexican territory into the fastest-growing state in the rapidly expanding United States of America. Within six months of Marshall's discovery, word had spread that there was gold throughout the streams and hills of central California. It wasn't long before thousands of gold-hungry prospectors poured in from all over the world in what is now known as the great California gold rush. -- "Gold Rush" : Western Expansion AlmanacRecommended Resources
All Resources by Category
- California Gold Rush: Salem on History
- The Gold Rush: Westward Expansion Almanac
- When Was The Biggest Gold Rush In U.S. History? - History Fact Finder
- Edward Kemble: Westward Expansion Primary Sources
- Native Americans and the California Gold Rush: Westward Expansion Primary Sources
- The Gold Rush: Westward Expansion Primary Sources
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