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Webisode 3. Segment 9 Gold Fever Oh, Sally, dearest Sally! Those were the words of a popular song during the days when gold fever spread like wildfire. Farmers left their plows, blacksmiths left their forges, tailors left their needles, sailors left their ships, and doctors left their patientsall were heading for California. Once you were in California, your cares would be over, it was said. Why, you could bend down and pick up gold in the streams Many of the forty-niners, as those who came that first year were called, did find gold, but usually it was gold dust and gold flakes Gold made California. It brought great wealth to a quiet frontier. It brought people and ideas from around the world. It mixed rich and poor. It gave California enough people to become a statequickly. One popular song described the gold rush this way: "They swam the wide rivers and crossed the tall peaks. And camped on the prairie for weeks upon weeks. Starvation and cholera and hard work and slaughter, They reached California 'spite hell and high water." California wasn't the only place where gold was found. It also turned up in Oregon, Nevada, Wyoming, Montana, Idaho, Colorado, and Alaska. Silver, too, in some of these places. Guess who got rich? Mostly the storekeepers. But stories of lucky miners filled newspapers, and that kept people coming. They came from Mexico, Spain, China, Peru, England, and almost every country you could name. America was becoming a country of immigrants. |
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