How would feel to be a multimillionaire in just a couple years, but you have to get the Klondike in Alaska. Many people took this challenge either making their fortune or coming up more broke than they already were. The Klondike Gold Rush played a major role in shaping peoples lives and a time in American history. My paper consists of 3 main topics: first, what people had to go through to get there; second, the harsh conditions they had to endure when they got there; and lastly, the striking at rich part or if at all they did get rich.
This mass rush of people all started in the summer of 1897; George Carmack was back from the Klondike with the gold he discovered in the summer of 1896 (SV; SV) (“The Klondike Gold Rush”). There was another ship, named Excelsior, which docked in San Francisco it also brought another miner and their riches from the Klondike (Stefoff). After the ships docked in Seattle and San Francisco, the word was out. “Even in those pre-Twitter days, word spreads fast.” (Martel). Thanks to the telegraph and many newspapers the gold rush drew many people looking for instant wealth (Stefoff). Once the people heard these telegraphs or saw the newspapers the prospectors were off to the Klondike (Glasner). The newspapers wrote an article on the boats coming to town saying “ A Ton of Gold from the Fabulous Klondike” Actually it was closer to two tons (Wharton).
Although most of the rush to the Klondike was to go prospect for gold other people got attracted there for the adventure, wilderness, or because they had nothing left where they lived now (Stefoff). This made the trip worthwhile for some people. The easiest way to get to the Klondike was by boat up to Dawson City the whole way, but it was also the most expen...
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... people getting to the Klondike, the climates when they got there, and striking at rich, all contributed to how these families live today. If it hadn’t had turned out this way their lives would be very different now.
Works Cited
Martel, Lynn. “History Glitters in Yukon; Lure of the Klondike Gold Rush Continues to Draw Conclusions to the North.” The Vancouver Sun April 28, 2012. ProQuest. Web. 11 Mar. 2014.
Wharton, David. “The Alaska Gold Rush”. Bloomington: Indiana UP, 1972. Print.
Stefoff, Rebecca. “The Northland”. Oxford University Press, 2002. elibrary. Web. 28 Feb. 2014.
“The Klondike Gold Rush.” N.p., n.d. Web. 04 Mar.2014.
“Klondike Gold Rush Yukon Territory 1897.” Klondike Gold Rush Yukon Territory 1897. N.p., n.d. Web. 05 Mar. 2014.
Glasner, Joyce. “Yellow Fever.” Canada’s History 91.3 (2011): 46-47. Academic Search Premier. Web. 6 Mar. 2014.
On January 24, 1848, Gold was discovered at Sutter’s Mill In Coloma California. This discovery, immediately spread around the globe. People from all different parts of the world came to California. People called it the place for a new beginning. California quickly became the most popular state in the United States. Even immigrants from Asia and Europe were coming to California just to get their hands on this precious gold. This also greatly affected the United States as we know it today.
Murphy, Jim. An American Plague: The True and Terrifying Story of the Yellow Fever Epidemic 1793. New York, New York: Clariton Book, 2003. Print.
For the Kracha family, a slow rise to proud business ownership was ended by a series of events: (1) a summer of drunken abandon by Djuro; (2) his return to the steel mills (3) his daughter's (Mary) marriage to a fellow countryman also in the mills; and (4) his grandson's growing discontentment with unfair labor practices and abuses. These events in the Kracha family's lives become intertwined with the story of America's own transformation between the 1880s and the 1940s.
Three pieces of evidence from the text that shows the motivation behind the “gold fever” is that at the time many Americans were earning low wages or either had no work. This means that people with a job or that earned a little bit of money wanted to find gold to be kind of rich. Another piece of evidence that I found was that people were rushing to the grocers, hardware merchants, and the clothiers. This means that the people wanted to get ready to go find gold, so they went to different shops to go get stuff like materials like footwear, gold pans, buckets, and more items. The thing that gave the people a reason to travel to Alaska in search of fortune is that when
If you were given the chance to go back in time and into the Klondike gold rush, then, would you? If you said yes then think about this, the gold miners of the Klondike gold rush dealt with many more hardships than the California gold rush. I think this because of the climate that the miners had to face, the competition from other miners, the geography and the topography of the region, the traveling and the technology in the region that is also known as the Yukon Territory. After reading this you might consider that it would be better to be in the California gold rush than in the Klondike gold rush.
Dickerson, James L. Yellow Fever: A Deadly Disease Poised to Kill Again. Amherst, NY: Prometheus Books, 2006. Print.
The Forty-Niners became significant in California in 1849. Forty-niners were the tens of thousands of men, and many fewer women, who migrated to California starting in 1849 after the discovery of gold there in 1848. Thousands of people hurried to California when they heard that gold had been discovered in the Sierra Nevada mountains. It caused hundreds of thousands of people from all over the world to make the long, dangerous journey to California in hopes of striking gold.
The yellow-fever started in Memphis, Tennessee in a restaurant and soon spread fast across the state and neighboring states. “Yellow fever, which is carried by mosquitos, originally came from West Africa and was brought to the United States on slaves ships” (History, 2009). The impact of the yellow-fever blamed and hated African Americans for spreading it in America. Some politicians that wanted to abolish slavery took this event as something positive for the black. The antislavery followers viewed yellow-fever as the slave owners fault since it was their slave ships that brought the infected to US soil. In the end, this influence both has a good and bad affect for the African American
News of those gold discoveries attracted thousands of people from all around the world. The gold rush not only attracted miners but people in search of new starts, whether that was from love affairs gone wrong, or debts. Some seen this rush as a way to make an easy profit or fortune and settle down with new everything. Pikes Peak Gold Rush was one of the most known features in the region. It became a stepping stone that drew as many as 100,000 prospectors. With these prospectors, they brought over the slogan, “Pikes Peak or Bust,” in 1859–60. Many used the slogan “Pikes Peak or Bust” to show that it was all or nothing, either they gave it their all to reach the location of Pikes Peak or they would lose everything they had trying. The Pikes Peak Gold Rush had nearly increased Colorado’s population by 50,000 people overnight. Miners had begun their search for gold in the streams and gravel beds when they first came over to Colorado. But as time had progressed and gold was becoming harder to find in those places, miners began to dig deeper into the land, which allowed them to find larger rocks of gold. By the end of September, about 891 men were mining for gold. Towns were already beginning to be built in order to serve the miners and their needs and well
The California Gold Rush in 1849 was the catalyst event for the state that earned them a spot in the U.S. union in 1850. This was not the first gold rush in North America; however, it was one of the most important gold rush events. The story of how the gold was discovered and the stories of the 49ers are well known. Men leaving their families in the East and heading West in hopes of striking it rich are the stories that most of us heard about when we learn about the California Gold Rush. Professors and scholars over the last two decades from various fields of study have taken a deeper look into the Gold Rush phenomena. When California joined the Union in 1850 it helped the U.S. expand westward just as most Americans had intended to do. The event of the Gold Rush can be viewed as important because it led to a national railroad. It also provided the correct circumstances for successful entrepreneurship, capitalism, and the development modern industrialization. The event also had a major influence on agriculture, economics, and politics.
Mr Robson played a large role in our local history and was the ninth Premier of British Columbia amongst other roles. Beginning as a merchant in Upper Canada, the aspiring gold miner moved West to The Colony of British Columbia in 1859 after hearing news of the Fraser Canyon Gold Rush. Although his prospecting was unsuccessful, he became known in the town of New Westminster, the colony’s capital. Soon after arriving in the unfamiliar colony, Robson was hired in 1861 as an editor for “The British Columbian,” mainland BC’s
What do you think of when you hear the term “Gold Rush”? The 1849 gold rush in California?
There have been many discoveries that have shaped our nation as a whole. Discoveries have allowed our country to thrive and become one of the most powerful nations in the world. When we look back at our nation's rich history, it is clear to see that there was one discovery in particular that had a vast impact on the United States; the discovery was gold in California. It was in this vastly unoccupied territory that the American dream was forever changed and California emerged as a powerful state busting at the seams. The California Gold Rush shaped California into the state that it is today. California is defined by its promise of entrepreneurial success and its acceptance and encouragement of obtaining the American Dream.
Bennet, P.; Cornelius J.; and Brune, N. Canada: A North American Nation. Second Edition ed. Canada: McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited, 1995.
In the story “Klondike Gold Rush” the author is describing what the Gold Mining point of view era was. The narrator expresses a tone through that minors had a choice, such as if they wanted to stay or go home. The narrator then begins to tell the obstacles of the travel of a minor would face to get to the mind. In the article “Klondike Gold Rush” by Gordon stables the text states, “A three week trip, the miners lost their lives or their possessions when their boats broke up in the rapids” (Stables, 8). He is showing us how some of the people in the Gold Rush went through alot. In the article “Klondike