About This Book
A firsthand account composed from letters and observations that contrasts popular romanticizations of the gold fields with on-the-ground realities. The author describes urban life, camp and mining practices, labor conditions, social disorder, fires and floods, costs and yields of mining, and the influence of transient populations and immigrant communities. Detailed chapters cover San Francisco, mining camps, travel routes via Cape Horn and Central America, and episodes of extralegal justice. Interspersed statistical notes and personal anecdotes underscore the economic, moral, and environmental consequences of rapid territorial transformation.
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