Some strike it rich, some just strike out
Every school kid knows that gold was found in California in 1848. If you ever sang "Clementine", you remember the words "lived a miner, forty-niner". But how much else about that episode in 19th century American history have you really thought about? I recently read a good novel, "Bitter Passage", about the harrowing trip across country taken by so many of the Argonauts of those days. Like that novel, Rohrbough's book does not wax eloquent about the fortunes made by gold miners. Only a few people really managed to come home with the prize. Mining in the creeks and rivers of California was no joke; it involved tough, unending toil over months with no guarantee that you would wind up with more than a pittance. Due to the sudden influx of thousands of hopefuls, goods and labor became scarce and extremely high-priced, so though gold mining might have paid more than farm labor or small-time shopkeeping back East, the cost of everything more or less negated the gains. Many of those who headed to California "saw the elephant" but also saw that profit might lie more easily in providing goods and services to the mining mobs. Even that did not always pay off. DAYS OF GOLD is based largely on the letters and diaries of numerous participants in the Gold Rush gleaned from libraries and historical societies in 14 states; a research job which couldn't have been easy. Turning the disparate sources into a flowing narrative was even harder, I imagine. Government reports, travel stories, and other sources are used as well. The chapters are organized topically rather than chronologically. The author has not neglected to mention the role of women, the situation back in the home towns of the gold seekers, the effects on miners' families, the disappointments which were more common than the successes, the violence against Indians and non-American miners, life and leisure in the gold fields, the effect of new money and lost population on the East, and a host of other, interesting topics. Well-organized and easily read, this book of social and economic history is both informative and a pleasure to read.