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547 pages, Hardcover
First published August 20, 2002
The hard and sometimes horrifying journeys to reach northern California over land, around Cape Horn, and across the isthmus of Panama, with no time to spare because time was literally money if others beat you to the spot.
The chaotic scramble to stake a claim, dig, pan, slice, or mine for gold amongst a polyglot of hundreds of thousands of fortune seekers from across continents and oceans, all too focused on fortune to pay attention to anything else in the short term.
The slowly accelerating attempt to settle the chaos as San Francisco, Sacramento, and finally the state of California transitioned from chaos to more or less permanent communities and began to pay attention to those other things like housing, law enforcement, public safety (frequent fires wiped out towns big and small), and government.
The impact of the Gold Rush on the political, economic, and social turmoil of slavery in antebellum America, as California rapidly bypassed the territorial phase of incoming statehood and submitted a free-state constitution to a Congress bitterly torn between secession and compromise to hold the Union together.
California, in short, was becoming more like the rest of America. Yet something else was happening, something of deeper significance: America was becoming more like California. The change commenced the moment the golden news from Coloma reached the East and the visions of the yellow metal littering the ground set imaginations aflame.
In that moment a new American dream began to take shape. The old American dream, the dream inherited from ten generations of ancestors, was the dream of the Puritans, of Benjamin Franklin's Poor Richard, of Thomas Jefferson's yeoman farmers: of men and women content to accumulate their modest fortunes a little at a time, year by year by year. The new dream was the dream of instant wealth, won in a twinkling by audacity and good luck. (p. 442)