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Book cover of The California Gold Rush
California - State & Local History, Frontier & Pioneer Life - Western United States, 19th Century US Westward Migration & Development - General, United States - 19th Century - Pioneers & The Old West, United States - State & Local History

The California Gold Rush

by Barbara Saffer
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Synopsis

Describes the discovery of gold in California, the rush to California to look for gold, establishment of mining towns, the outbreak of criminal activity, and other aspects of ...

Denise Daley - Children's Literature

At the urging of then President Polk, almost 90,000 people from all over the world rushed to California to find the abundant gold that they believed lay in the streets. The year was 1849 and the gold seekers became known as "forty-niners." Panning for gold was a grueling job that required much patience and yielded little gold. At its conclusion ten years later, the California gold rush had helped to make the United States a leading producer of gold and it also hastened settlement of the West. This informative book describes the development of California during this influential ten-year period. The creation of overland routes to California as well as the growth of mines and mining towns is described in terms that are easy to understand. Numerous photographs help the reader to better visualize life during this important era in American history. The book contains a detailed index, glossary, and timeline, as well as recommended book and Internet sources. It is part of "The American West" series. 2003, Mason Crest Publishers,

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Editorials

Children's Literature

At the urging of then President Polk, almost 90,000 people from all over the world rushed to California to find the abundant gold that they believed lay in the streets. The year was 1849 and the gold seekers became known as "forty-niners." Panning for gold was a grueling job that required much patience and yielded little gold. At its conclusion ten years later, the California gold rush had helped to make the United States a leading producer of gold and it also hastened settlement of the West. This informative book describes the development of California during this influential ten-year period. The creation of overland routes to California as well as the growth of mines and mining towns is described in terms that are easy to understand. Numerous photographs help the reader to better visualize life during this important era in American history. The book contains a detailed index, glossary, and timeline, as well as recommended book and Internet sources. It is part of "The American West" series. 2003, Mason Crest Publishers,
β€” Denise Daley

School Library Journal

Gr 5-7-Two books that are easy to read and appealing enough for reluctant readers. American Flag is a history of the designs leading up to the familiar "Old Glory." Ferry includes Betsy Ross's story as a legend, thereby crediting Francis Hopkinson with the design of the Stars and Stripes. One chapter describes Francis Scott Key's inspiration for writing "The Star Spangled Banner." Illustrations are abundant, beginning with a depiction of Columbus unfurling a flag in the New World, and ending with a photo of Neil Armstrong on the Moon in 1969. The last chapter deals with use/abuse of the flag in the last two decades. In seven chapters, Saffer introduces John Sutter, describes the difficulty of travel on overland trails, and details life in mining towns (crime, work laws, ethnic prejudice). Archival photos, sidebars, and borders decorate each page; the text is simple but not dull.-Linda Beck, Indian Valley Public Library, Telford, PA Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.

Book Details

Published
February 1, 2002
Publisher
Mason Crest Publishers
Pages
64
Format
Library Binding
ISBN
9781590840603

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