About This Book
A series of twenty-three letters from a woman living in California mining camps to her sister in Massachusetts offers vivid, unsentimental portraits of daily camp life. The correspondence records domestic routines, social gatherings, births and funerals, the roles and hardships of women, and character sketches of miners and other settlers, while tracing shifting moods of prosperity and decline. Observational and often lightly humorous, the letters document improvised religious and civic practices, community dynamics, and the practical challenges of frontier existence, creating an eyewitness chronicle of the social texture and moral complexities of early mining settlements.
About the Author
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