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The gold hunters

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About This Book

A first-person account of emigration to California during the gold rush era, describing the arduous sea-and-isthmus voyage, crowded conditions, sickness, scarce provisions, and occasional deaths. It then turns to life in mining camps, detailing daily labor, claim work, supply economies, and the improvisations miners used to pursue fortune. The narrative sketches camp social dynamics, from rough camaraderie and gambling to opportunism, makeshift medicine, and informal dispute resolution. Mixed practical guidance and colorful travel anecdotes convey landscape impressions and elemental human behavior, producing an immediate, on-the-ground portrait of frontier mining life.

About the Author

Borthwick, John David portrait

John David Borthwick

John David Borthwick was a 19th-century author known for his vivid accounts of life during the California Gold Rush. His notable works include "The Gold Hunters," which captures the excitement and challenges faced by prospectors, and "Three Years in California [1851-54]," a detailed narrative of his experiences in the burgeoning state. Borthwick's writings provide valuable insights into the era's social dynamics and the quest for fortune, making him a significant figure in the literature of American exploration and adventure.

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