During the 1800’s, lives changed for many people. The Klondike Gold Rush began. In the article Klondike Gold Rush written by the Public Domain, the passage from A Women Who Went to Alaska written by May Kellogg Sullivan, and the video City of Gold made by the National Film Board of Canada and narrated Pierre Berton, the points of view of each show the miners’ lives. Each piece has a point of view, which helps the reader understand the miners’ lives through the word choice, and the tone
First, the article Klondike Gold Rush is written in the third person point of view. This article shows the hardships the miners faced and how difficult it was for the miners. This author helps the reader understand by mostly showing the difficulties the miners faced and how difficult it was for the miners. The author of this article uses words such as disappointment and lost lives to describe the miners’ lives. In the article it states, “...found disappointment...” this helps the reader understand the miners’ lives, because it
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This passage shows the disappointments of the trip and the unfairness of the rush. This author helps the reader understand the miners’ lives by showing the disappointments and some of the outcomes of the miners’. The author of this article uses words such as oppressive and meager to help describe the lives. In the passage it states, “laws are very arbitrary and strictly enforced,” this helps the readers understand the miners’ lives, because it shows how difficult it even was to even find the gold. In the article it states, “half of all mining land is reserved for the crown, a quarter or more is gobbled by corrupt officials, and a meager share left for the daring miners...” this helps understand the miners’ lives, because it shows the unfairness for the miners. Overall, the author of this passage shows the unfairness and difficulties that this miners had to
The daily life of a miner was far from perfect. The way the papers and other means of propaganda had portrayed getting rich quick, but it was far from easy. All the equipment that was needed to start out as a miner was for the most part outrageous. The earning wages from gold was” sixteen dollars an ounce” pg.8. Even so, the work was backbreaking. There was swarms of minors trying to get rich quick. To many miners that traveled to get a piece of the precious metal they where resorted to taking land from previous land owner just to get ahead in the Gold Rush. Not to mention that the living conditions where also outrageous. The “rentals of hotels and other business structures, whether of boards or of canvas, reached even dizzier heights than did commodity prices” pg.8. This spaces where set prices at 3,000 dollars a month or 40,000 dollars for a year, there was also other prices around the area of San Francisco. And in some cases miners where resorted to living in a room filled to the brim with other miners. This lead to very poor conditions for any one to live in. But nothing was better then being rich in a few months or
In the past Tuesday in class, we read Assembling California by John McPhee. In reading the first few pages of the book, I was amazed about how much gold was present in California at the start of the gold rush. I can’t even imagine gold being so prevalent that people were digging it out of rocks with knives. Eventually, as more people came for the gold and to ‘strike it rich,’ they brought other ways of harvesting the gold out of California, such as panning and gunpowder. This search for gold, and any raw material at that made me realize how extensive the desire for raw materials really is. I realized that people don’t care about the repercussions of their actions, provided that the immediate result of their actions is beneficial to themselves.
The Gold Rush of California was a “shot heard” round the world that caught the ears of many individuals who were seeking the golden opportunities of the West. (Chan & Olin 1992). With the dreams of wealth on the horizon, the Gold Rush brought on a drastic change in American society. For the women of this period, their lives would be altered in ways that would change the Western frontier. With an eagerness for wealth and equality women now found themselves struggling to survive in a society that was mainly male dominant and branch out from the normalcy of womanhood, which would transform occupational drive, prostitution and marital status.
During the rise of industrialization, the United States had just ended the Civil War and was starting to move on. People had an aspiration at this time to make a more than decent living for themselves, and the economy was at the right spot for this to be possible. This time period in American History is referred to as the Gilded Age, termed by the famous author Mark Twain, which simply means covered in gold; however, Twain did not necessarily mean this in a good way. He believed right under the surface of this gold plating was still problems with the American society that didn’t look so appealing. This essay will discuss how practices during the rise of industrialization during the Gilded Age shaped the American work and labor force.
Chapter 16 is entitled Americas Gilded Age this is rightfully named so. A Gilded Age or the term gilded refers to a situation where from the outside everything looks beautiful shiny and new and the inside is corrupt and evil. From the outside looking in America in general is flourishing the Industrial revolution for starters means an excess of mining and railroad construction which meant more money for all parties involved. the supply and demand ratio was not equal meaning an influx of goods which meant that prices would drop considerably, I guees you could say they were experiencing too much of a good thing. Eventhough some individuals had fallen on troten times several individuals emerged as busicess tycoons such
Greed and pride are negative moral truths which are most evident when Candide and Cacambo decide to leave El Dorado because if they stayed they would be like everyone else, and if they left and took some riches with them, they could "show off for the folks at home" and buy whatever they desired. Eventually, their wealth is stolen by dishonest and wicked men, and they find themselves more miserable and untrusting than before. They find that all their riches cannot buy what they truly want.
The conditions that the miners had to face during the gold rush. They had to sacrifice time and effort to mine because they didn’t have money to spend on anything else. The conditions also showed that they had to drink out of barrels stored for months that developed a vile taste meaning they needed to add vinegar and molasses to make the water drinkable.In addition they Also showed how it was hard for the mines to find out ways to mine and find the gold , They first used baskets to sift through gravel then later used high pressure water and explosives to allow faster and more reliable way of mining. In conclusion to this topic times were very hard for the miners , They didn’t have much because of what they gave up from what they expected of
Have you ever wondered what it was like to be a miner during the gold rush? Or have you ever thought about the conditions they had to go through to even get to the location of the gold? In “Klondike Gold Rush ~ Yukon Territory 1897,” the reader learns about difficult tasks and horrid events that the miners had to withstand in order to mine gold. In “A Woman Who Went to Alaska,” by May Kellogg Sullivan the narrator expresses how they feel the Canadian Dominion government is unfair and how the miners go through more just to get to the mines then it's worth. In both pieces, the authors both heavily feel that the conditions are terrible for the miners and how much gold they collect was cruel for how much work they put in. In both passages, the author was
The author’s challenging for other historical viewpoints during the Gold Rush was how this two types of classes were treated differently, between the Natives Americans and the Europeareans. High class women who were the Europeans were more as a royal class than the Natives, were a lower class. The European woman were in a higher positions than the other women. But even though these women were treated differently they were not as much different as
In the late 1800’s tens and tens of thousands of people joined what was called the Gold Rush. They risked their lives and many died along the way in the horrendous and treacherous conditions. In the pieces of text including, “The Klondike Gold Rush”, “ A Woman Who Went to Alaska” and the narrator of City of Gold, they are discussing the same topic but are using different viewpoints or perspectives. They share the same topic but have different attitudes of that time in history. One is about a person whose family member was part of it.
Many of Charles Christian Nahl’s Gold Rush paintings capture scenes of freedom, companionship, and the rough lives the miners lived. However, in his painting The Dead Miner (1867), Nahl reveals a darker fate for some of the miners. It showcases the body of a miner, dead or soon to be, in the middle of a snowy, dark landscape. Nahl used his techniques to create a story in the painting, one that could be applied to almost any miner. Nahl’s
In the distant Sacramento, land of gold and fame, lived a young governor of about the age of 27. This man lived in a mansion with his wife, two sons, and daughter. They stuck closely to tradition, living in the capital of their state of California where their government functioned, and taking a love of riches, sparked long ago by the settlers that had come long ago in search of a rush of gold. Felix Barocco, the one who governed this rich state, was especially greedy and always in search of an ever-growing possession of this expensive metal. Every day as the sun rose and set, and every night as the moon did the same, gold-loving Felix snatched up all he could find, and when the precious metal was scarce, dreamed of possessing golden utensils, of sitting and sleeping upon golden furniture, and even bathing in pure liquid gold. It seemed as though his dreaming began to overtake even his state and family.
In the second article “ A Woman Who Went to Alaska”, the author almost did the same thing as the first article. But, this time the president was very strict to the people or anybody that is trying to mine for goldand that he added some new rules, the miners are being asked to have a permint and license if not, they get arresetd. The miners will have to pay $10 for the particpation of the race. In the text its says, “ The Canadian Dominion government is very oppressive. Mining laws are very arbitray and
James Marshall, on January 1848, was constructing his sawmill on a river near Sacramento when he discovered a piece of shining and glowing golden metal near the river, which ended up being gold. Shortly after the word about the discovery got around, thousands of people across the nation and the globe all flocked to the region, fixated by “gold fever” effectively commencing the Gold Rush. An event such as the Gold Rush can take place due to the reasoning that one of humanities basic traits is a materialistic one. In his piece, “Aquinas on the Nature of Human Beings”, Jason T. Eberl assets Thomas Aquinas’s account of the nature of humanity and synthesizes Aquinas’s conclusion as being driven my materialistic needs. On the other hand, social
I will discuss how the Gold Rush, more than any other single event, impacted the social, economic, and political nature of the West Coast and the United States. I will break down the social, economic, and political ramifications of the Gold Rush on (a) the region, and (b) the United States as a whole.