Posted on January 24, 2022
This is an update of my post published on January 24, 2011:
J
ames Marshall was a pretty average guy—a carpenter and a sawmill operator. But on this date in 1848, he made a discovery that changed his life. Heck, it changed a whole lot of people’s lives!
He was examining the channel below the sawmill he was constructing in partnership with John Sutter in California, which then belonged to Mexico.
He noticed some shiny flecks in the channel bed, and he picked up one or two pieces for closer study. He knew a little bit about minerals, and when he saw that the shiny stuff was very bright, brittle, yet malleable (which means it could be beaten into different shapes, without breaking)—and, of course, that it was gold-colored!—Marshall knew that he had discovered precious, valuable gold!
According to his later recounting, he went to one of the carpenters working on the mill and said, “I have found it.” And when he explained that “it” meant gold, the other carpenter protested that it couldn’t be gold. But Marshall was sure of himself. And of course, he was right!
However, Marshall’s discovery did not make him rich. Instead, his sawmill failed when everybody dropped everything to search for gold, and his later business ventures, a vineyard and a gold mine, eventually failed as well. Neither Marshall, the guy who actually discovered the gold, nor Sutter, the guy who owned the land on which the discovery was made, benefitted from the discovery!
You may already know that people came to California from all over the world to search for gold (or to sell things to miners searching for gold). It is estimated that some 300,000 people came during the Gold Rush!
Find out more!
For more on the discovery of gold, go to the History Net.
Take a virtual tour of the Oakland Museum‘s Gold Rush exhibit.
Check out the Women’s Museum of California exhibit on the women of the Gold Rush.
Also on this date:
Global Belly Laugh Day
Physicist Michio Kaku’s birthday
National Peanut Butter Day
Pioneer in the study of memory Hermann Ebbinghaus’s birthday
Beginning of the Sundance Film Festival
Economic Liberation Day in Togo
Ballerina Maria Tallchief’s birthday
Alasitas Fair in Bolivia
Woodworker / furniture maker Sam Maloof’s birthday
Mobile Recycling Day
Unification Day in Romania
Artist Ruth Asawa’s birthday
Plan ahead:
Check out my Pinterest pages on:
-
January holidays
-
January birthdays
-
Historical anniversaries in January
And here are my Pinterest boards for:
-
February holidays
-
-
Historical anniversaries in February