Throughout the course of the Gold Rush, which lasted until about 1855, an estimated 300,000 people migrated to California in hopes of striking it rich. They were nicknamed forty-niners for the year in which they began arriving there in droves: 1849.
Gold fever attracted immigrants from all across the U.S.—and also Latin America, China, Europe, and Australia. Prospectors arrived by covered wagon, horseback, and ship.
“People looked on the possibility of finding gold in California as a way of jump-starting stalled careers and compressing a decade’s worth of work into maybe two good seasons in the gold mines,” Brands says.
Almost overnight, San Francisco transformed from a small settlement of 1,000 people into a boomtown of 25,000 by the end of 1849. Many forty-niners borrowed money, sold their farms, or used their life savings to get the money for the voyage.
“I have left those that I love . . . behind and risked everything and endured many hardships to get here,” gold miner S. Shufelt wrote in a 1850 letter to his cousin. “I want to make enough to live easier and do some good with, before I return.”
Miners set up camps along the river, working sunrise to sundown using pans to sift for gold. They endured difficult conditions at the camps. Disease and malnutrition were common, and competition for gold and other resources bred conflict and suspicion, with the men often forming alliances along racial lines.
“There was a sense of a kind of zero-sum game,” says Malcolm Rohrbough, author of Days of Gold. “There was only so much gold in California, and you had better be getting your share and you had better be keeping an eye on the other people who were getting their share.”