4th Grade Gold Rush: Unit 3, Les. 1

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What you need to know How did the discovery of gold change California?

description

This powerpoint is an outline of a social studies lesson in a CA textbook. It covers Unit 3, Lesson 1. I will soon create an online quiz that will be linked to it.

Transcript of 4th Grade Gold Rush: Unit 3, Les. 1

Page 1: 4th Grade Gold Rush: Unit 3, Les. 1

What you need to knowHow did the discovery of gold change California?

Page 2: 4th Grade Gold Rush: Unit 3, Les. 1

Website: http://www.crestek.net/

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Educational Outreach: http://wildlifeclassroom.org/

Email: [email protected]

Page 3: 4th Grade Gold Rush: Unit 3, Les. 1

Explain how the discovery of gold affected California’s population and settlements.

Describe the routes that gold seekers used to reach California.

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Sutter hires James Marshall to build the sawmill

John Sutter builds a sawmill in Coloma Marshall discovers gold, January 24, 1848,

while working on the mill Marshall tells Sutter about it Sutter confirms the nugget is gold Word gets out about the gold discovery

and workers leave the sawmill to search for gold

Sam Brannan spread word of the discovery

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We’re not sure if that’s really James Marshall in this photo.

James Marshall

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Sutter in uniform.

Painting of Sutter’s Fort in Sacramento, CA. Painting of John Sutter.

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Gold! Gold!

Gold in Coloma

!

Sam Brannan told everyone about the discovery of gold on the American River. He held up a bottle of gold dust for everyone to see after returning to San Francisco from Coloma.

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President James K. Polk confirmed the discovery of gold in Coloma

About 90,000 gold seekers left for CA They were called 49ers because most of

them began arriving in 1849 Most miners were men About 1000 African Americans came to

the gold fields, some as slaves There were 3 routes to the CA gold

fields

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1) Part land and seaThis was the fastest; people sailed to the Isthmus of Panama and

then traveled overland by mule, foot or riverboat. Once at the Pacific Coast, they caught another ship to the CA coast.

2) All by seaPeople took a ship; it could take 3-8 months; it was the

longest

3) All by landTravelers crossed deserts and mountain ranges; sometimes there

were accidents, or people got sick or ran out of food and water

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Many travelers were bitten by mosquitoes carrying yellow fever or malaria.

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The canal is 48 miles long. It was built between 1904-1914. This route would be safer for ships as they would not need to sail through the Straight of Magellan or around Cape Horn.

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Miners “staked” their gold claims by driving stakes or posts into the ground around the area they were prospecting

Miners used cradles, pans, shovels and picks to find gold

Miners usually worked 6 days a week

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Camp life was hard Most lived in tents or shacks There was little food or medicine Streets were filled with trash Miners played cards or read for

entertainment On Sunday they rested or did laundry Few people got rich

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Most miners built simple lean-to shelters or used canvas tents. They often worked 6 days a week, from sun up to sun set.

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These images depict the difficulties of a miner’s life.

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What did the discovery of gold do to CA?•How did it affect CA’s population?•How did it affect CA’s settlements?

How did gold seekers get to CA?•Route 1?•Route 2?•Route 3?