Boom Towns and Ghost Towns in America Research Paper

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From Gold Rush to Ghost TownIntroductionChristopher Columbus came looking for gold in 1492—but it was not until nearly 400 years later that the gold was finally found. In 1848, in the Sacramento Valley, gold was discovered and news of the event quickly spread like wildfire across the U.S.—and then across the world. The following year, 100,000 newcomers had flooded into the California territory to lay their claim to the fortunes that lay beneath the ground.[footnoteRef:2] They came from everywhere in the States, from Mexico, South America, Europe, China and Australia.[footnoteRef:3] They were known as the ‘49ers—and a decade later, after a decline in gold discoveries, they would migrate again and be found in Colorado—there known as the ‘59ers. For a brief period of time, the gold rush brought an economic boom to parts of the country that beforehand had been sparsely populated. Towns shot up virtually overnight—and then, when the boom went bust, they were vacated as quickly as they had been constructed. The remains were known as ghost towns—empty shells of a civilization in a hurry to make it rich: the remnants of a society consumed by a dream that had haunted it for centuries—wealth, riches, gold, glory. The story of the Gold Rush is a story of mad pursuit of what has always been the most popular of precious metals; it is a story of towns and ghost towns, of economic booms and economic busts. In this tale there is a moral—one that America would do well to remember today as its merchants and financiers, bankers and fund managers pursue a new kind of gold—whether it is high yield, crypto, risk assets, or some other form of investment that one day promises great returns and then the next gives nothing. The story of the Gold Rush is the story of every bubble that has ever appeared: it represents the mania and manic demand for riches. In the story of the Gold Rush, gold is only one side of the story—the other is the Ghost Town. [2: “The Gold Rush of 1849,” History. A+E Networks, 2010. https://www.history.com/topics/gold-rush-of-1849] [3: James Holliday, The World Rushed In: The California Gold Rush Experience (University of Oklahoma Press, 2015), 400.]In the BeginningThe problem with the Gold Rush that began in California and spread to Colorado, Utah, Wyoming and Idaho over the next few decades was both social and economical. It became political at points but only because the first two factors necessitate political intervention sooner or later. That is what happened in California as soon as foreign immigrants began showing up in force to stake their claims. As James Holliday notes, with the flood of immigrants from around the world seeking gold in the Golden State came fear and anger from the American miners there, which prompted the California legislature in 1850 to take action: it passed the Foreign Miners’ Tax, which “decreed that only native or naturalized citizens of the United States would be permitted to mine in California without a license, the cost of which would be $20 per month.”[footnoteRef:4] Foreigners were not happy about that. The miners had no titles to the land and claims to work the mines were settled informally among themselves with regulations that existed in the camps and were different from camp to camp. In an 1850 letter from William Swain to his brother George, William describes the moral condition of the camps: “We found the most extraordinary state of morals in the mines. Everything in this country is left where the owner wished to leave it, in any place no matter where, as such a thing as stealing is not known. Miners’ rights are well protected. Disputes seldom arise and are settled by referees, as they would be at home.”[footnoteRef:5] Essentially, if you were mining the earth for gold, you had a claim to it—and tools on the site would typically be the indication of this fact. With the Miners’ Tax going into effect to pacify the American miners who felt that foreigners were stealing America’s gold, foreign miners took to the streets of Sonora to protest the extremely high fine: they waved their guns and threatened worse—but a group of American miners banded together to form a makeshift armed force; a small skirmish ensued but the foreign threat was suppressed by the American collective action of legislation and firepower. This was America’s backyard and foreigners, if you wanted to partake, you would have to pay a price.[footnoteRef:6] [4: Holliday, The World Rushed In, 401-2.] [5: “William Swain Letter Written from ‘The Diggings’ in California.” PBS, Archives of the West. http://www.pbs.org/weta/thewest/resources/archives/three/swain2.htm] [6: Holliday, The World Rushed In, 400-1.]The moral condition of the camps described by William Swain also did not last. Discovered in 1848, gold had ushered in a brief moment of good times among the ‘49ers—but by 1850, with the arrival of so many competing miners from all over the world, the good times now seemed like a distant memory. As one miner from Missouri put it, “Money is our only stimulus and the getting of it our only pleasure. Never was any country so well calculated to cultivate the spirit of avarice.”[footnoteRef:7] This desire for riches is what drove hundreds of thousands out West. Sooner or later, there would have to be some form of community established for them all. Thus, the boom town came into existence. [7: Holliday, The World Rushed In, 401.]Mining TownsJust as the Americans displayed a knack for instilling loose-fitting regulations that allowed them to maintain a semi-structured order among themselves as they mined the earth, their approach to building a community within the vicinity of the mining activities quickly showed a greater tenacity and devotion to the Gold Rush. These were the gold mining towns—and they sprang up like weeds to meet the needs of the miners.

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They had everything to offer and were “complete with shops, saloons, brothels and other businesses seeking to make their own Gold Rush fortune.”[footnoteRef:8] If the proprietors of these towns could make a fortune in mining, they would seek by satisfying the miners’ desires, one way or another. In short, the whole economy of these towns was dependent upon the success of the miners in the region. [8: “The Gold Rush of 1849,” History. A+E Networks, 2010. https://www.history.com/topics/gold-rush-of-1849]And if the morals of the camps, which started out respectable, were quickly eroding under the everyday pressures and tensions that were building up as a result of the conflict and competition coming in from all sides, the towns were quick to reflect this decline in morality. Lawlessness was rampant: this really was the Wild West. There was “rampant banditry, gambling, prostitution and violence.”[footnoteRef:9] The gold was becoming harder and harder to reach as well. By 1852, in California, mining hit its peak “when some $81 million was pulled from the ground.”[footnoteRef:10] It declined from there on. The gold rushers did not,…

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…of these were not towns designed to thrive: they existed to support the miners and their families, and while there those families had to go about their lives like they would in any other place—except the frontier was not just like any other place and everyone knew it. There was a sense of fatality looming over every passing day, week, month and year. Soon the town’s reason for being would vanish—unless, like the survivors and thrivers, it could manage to find an alternate reason for being. [21: Sandra Dallas, Colorado Ghost Towns and Mining Camps (University of Oklahoma Press, 1985), 11.]Those That Made ItTowns that survived and thrived even after the Gold Rush ended did so for numerous reasons—Grass Valley and Nevada City are two such examples.[footnoteRef:22] They were established as boom mining towns in California and figured squarely into the state’s economy, supporting miners and their families for years in the foothills of the Sierra Nevada. All the excitement happened primarily in Nevada City: it was the social hub of the region and for that reason became the county seat and commercial heart of the region. It established its importance socially, economically and politically. But when the gold mining work dried up, both Nevada City and its nearby neighbor Grass Valley were faced with the challenge of how to sustain themselves. [22: Mann, Ralph. "The Decade after the Gold Rush: Social Structure in Grass Valley and Nevada City, California, 1850-1860." Pacific Historical Review 41, no. 4 (1972): 484.]Would they go bust like so many others or would they find a way to last? Fortunately, the good earth would provide the two towns an alternate resource to mine—one that would become highly important in the coming years, following the end of the Gold Rush. The secret to their success was simple: as Ralph Mann states, Nevada City “was able to maintain itself through its political, legal, and business importance until rich hydraulic and quartz mining interests could be developed.”[footnoteRef:23] Grass Valley struggled a bit more as its quartz deposits were not as good—“but when mining technology advanced” the town’s mineral wealth could be tapped. Both Grass Valley and Nevada City thus found ways “to thrive long after most camps had disappeared” by shifting their focus away from gold and finding support among those willing to use advances in mining technology to pursue newly sought after mineral deposits in the region.[footnoteRef:24] [23: Mann, Ralph. "The Decade after the Gold Rush: Social Structure in Grass Valley and Nevada City, California, 1850-1860." Pacific Historical Review 41, no. 4 (1972): 484.] [24: Mann, Ralph. "The Decade after the Gold Rush: Social Structure in Grass Valley and Nevada City, California, 1850-1860." Pacific Historical Review 41, no. 4 (1972): 484.]ConclusionThe Gold Rush offered people from all around the world the opportunity to strike it rich quick—so long as they got in on the action early on and got rich along with the boom town entrepreneurs whose saloons and dance halls were a source of recreation for many. However, when the rush wore off the temporary settlers of these boom towns sought new streams of revenue. The Gold Rush expanded to other parts of the West. Colorado received a lot of the miners eager to continue the pursuits that they began in California. Boom towns turned to Ghost Towns: weather, wilderness, a lack of underlying infrastructure (transportation, economic foundation, and social value) plagued most of them. A few managed to keep their populace and establish a reason….....

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