Year: Day to Day Men: January 24
Ginger and Blue Tiles
On the twenty-fourth day of January in 1848, carpenter James Wilson Marshall found nuggets of gold in California’s American River near the site of the sawmill he was constructing for John Sutter. The news of this discovery brought three-hundred thousand people to California in the hope of a new life. This sudden influx of population allowed California to quickly achieve statehood through the Compromise of 1850. The Compromise was a packet of five separate Congressional bills, one of which approved California’s request for statehood, that temporarily defused tensions between the free and slave states in the United States.
A New Jersey native who came to California in 1944, James Marshall had found the gold nuggets in the tailrace, essentially a water wheel for producing energy, attached to the lumber mill he was building for Swiss immigrant John Sutter. He brought the gold to Sutter and the men privately tested the nuggets. Assured it was gold, Sutter wanted to keep the news of the discovery private as he had plans for an agricultural empire on the site.
Having sworn all the workers at the mill to secrecy, Sutter sent one of the carpenters, former Dragoon soldier Charles Bennet. to Monterey which was acting as the functional capital of the territory. Bennet was to meet with Colonel Mason, the chief United States official, to secure mineral rights of the land upon which the mill was being built. However after stopping in the Bay Area city of Benicia, Bennet excitedly made remarks about Sutter’s gold discovery after hearing about a recent discovery of coal. In San Francisco, he made a second remark about the gold and, after Colonel Mason declined to make judgment on the mineral rights, revealed the secret a third time.
By March of 1848, the discovery of gold at the Sutter site was confirmed by newspaper publisher and merchant Samuel Brannan, who had hastily stocked his store with gold prospecting supplies and advertised the discovery throughout San Francisco. The New York Herald, a major news source on the eastern coast of the United States, reported the California gold discovery in its August 19th edition of 1848. On December 5th of the same year. President James Polk confirmed the discovery in an address to Congress and, with that, the gold rush began. As John Sutter had feared, his business plans were ruined, his workers left to pan for gold, and squatters took over his land and stole both his crops and his cattle.
While the sudden influx of gold into the money supply reinvigorated the American economy, it had severe effects on Native Californians and sped the Native American population’s decline from disease, starvation and genocide. Whole indigenous societies were attacked and pushed off their lands by the gold seekers. Dependent on traditional hunting, gathering and agriculture, Native Americans became victims as gravel, silt and toxic chemicals from prospecting operations killed fish and destroyed habitats. Game disappeared as settlements and mining camps were built amidst game and food gathering locations. Newly plowed farms to feed the miners took away more of land.
Systematic attacks against tribespeople living near mining districts occurred. The numbers of killings of California Native Americans by non-natives between 1846 and 1873 was estimated at between ninety-four hundred and sixteen thousand, most of which occurred in more than three hundred-seventy massacres. If Native people responded in retribution, large scale attacks would be made against entire Native villages. One such attack was the 1852 Bridge Gulch Massacre where a group of setters attacked a band of Wintu Indians; only three children survived the massacre.
California’s first governor, Peter Burnett, declared there were only two options towards the California Native population, removal or extermination. On the twenty-second of April in 1850, the California legislature passed the Act for the Government and Protection of Indians which allowed settlers to capture and use Native people as bonded workers, prohibited Native peoples’ testimony against settlers, and allowed the adoption of Native children by settlers, often for labor purposes. After the initial rapid economic growth had ended, laws and confiscatory taxes were imposed to drive out the remaining Native Americans, immigrants from China, Mexico, Chile and Latin America.
