Background on the
California Gold Rush

A QUICK PRIMER

Is it coincidence that Hollywood, aerospace, the computer industry and the Internet all started in California?

Not according to filmmakers Michael Trinklein and Steven Boettcher. They believe those industries all can trace their roots to an obscure event on the American River in 1848 California--the discovery of gold.

The unprecedented rush west that followed would create something America had never seen before: an economy driven by high-risk entrepreneurialism. That environment would later nurture some of California's largest industries, and would continue to spawn new companies throughout the United States.

An Accidental Discovery

Gold was first discovered in California by James Marshall, hired by rancher John Sutter to build a sawmill for Sutter's expanding agricultural empire. While chopping lumber for the sawmill, Marshall noticed several gold nuggets in the American River and told Sutter. Surprisingly, neither Marshall nor Sutter had any interest in capitalizing on the find and feared that competition from gold-seekers would interrupt their own operations, so they made a pact to keep the discovery a secret.

But within months, word spread eastward, and by 1849, thousands of young men left their homes and families and traveled to California for their share of the fortune. Some traveled on foot on the already established Oregon-California Trail. Others traveled by ship around the tip of South America, while still others took shortcuts across Panama and Mexico. Regardless of the route, it was an intensely difficult journey, with the adventurers often plagued by seasickness, malaria, cholera and other diseases.

It's important to note that the gold-seekers, or 49ers as they were called since most left their homes in 1849, were not only American. The California gold rush was a world event, attracting gold-seekers from Mexico, China, Germany, France, Turkey and around the world.

High-risk Entrepreneurialism

Some of the most successful entrepreneurs never panned for gold, but supplied the gold miners with much-needed supplies and services. For example, Levi Strauss started a successful dry goods business, Philip Armour opened a meat market and Henry Wells and William Fargo offered miners secure, honest banking services in their company, Wells, Fargo & Co.

Women played an important, yet often underestimated role during the gold rush. At the time, women were scarce, but those who lived in California realized the entrepreneurial opportunities that existed and put their much-needed domestic skills to work and profit. Some authorities regard this period in history as the beginning of the women's movement.

The legacy of the gold rush is significant for a number of reasons. First, gold brought people from around the world to the West--people who stayed to form the multi-cultural nucleus that exists today in that region of the country. Secondly, the gold rush pulled the country itself westward, ensuring that California and the other western regions would become a part of the United States. Lastly, the gold rush awakened America to the idea of high-risk entrepreneurialism, a concept that America's capitalistic society continues to nurture.

On January 24, 1998, the United States will celebrate the 150th anniversary of the gold rush.