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Georgia Gold Rush: Twenty-Niners, Cherokees, and Gold Fever » (REPRINT)

Book cover image of Georgia Gold Rush: Twenty-Niners, Cherokees, and Gold Fever by David Williams

Authors: David Williams
ISBN-13: 9781570030529, ISBN-10: 1570030529
Format: Paperback
Publisher: University of South Carolina Press
Date Published: August 2003
Edition: REPRINT

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Author Biography: David Williams

Book Synopsis

In the 1820s a series of gold strikes from Virginia to Alabama caused such excitement that thousands of miners from all parts of the United States poured into the region. This Southern gold rush, the first in U.S. history, reached Georgia with the discovery of the Dahlonega Gold Belt in 1829. Said Benjamin Parks, one of Georgia's first twenty-niners: "The news got abroad, and such excitement you never saw. It seemed within a few days as if the whole world must have heard of it, for men came from every state I had ever heard of. They came afoot, on horseback and in wagons, acting more like crazy men than anything else. All the way from where Dahlonega now stands, to Nuckollsville there were men panning out of the branches and making holes in the hillsides." As it happened, the Georgia gold fields were found to lie in and around Cherokee territory. In 1830 Georgia extended its authority over the area, and two years later the land was raffled off in a lottery. Although they resisted this land grab through the courts, the Cherokees were eventually driven west on the Trail of Tears into what is today northeastern Oklahoma. The gold rush era survived the Cherokees in Georgia by only a few years. The early 1840s saw a dramatic decline in the fortunes of the Southern gold region. When word of a new gold strike in California reached the miners, they wasted no time in following the banished Indians westward. In fact, many Georgia twenty-niners became some of the first California forty-niners. Georgia's gold rush is now almost two centuries past, but gold fever continues. Many residents still pan for gold, and every October during Gold Rush Days hundreds of latter-day prospectors reliving the excitement of Georgia's great antebellum gold rush throng to the small mountain town of Dahlonega.

Table of Contents

Illustrations
Preface
Introduction1
Ch. 1"No Talke, No Hope, Nor Worke, But Dig Gold": The Origins of Southern Gold Fever7
Ch. 2"Acting Like Crazy Men": Gold Fever and the Great Intrusion21
Ch. 3"Get a Little Further": The Cherokee Nation Abandoned37
Ch. 4"Civilized Life" Comes to the Gold Region47
Ch. 5"It's Just Like Gambling - All Luck": Mining in the Gold Rush Days65
Ch. 6"Gambling Houses, Dancing Houses, & Drinking Saloons": Life in the Georgia Gold Region83
Ch. 7"Prosper the Americans and Cherokees": The Climactic Year of 1838105
Epilogue: "Gold Fever. . . Ain't No Cure For It"117
Notes125
Bibliography155
Index169

Subjects