1 / 12

The California Gold Rush

The California Gold Rush. Mrs. Murray’s 4 th Grade eMINTS Classroom. The Rush Is On.

samson
Download Presentation

The California Gold Rush

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The California Gold Rush Mrs. Murray’s 4th Grade eMINTS Classroom Mrs. Murray's 4th Grade eMINTS TEACHER RESOURCE

  2. The Rush Is On.... • On December 5, 1848, President James K. Polk confirmed the tales of gold in his State of the Union address. The race was on. Thousands of individuals began streaming out west across America -- some by land, some by sea. Thousands more traveled from other countries to California. Some found the quick riches of their dreams. Most faced unending days of monotonous, back-breaking labor. • In 1849, at the height of the California Gold Rush, as many as 80,000 gold-seeking “forty-niners” poured into California. Although few of them made fortunes out of panning for gold, many of them stayed to farm and start businesses. Getting to California however, was not an easy feat Mrs. Murray's 4th Grade eMINTS TEACHER RESOURCE

  3. The Journey • Gold-seekers had to find a way to get to California. It was a long way and there were no railroads or long rivers to float on to California. Instead, they must choose between a long, long trip across land or a shorter trip by sea. Either way, the trip was going to be a test of their endurance. Mrs. Murray's 4th Grade eMINTS TEACHER RESOURCE

  4. Mrs. Murray's 4th Grade eMINTS TEACHER RESOURCE

  5. The Arrival..... • Fortune-seekers arrived by boat and wagon from everywhere in the world, to set up camps and stake their claims in the hope of achieving fabulous wealth. Some did, but a far greater number found unrelenting poverty, disease and death. • Play Video: Trail to Riches: The California Gold Rush and Settlement of the Pacific Northwest Mrs. Murray's 4th Grade eMINTS TEACHER RESOURCE

  6. Things To Think About.... • Once the gold rush era was over in California, large companies and investors began to build huge mines all around the countryside to look for gold and precious stones deep within the earth. Many accidents occurred, leaving poor mine workers crippled or dead. These mines also scarred the natural landscape of the area. • As you look over the photographs on the next few slides, think about the following questions: • What were some of the major risks for miners? • Why were there not more controls on the safety of mines? • How could mining change the surrounding land? Would it help it or hurt it? • What equipment would you need to be a forty-niner? • What would you do if you suddenly struck it rich? • Is there still gold in California? Mrs. Murray's 4th Grade eMINTS TEACHER RESOURCE

  7. Mrs. Murray's 4th Grade eMINTS TEACHER RESOURCE

  8. Mrs. Murray's 4th Grade eMINTS TEACHER RESOURCE

  9. Mrs. Murray's 4th Grade eMINTS TEACHER RESOURCE

  10. The Task • Use the internet to research the California Gold Rush. Collect information on the land routes and the water routes. • Create a table, chart, or graphic organizer in Kidspiration to compare the advantages and disadvantages of traveling over land with traveling over water. • Print your final product. • Carefully evaluate both routes and create a poster advertising the route you would have taken to California during the big rush. • Include words and illustrations showing that you know; WHO, WHAT, WHEN, WHERE, about the Gold Rush. • Your poster must have a map with the route you’re advertising drawn on it. • The poster should also include three reasons for choosing the route you’re advertising. Each reasoning must be supported by historical details. Mrs. Murray's 4th Grade eMINTS STUDENT HANDOUT

  11. Useful Links • All About The Gold Rush • http://www.isu.edu/%7Etrinmich/allabout.html • Women In The Gold Rush • http://claim.goldrush.com/~joann/ • First Person Narrative: American Memory Collection, Diary and Letters The Trip • http://memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/r?ammem/upbover:@field(DOCID+@lit(dia5582T000)) • The Journey • http://pbskids.org/wayback/goldrush/journey.html • California Gold -- Migrating to California: Overland, around the Horn, and via Panama • http://www.duke.edu/~agf2/history391/migration.html • Gold Rush Museum • http://www.museumca.org/goldrush/ • PBS The Gold Rush • http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/goldrush/ • The Gold Rush • http://www.jlhs.nhusd.k12.ca.us/Classes/Social_Science/Gold_Rush/California.Gold.Rush.html Mrs. Murray's 4th Grade eMINTS STUDENT HANDOUT

  12. The Scoring Guide Historian: ______________ • Students will be able to identify key historical facts regarding the California Gold Rush and analyze the advantages and disadvantages of the routes chosen by the pioneers who traveled to California during the Gold Rush. Mrs. Murray's 4th Grade eMINTS STUDENT HANDOUT

More Related