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Collection: Directories and Documents > Pamphlets

An Illustrated History of California's Gold Rush by Wells Fargo Bank (PH 1-27) (34 pages)

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. The Gold Country Today ~ —S here’s still gold in the Sierra foothills—lots of it. Nuggets still wash down during the rains, you can still pan “color” from the gravel of the stream beds. But the surface gold is too scarce to support full-time placer mining, and the deep deposits are so costly to recover that only a few mining companies remain in operation now. Some of the boisterous Gold Rush camps have disappeared completely, and others are commemorated only by signs erected by California historical societies and other agencies. But along Highway 49 and on the side roads leading from it are countless little towns and villages which contain relics from, and retain the flavor of, the Golden Decade. The area known as the “Gold Country” stretches from Downieville and Sierra City on the north to Mariposa near Yosemite Park. The entire length of it can easily be driven in a day. But it is much more rewarding to take several days or a week, and investigate the towns, the museums, the old buildings and the back roads. The Gold Country is an area unique in its history and traditions. It’s well worth exploring. Starting from the north the main points of interest are: ~—Sl > DOWNIEVILLE This town had the rather dubious distinction of being the only camp in the Gold Country to execute a woman by hanging. Details of the circumstances are not clear now. But it seems that a dance hall girl named Juanita lived in Downieville with her Mexican boyfriend. One night after a celebration, a miner named Campbell came to call on her without being invited. He, in fact, battered in the door of her house. The next day he returned, perhaps to apologize, perhaps not. The boyfriend accosted him, uncomplimentary remarks were exchanged and in the course of the argument Juanita settled any question of where her affections lay by stabbing Campbell in the chest. 8 t eee ie aoe § toes Dene ee Qe =