Chile, Peru, and the California Gold Rush of 1849University of California Press, 1 jan 1973 - 312 pagina's |
Inhoudsopgave
Who Started the Gold Rush? | 3 |
Nothing Is More Timid Than a Million Dollars | 16 |
Chilean Newspapers and the Gold Rush | 30 |
California Has Made Another New World | 42 |
Pérez Rosales Joins the Rush | 55 |
The Cruise of the Staouelí | 65 |
A Vista Filled with Many Specters of the Past | 79 |
Lima Learns about the Gold Discovery | 94 |
The July Fourth Thundercloud | 152 |
The AntiChilean Riot in San Francisco | 163 |
Ya No Voy a California | 173 |
French Aragonautes Become Argonautes | 185 |
Washington City in California | 197 |
Chiles Pony Express and Joaquín Murieta | 209 |
Crusoes Island the City of the Kings | 220 |
CHILEANS WHO REMAINED IN CALIFORNIA | 235 |
The S S California Sails to Panama and San Francisco | 111 |
My Patron Saint Is San Joaquín | 125 |
The Northern Diggings | 140 |
Epilogue | 249 |
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
adobe adventure Alsop Alta California Álvarez anchor Anglos arrived became Berthold birlocho Cali California gold rush Callao Captain Andrews Captain Forbes cargo carried Castilla Charles Wilkes Chile Santiago Chilean Cía Comercio de Valparaiso Correo crowded deck diggings doctor Dysy eager editor El Comercio El Mercurio emigrants English flour foreign fornia French Gilliss gold discoveries gold seekers harbor History horses Ibid Inca Indians island James Melville Gilliss Joaquín Joaquín Murieta José land later Lima Mariquita merchants Mercurio Mexican miles Murieta newspapers North American Pacific Panama paraiso passengers peons Peru Peruvian pesos Pizarro placers plaza port Ramón reported revolution River Roberto Hernández rotos Sacramento sailed sailors Sam Roberts San Francisco Santiago de Chile schooner seemed ship shore Sonora South Spain Spanish Spanish-speaking Staouelí stopped streets Talcahuano tent town trade travelers trip Tschudi United vessels Vicente Pérez Rosales Vicuña Virjinia voyage York