Description

Book Synopsis
California’s history is rich and diverse, with numerous fascinating stories hidden in its past. Before the discovery of gold in the Sierras, San Francisco (Yerba Buena) and its surroundings comprised a sparsely populated frontier on the edge of the old Spanish realm. After 1848, the area rapidly transformed into a settled urban system as a tremendous influx of prospectors and settlers came to seek their fortune in California. A wave of gold miners, merchants, farmers, politicians, carpenters, and many others from various backgrounds and corners of the world migrated to the area at that time. Interrelated social, geographic, and economic processes led to a very quick metamorphosis from frontier settlement to a firmly established system with ingrained economic patterns.

The development of San Francisco’s outlying region from a wilderness into a prosperous village and farming mecca shows how quickly in-migration coupled with economic diversification can establish a stable settlement structure upon the landscape. Otterstrom describes an intricately woven tapestry of interrelated people who were contributing creators of a wide variety of prosperous northern California environs. He uncovers the processes that converted this sleepy post-Mexican outpost into a focal point of nearly hyperactive youthful growth. The narrative follows this crucial story of settlement development until the dawn of the twentieth century, through the interconnected framework of individual and family ingenuity, migration trajectories, and diverse geographical scales.

Multiplying individualistic experiences from across far-flung appendages of the Northern California system into larger and larger scales, Otterstrom has achieved a matchless historical and sociological study that will form the basis for any future studies of the area.

Trade Review
The historiography of the California Gold Rush and its aftermath is among the richest and deepest in Western Americana. Otterstrom is to be congratulated for attempting a new kind of sophisticated analysis of migration and settlement and applying it to a region that has long held a special place in the geographical imagination. As far as I can tell, there is presently no direct competition for this book. The approach is fresh and it adds to the literature in a meaningful way."" - David Larson, Professor of Geography and Environmental Studies, California State University, East Bay

From California's Gold Fields to the Mendocino

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    £999.99

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    A Hardback by Samuel M. Otterstrom

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      View other formats and editions of From California's Gold Fields to the Mendocino by Samuel M. Otterstrom

      Publisher: University of Nevada Press
      Publication Date: 30/05/2017
      ISBN13: 9781943859283, 978-1943859283
      ISBN10: 1943859280

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      California’s history is rich and diverse, with numerous fascinating stories hidden in its past. Before the discovery of gold in the Sierras, San Francisco (Yerba Buena) and its surroundings comprised a sparsely populated frontier on the edge of the old Spanish realm. After 1848, the area rapidly transformed into a settled urban system as a tremendous influx of prospectors and settlers came to seek their fortune in California. A wave of gold miners, merchants, farmers, politicians, carpenters, and many others from various backgrounds and corners of the world migrated to the area at that time. Interrelated social, geographic, and economic processes led to a very quick metamorphosis from frontier settlement to a firmly established system with ingrained economic patterns.

      The development of San Francisco’s outlying region from a wilderness into a prosperous village and farming mecca shows how quickly in-migration coupled with economic diversification can establish a stable settlement structure upon the landscape. Otterstrom describes an intricately woven tapestry of interrelated people who were contributing creators of a wide variety of prosperous northern California environs. He uncovers the processes that converted this sleepy post-Mexican outpost into a focal point of nearly hyperactive youthful growth. The narrative follows this crucial story of settlement development until the dawn of the twentieth century, through the interconnected framework of individual and family ingenuity, migration trajectories, and diverse geographical scales.

      Multiplying individualistic experiences from across far-flung appendages of the Northern California system into larger and larger scales, Otterstrom has achieved a matchless historical and sociological study that will form the basis for any future studies of the area.

      Trade Review
      The historiography of the California Gold Rush and its aftermath is among the richest and deepest in Western Americana. Otterstrom is to be congratulated for attempting a new kind of sophisticated analysis of migration and settlement and applying it to a region that has long held a special place in the geographical imagination. As far as I can tell, there is presently no direct competition for this book. The approach is fresh and it adds to the literature in a meaningful way."" - David Larson, Professor of Geography and Environmental Studies, California State University, East Bay

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