USA HISTORY

MANIFEST DESTINY 1806 1855

ELECTION OF 1848 AND THE CALIFORNIA GOLD RUSH

Question [CLICK ON ANY CHOICE TO KNOW THE RIGHT ANSWER]
What were towns called that were abandoned once the gold was gone? a. Empty citiesb. Ghost townsc. Bust townsd. Lonelyvilles e. Boomtowns
A
Empty cities
B
Ghost towns
C
Lonelyvilles
D
Boomtowns
Explanation: 

Detailed explanation-1: -Whenever gold was discovered in a new place, miners would move in and make a mining camp. Sometimes these camps would rapidly grow into towns called boomtowns. The cities of San Francisco and Columbia are two examples of boomtowns during the gold rush. A lot of boomtowns eventually turned into abandoned ghost towns.

Detailed explanation-2: -All these thousands of miners needed supplies. Typical supplies for a miner included a mining pan, a shovel, and a pick for mining. They also needed food and living supplies such as coffee, bacon, sugar, beans, flour, bedding, a tent, lamp, and a kettle.

Detailed explanation-3: -The California gold rush caused a huge increase in California’s population. That year about 80, 000 gold-seekers came to California, hoping to strike it rich. These migrants were known as “forty-niners.” Nearly eighty percent of these were Americans from the east. The others came from all over the world.

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