Albert S. Evans (1831-1872) was a New Hampshire-born California journalist, serving as correspondent for the New York Tribune and Chicago Tribune. Á la California (1873) is a volume of reminiscences and anecdotal history published after Evans's death at sea. He begins by taking his reader on a tour from the Sierra Morena through the San Andreas Valley, south to Pescadero and Santa Cruz, up the Napa Valley and Mount St. Helena. He offers several chapters on San Francisco, with special attention to the legends of the Barbary Coast and Chinatown and tales of miners in the Gold Rush
Flour was three dollars a pound and tents rented at five thousand dollars a month in San Francisco i...
David L. Phillips (1823-1880) took his tubercular son to California in 1876 in hope that the change ...
Friedrich Gerstäcker (1816-1872), a native of Hamburg, left Germany in 1837 for a six-year stay in N...
William Francis White (1829-1891?) and his young wife sailed from New York in 1849 round the Horn to...
Thaddeus S. Kenderdine made his way from Philadelphia to Michigan in 1858, staying only a month befo...
Lell Hawley Woolley (b. 1825) left the Green Mountains of Vermont to cross the plains in a mule trai...
William Heath Davis (1822-1909) was the son of a Boston ship captain engaged in the Hawaiian trade a...
Cowan p. 226; Rocq 16869; Sabin 26033; Wheat 79.First ed."Natural History of California: p. 275-386...
The California gold rush was one of the biggest news stories of the nineteenth century. The demand f...
Frank Aleamon Leach (b. 1846) published the Vallejo Evening Chronicle, 1867-1886; and the Oakland En...
First volume in a 2-volume memoir by William Redmond Ryan, describing California and Baja California...
The California gold rush was one of the biggest news stories of the nineteenth century. The demand f...
George F. Weeks (b. ca. 1852) was a young reporter in New York City in 1876, when tuberculosis drove...
Second volume in a 2-volume memoir by William Redmond Ryan, describing California and Baja Californi...
Second volume in a 2-volume memoir by William Redmond Ryan, describing California and Baja Californi...
Flour was three dollars a pound and tents rented at five thousand dollars a month in San Francisco i...
David L. Phillips (1823-1880) took his tubercular son to California in 1876 in hope that the change ...
Friedrich Gerstäcker (1816-1872), a native of Hamburg, left Germany in 1837 for a six-year stay in N...
William Francis White (1829-1891?) and his young wife sailed from New York in 1849 round the Horn to...
Thaddeus S. Kenderdine made his way from Philadelphia to Michigan in 1858, staying only a month befo...
Lell Hawley Woolley (b. 1825) left the Green Mountains of Vermont to cross the plains in a mule trai...
William Heath Davis (1822-1909) was the son of a Boston ship captain engaged in the Hawaiian trade a...
Cowan p. 226; Rocq 16869; Sabin 26033; Wheat 79.First ed."Natural History of California: p. 275-386...
The California gold rush was one of the biggest news stories of the nineteenth century. The demand f...
Frank Aleamon Leach (b. 1846) published the Vallejo Evening Chronicle, 1867-1886; and the Oakland En...
First volume in a 2-volume memoir by William Redmond Ryan, describing California and Baja California...
The California gold rush was one of the biggest news stories of the nineteenth century. The demand f...
George F. Weeks (b. ca. 1852) was a young reporter in New York City in 1876, when tuberculosis drove...
Second volume in a 2-volume memoir by William Redmond Ryan, describing California and Baja Californi...
Second volume in a 2-volume memoir by William Redmond Ryan, describing California and Baja Californi...
Flour was three dollars a pound and tents rented at five thousand dollars a month in San Francisco i...
David L. Phillips (1823-1880) took his tubercular son to California in 1876 in hope that the change ...
Friedrich Gerstäcker (1816-1872), a native of Hamburg, left Germany in 1837 for a six-year stay in N...