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Encyclopedia Dubuque

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GOLD

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Gold

GOLD. Dubuque may have a fortune in gold hidden by Thomas KELLY, a secretive miner, on the bluff behind ST. RAPHAEL'S CATHEDRAL.

"Gold fever" based on the news from California struck Dubuque on October 20, 1848. Carrying the title, "Gold in California," the article in the Dubuque Tribune reprinted a letter from Thomas O. Larkin who had actually visited the gold fields. (1) On December 30th a public meeting in the courthouse led to an organization of those wishing to travel to the gold fields. On March 19, 1849 fourteen wagons of gold seekers crossed the MISSISSIPPI RIVER at Dubuque. Several Dubuque residents traveled to California by way of the Isthmus of Panama. Others joined the California Society. The Galena and Dubuque Mining Company organized fifty-three teams which cross the Great Plains in 1849. (2) In 1850 the Dubuque Emigrating Association of fifty-four men and twenty wagons left for California. (3)

Dubuque had its own gold rush in 1858. An individual, camping with friends on Ham's Island (later known as CITY ISLAND), reportedly kicked up a glistening stone from the sand. Thinking it was gold, he hurried to an assay office where the sample was found to contain gold. Wishing to know whether more gold existed in the area, the city financed ten prospectors to conduct a more exhaustive search. Over the next week more gold-bearing quartz rock was found but nothing like the hoped-for bonanza. Each prospector did, however, earn more than ten dollars per day. Gold was also found at LAKE PEOSTA, along CATFISH CREEK, and in some gullies and ravines in West Dubuque. (4)

The discovery of gold near Pike's Peak in Colorado led to wagon trains using the Dubuque ferry to cross the Mississippi. Records kept by the Express and Herald indicated the following traffic: April 24--3 wagons, April 25--22, April 26--14, April 27--19, April 28--18, April 29--10, April 30--4. There were a total of 611 for the year through May 12, 1859. (5)

In 1877 the Dubuque Herald announced that interested prospectors "out for a drive" should take the road near McKnight Springs toward Thompson's Mill. Near a section of road with high hills and deep gullies gold had been discovered. (6)

The discovery of gold in Alaska led an estimated eight to ten Dubuque men to leave for the Klondike on February 1, 1898. They left on the CHICAGO AND GREAT WESTERN RAILWAY for Seattle and then planned to proceed over the Chilkoot pass. A second party of between eight and ten members were to leave two weeks later. (7)

On Thursday, March 9,1933, Congress passed laws outlawing the private ownership of gold. This action led Dubuque residents in a single day to exchange $100,000 in gold for paper money.

The premier resource for the effects of the California gold rush on Dubuque was written by Robert F KLEIN.

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Source:

1. Klein, Robert F. Dubuque During the California Gold Rush, Charleston, SC: The History Press, 2011, p. 31

2. Oldt, Franklin T. and Patrick J Quigley. The History of Dubuque County, Iowa, Chicago: Goodspeed Historical Association, 1890, p. 84

3. Ibid., p. 89

4. "Thar Was Once Gold in Them Hills-Maybe," Telegraph Herald, Mar. 7, 1960, Dubuque News, p. 1

5. "Pike's Peak Teams," Express and Herald, May 12, 1859, p. 3

6. "Is It Gold?" Dubuque Herald, May 8, 1877, p. 4

7. "Ready for Alaska," The Dubuque Herald, January 30, 1898, p. 8