Forty-Niner

The Extraordinary Gold Rush Odyssey of Joseph Goldsborough Bruff

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Pub Date May 09 2017 | Archive Date Apr 30 2017

Description

While the seminal California Gold Rush of 1849 produced numerous firsthand diaries and accounts, Joseph Goldsborough Bruff’s—widely regarded as the best and most accurate—provides the basis of this narrative reimagining of a quintessential American legend. Ken Lizzio traces the pioneer’s thrilling adventure from the first rumors of gold, through his crossing of the frontier, all the way to his incredible survival and escape to a prosperous life back east. This is the first book to create a narrative of Bruff’s journey from his meticulously written and preserved diary. And with more than fifty of Bruff’s original pencil sketches and paintings, Forty-Niner provides a new, immersive vision of one of America’s most fabled eras. The American Grit series brings you true tales of endurance, survival, and ingenuity from the annals of American history. These books focus on the trials of remarkable individuals with an emphasis on rich primary source material and artwork.

While the seminal California Gold Rush of 1849 produced numerous firsthand diaries and accounts, Joseph Goldsborough Bruff’s—widely regarded as the best and most accurate—provides the basis of this...


Available Editions

EDITION Other Format
ISBN 9781682680506
PRICE $24.95 (USD)
PAGES 256

Average rating from 4 members


Featured Reviews

This is a really interesting new series from Norton--choose a lesser-known primary source, in this case, the drawings and journals of Joseph Bruff (two years at West Point, trained sailor, draftsman and mapmaker), and have a skilled historian use that to build a readable and vivid account backed by secondary and experiential sources. This allows for the reconstruction of an organized "company" migration to the 1849 California Gold rush, their miscalculation of Sierra Nevada winters, Bruff's sense of obligation as a US Government employee to help other stranded people to his own disadvantage, the economic realities of the mining rush, and the decision-making of man who realized that his professional skills and commitment to science and bureaucracy made him a much better fit in DC than in a get rich quick scheme of such precarious odds.

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