Audiolibro: The Shirley Letters from California Mines in 1851-52
- Download 00 – Introduction audio
- Download Letter 01 – The Journey to Rich Bar audio
- Download Letter 02 – Rich Bar – Its Hotels and Pioneer Families audio
- Download Letter 03 – Life and Fortune at the Bar-Diggings audio
- Download Letter 04 – Accidents-Surgery-Death-Festivity audio
- Download Letter 05 – Death of a Mother – Life of Pioneer Women audio
- Download Letter 06 – Use of Profanity – Uncertainty of Mining audio
- Download Letter 07 – The New Log-cabin Home at Indian Bar audio
- Download Letter 08 – Life and Characters at Indian Bar audio
- Download Letter 09 – Theft of Gold-Dust – Trial and Punishment audio
- Download Letter 10 – Amateur Mining-Hairbreadth ‘Scapes, &c. audio
- Download Letter 11 – Robbery, Trial, Execution – More Tragedy audio
- Download Letter 12 – A Stormy Winter – Holiday Saturnalias audio
- Download Letter 13 – Sociability and Excitements of Mining-life audio
- Download Letter 14 – Springtide – Linguistics – Storms – Accidents audio
- Download Letter 15 – Mining Methods – Miners, Gamblers, Etc. audio
- Download Letter 16 – Birth – Stabbing – Foreigners Ousted – Revels audio
- Download Letter 17 – Supplies by Pack-Mules – Kanakas and Indians audio
- Download Letter 18 – Fourth of July Festival – Spanish Attacked audio
- Download Letter 19 – Murder, Theft, Riot, Hanging, Whipping, &c. audio
- Download Letter 20 – Murder – Mining Scenes – Spanish Breakfast audio
- Download Letter 21 – Discomforts of Trip to Political Convention audio
- Download Letter 22 – The Overland Tide of Immigration audio
- Download Letter 23 – Mining Failures – Departure from Indian Bar audio
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Descripción
Louise Amelia Knapp Smith Clappe moved to California from Massachusetts during the Gold Rush of the mid-1800’s. During her travels, Louise was offered the opportunity to write for The Herald about her travel adventures. It was at this point that Louise chose the name “Shirley” as her pen name. Dame Shirley wrote a series of 23 letters to her sister Mary Jane (also known as Molly) in Massachusetts in 1851 and 1852. The “Shirley Letters”, as the collected whole later became known, gave true accounts of life in two gold mining camps on the Feather River in the 1850s. She described these camps in Northern California with vividness in portraying the wildness of Gold Rush life. The letters give detailed accounts of the vast and beautiful landscape that was the background to the hustle and bustle of mining life. Louise’s perspective as a woman provided a contrast to the typically all-male mining camps that she occupied. The letters were later published in the Pioneer, a California literary magazine based out of San Francisco.
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