Berkeleyan Masthead HomeSearchArchive

This Week's Stories


Special Insert: Special Section: Kids' Summer Programs 2000



From Strategic Vision To Administrative Action



The Director Strikes Back: Appearance by George Lucas



ABC's of Science Education



Stalking Pathogens at Every Port



Changing the Dynamics Of the Lecture Hall



Photo: Parging in Process



Revising an Old Theory Could Make Drug Design a Little Easier



Inhale if You Must, but Eat Your Citrus



UC Berkeley Retirement Center Keeps Faculty and Staff Retirees in the Loop



Berkeley Honored as A Leader in Graduating Minority Ph.D.'s



Regular Features

  

Awards


  

Books


  

Campus Calendar


  

News Briefs


  

Obituaries


  

Staff Enrichment








Books

Posted February 23, 2000

 A Year of Mud and Gold

Edited By William Benemann
Head of Technical Services
Boalt Hall School Library

This collection of letters and diaries by men and women of the gold rush era intimately describes their hopes of striking it rich in California. These accounts, written from 1848 to 1850, tell of San Francisco's metamorphosis from a small Mexican outpost into a rough-and-tumble boomtown. The correspondents range from the barely literate to writers of expert prose, and their letters and diaries hold clues to processes central to frontier history.

University of Nebraska Press
241 pages

 

 

[HOME]   [SEARCH]   [ARCHIVE]



February 23-29, 2000 (Volume 28, Number 23)
Copyright 2000, The Regents of the University of California.
Produced and maintained by the
Office of Public Affairs at UC Berkeley.
Comments? E-mail
berkeleyan@pa.urel.berkeley.edu.