34 min.

Josefa Segovia - Part 2 of 2 Queens of the Mines

    • Geschiedenis

Queens of the Mines features the authentic stories of gold rush women who blossomed from the camouflaged, twisted roots of California. These are true stories, with some of my own fabrication of descriptive details. 
Thank you to Columbia Mercantile 1855 and The Chop Shop of Jamestown.
Work Cited
PBS The Land of Gold and Hope
Fascinating Women in California History By Alton Pryor
La Chicana: The Mexican-American Woman By Alfredo Mirandé, Evangelina Enríquez
Ghost Towns of the West By Philip Varney, Jim Hinckley
Hunting for Gold by Major William Downie
Life in the California Gold Fields by William Swain 1850
The Hanging of Juanita: The Only Woman to Be Lynched in California
Yesterday’s Crimes: Lynching a Woman in Gold Country  The only lynching of a woman in California history inspired SF Opera's Girls of the Golden West.  by Bob Calhoun •
The Tale of Josefa  Hannah Kohler 
A History of Mexican Americans in California: HISTORIC SITES
When Americans Lynched Mexicans By William D. Carrigan and Clive Webb
The legacy of lynching in the West BY ADAM M. SOWARDS / HIGH COUNTRY NEWS
Forgotten Lynching Victims | Mexicans in America
Ghost Hunter's Guide to California's Gold Rush Country By Jeff Dwyer 
Haunted Places: The National Directory: Ghostly Abodes, Sacred Sites, UFO ... By Dennis William Hauck
U.S. Chicanas and Latinas in a Historical Context- Irene I. Blea

Swifty

 
In 2018, I was learning how to work from home, and had recently started researching gold rush characters for a Historical Fiction Novel that I intended on writing. My best friend Sarah who lived across the street was taking a 19th century US History class at UC Merced, and living across the street. Sarah was writing a paper titled the Mythology of the Mother Lode, which I will quote many times in the next few minutes. We studied and giggled on my front porch and during this time, Sarah opened my eyes to how the modern day collective memory of the Ol’ West that I was trying to write about, was often romanticized. Mostly remembered as a vast, wide open land that was ripe with resources, ready to be conquered and claimed by any individual. As long as that individual was ambitious, strong and persistent enough with endless possibilities for those who braved the terrain. This was all with little mention of the racialized experiences. It became clear how one’s race, gender, and the related labor restrictions could hinder one’s chance at hitting the motherlode or gaining economic upward mobility, and it also decreased their assumed value in society. Sarah began studying old newspaper archives. What better documented the beliefs, values, norms, traditions, politics and social settings than the newspapers of the time? She would Call me, or run across the street to my house to share her findings. We found clear examples of racism against Mexican, Black, Chinese, and Native people who were living locally and across the country. One morning, both bundled in bath robes, Sarah showed me the winter issue of The Mariposa Gazette from 1865. The issue demonstrated how the Native California Indians were clearly devalued. In addition to several brief reports of “killing Indians,” the article that we both found most disturbing was a front page story consuming upwards the entirety of the page. A detailed account of Yosemite’s beauty. It seemed sweet. Until you read on, and the writer boasts, "no white man had ever looked upon its sublime wonders until 1851, when we came here in pursuit of Indians... coming to kill and exterminate." It stuck with me, and I think about it all the time.  If you are a person that visits Yosemite, I hope you can find your own way to honor the lives lost the next time you are there. The lives of those who were the original keepers of one of our planet's most beautiful gifts. The Placer Herald casually mentioned a Lynching “a negro, lynched at beals bar for stealing a watch.” Chinese locals were referred to as "Celestials" and "

Queens of the Mines features the authentic stories of gold rush women who blossomed from the camouflaged, twisted roots of California. These are true stories, with some of my own fabrication of descriptive details. 
Thank you to Columbia Mercantile 1855 and The Chop Shop of Jamestown.
Work Cited
PBS The Land of Gold and Hope
Fascinating Women in California History By Alton Pryor
La Chicana: The Mexican-American Woman By Alfredo Mirandé, Evangelina Enríquez
Ghost Towns of the West By Philip Varney, Jim Hinckley
Hunting for Gold by Major William Downie
Life in the California Gold Fields by William Swain 1850
The Hanging of Juanita: The Only Woman to Be Lynched in California
Yesterday’s Crimes: Lynching a Woman in Gold Country  The only lynching of a woman in California history inspired SF Opera's Girls of the Golden West.  by Bob Calhoun •
The Tale of Josefa  Hannah Kohler 
A History of Mexican Americans in California: HISTORIC SITES
When Americans Lynched Mexicans By William D. Carrigan and Clive Webb
The legacy of lynching in the West BY ADAM M. SOWARDS / HIGH COUNTRY NEWS
Forgotten Lynching Victims | Mexicans in America
Ghost Hunter's Guide to California's Gold Rush Country By Jeff Dwyer 
Haunted Places: The National Directory: Ghostly Abodes, Sacred Sites, UFO ... By Dennis William Hauck
U.S. Chicanas and Latinas in a Historical Context- Irene I. Blea

Swifty

 
In 2018, I was learning how to work from home, and had recently started researching gold rush characters for a Historical Fiction Novel that I intended on writing. My best friend Sarah who lived across the street was taking a 19th century US History class at UC Merced, and living across the street. Sarah was writing a paper titled the Mythology of the Mother Lode, which I will quote many times in the next few minutes. We studied and giggled on my front porch and during this time, Sarah opened my eyes to how the modern day collective memory of the Ol’ West that I was trying to write about, was often romanticized. Mostly remembered as a vast, wide open land that was ripe with resources, ready to be conquered and claimed by any individual. As long as that individual was ambitious, strong and persistent enough with endless possibilities for those who braved the terrain. This was all with little mention of the racialized experiences. It became clear how one’s race, gender, and the related labor restrictions could hinder one’s chance at hitting the motherlode or gaining economic upward mobility, and it also decreased their assumed value in society. Sarah began studying old newspaper archives. What better documented the beliefs, values, norms, traditions, politics and social settings than the newspapers of the time? She would Call me, or run across the street to my house to share her findings. We found clear examples of racism against Mexican, Black, Chinese, and Native people who were living locally and across the country. One morning, both bundled in bath robes, Sarah showed me the winter issue of The Mariposa Gazette from 1865. The issue demonstrated how the Native California Indians were clearly devalued. In addition to several brief reports of “killing Indians,” the article that we both found most disturbing was a front page story consuming upwards the entirety of the page. A detailed account of Yosemite’s beauty. It seemed sweet. Until you read on, and the writer boasts, "no white man had ever looked upon its sublime wonders until 1851, when we came here in pursuit of Indians... coming to kill and exterminate." It stuck with me, and I think about it all the time.  If you are a person that visits Yosemite, I hope you can find your own way to honor the lives lost the next time you are there. The lives of those who were the original keepers of one of our planet's most beautiful gifts. The Placer Herald casually mentioned a Lynching “a negro, lynched at beals bar for stealing a watch.” Chinese locals were referred to as "Celestials" and "

34 min.

Top-podcasts in Geschiedenis

Bevriende Bommen
NPO Radio 1 / NOS
De 100-jarige
de Volkskrant
Mina & Mevrouw
NPO Radio 1 / VPRO
Tante Jos
NPO Radio 1 / KRO-NCRV
FOUT
Rick Blom, Tijmen Dokter / Corti Media
Geschiedenis voor herbeginners
Jonas Goossenaerts, Filip Vekemans, Benjamin Goyvaerts, Laurent Poschet