The Tasmania Reef was the richest gold discovery anywhere in Australia in the 1870s and 1880s, and Beaconsfield grew to become Tasmania’s third biggest town. In today’s money, some $3 Billion came out of Beaconsfield over the life of the Tasmania mine. This book is a first-hand account of the discovery of gold and how the town was established. The narrator is a composite of the writings of around a dozen miners who were there – and describes the mines, the people and the events of the early years, as Beaconsfield grew and changed from a tent city to become a proud, innovative and community-conscious urban society.
Memoir of Edna Gaffney of life in Gippsland Victoria 1930s and 40s and later graduating as a nurse working in the 50s and 60s
... Brandy Creek, Crystal Creek, Boulder Creek, and Whiskeytown. Each has its own charm; each is worth a visit not only for the falling water, but also to experience recovery of wildlands after wildfire. Finding. the. trailhead: From Redding ...
Nestled in the klamath Mountains watershed and steeped in the history of the California Gold Rush, Whiskeytown offers a wealth of year-round recreational opportunities. Photos by Philip Wright and the author.
The fifth edition of this classic hiking guide, in print for more than 25 years, has been completely revamped and now covers not only trails and cross-country routes in the Alps but in the nearby recreation lands.
Deer Lake (7,090') 5 M Scenic lake, aspen groves, view of Sierra Buttes The trail begins across the road. ... An old jeep trail circles around the western edge of the lake to a well-preserved, old mine, complete with old, narrow-gauge ...
How Gold Run earned its name is fairly obvious. In fact, the town earned an official State Landmark designation (#405) for its highly efficient hydraulic mines. Between 1865 and 1878, Gold Run's mines shipped a whopping $6,125,000 in ...
The Douglas squirrel is rarely a camp robber, but he may drop a green pine or fir cone uncomfortably close to you as you pass beneath his tree. The piles of cone scales and cones under trees usually belong to Douglas squirrels.