1948 3c California Gold Rush Centennial

# 954 - 1948 3c California Gold Rush Centennial

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U.S. #954
3¢ California Gold
 
Issue Date: January 24, 1948
City: Coloma, CA
Quantity: 131,109,500
Printed by: Bureau of Engraving and Printing
Printing Method: Rotary Press
Perforations:
11 x 10 1/2
Color: Dark violet
 
U.S. #954 commemorates the 100th anniversary of the discovery of gold in California. The stamp pictures the famed Sutter’s Mill in Coloma.
 
The California Gold Rush
Gold was discovered in California on January 24, 1848 – just before the U.S. and Mexico signed the peace treaty. The gold was discovered at Sutter’s Mill in the Sacramento Valley, on land granted to pioneer-trader John A. Sutter. Sutter hired carpenter James W. Marshall to construct a sawmill. It was Marshall who discovered the area’s first gold nuggets.
 
News of this discovery spread like wildfire, and thousands of miners rushed to establish claims. These miners became known as “Forty-Niners,” and they came from all over the world. Between 1848 and 1849, California’s population grew from about 15,000 to well over 100,000. The wealth generated by gold transformed small communities like San Francisco and Sacramento into flourishing towns.
 

California Admitted To The Union 

U.S. #1373 pictures the Carmel Mission belfry.

On September 9, 1850, California became America’s 31st state.

Long before Europeans first explored California, it was inhabited by as many as 300,000 Indians.  The Hupa and Pomo tribes lived in the north, the Maidu in the central region, and the Yuma in the south.  Because of the region’s high mountains and vast deserts, these groups were isolated from one another, as well as from people farther east.

In 1542, Juan Rodríguez Cabrillo, a Portuguese explorer employed by Spain, became the first European to sail along the coast of California.  In 1579, Sir Francis Drake claimed the land for England.  Afraid they were losing the region to the English, Spain sent more exploring parties to California.  One of these explorers, Sebastián Vizcaíno, urged Spain to colonize the area before England had the chance.

U.S. #954 pictures Sutter’s Mill in Coloma.

In 1769, Captain Gaspar de Portolá, governor of Baja California, founded a military fort at San Diego.  That same year, also in San Diego, Father Junipero Serra established the first California Mission.  Over the next 13 years, Father Serra founded eight more.  By 1823, there were 21 missions in California, each within a day’s walk of the previous one.

Despite the large missionary presence, Spain did not have firm control over the region.  In 1812, Russian fur traders from Alaska established Fort Ross on the northern California coast.  Twelve years later, in response to the Monroe Doctrine – which was in part influenced by Russia’s expansion into the area – Russia agreed to limit its trapping to Alaska.  However, the Russians did not leave Fort Ross until the early 1840s.

U.S. #997 pictures the gold miners who fueled California’s rapid growth, as well as other important resources like oil and citrus fruit.

The missions were a powerful economic force.  Many Indians who lived in these missions were forced to do hard labor for long hours.  Also, as a number of Indians were exposed to new diseases, many became ill and died.  Quite a number of people in California and Mexico wanted the missions shut down.  As a result, the government began selling the missions in the 1830s.  By 1846, nearly all the mission property had been sold.

In 1821, Mexico won its independence from Spain.  A year later, California became a province of Mexico.  The province was allowed to establish its own legislature and military force.  But when Mexico began sending governors to the province in 1825, Californians began to resent the outside influence.  Some citizens engaged Mexican troops in some minor conflicts.  This continued resistance weakened Mexico’s control of the area.

In 1796, the Otter became the first American sailing vessel to reach California’s coast from the East.  Many other ships soon began making this profitable voyage.  In 1826, trapper Jedediah Strong Smith became the first American explorer to reach California by land.  Many trappers and explorers soon followed in his footsteps.  The first group of American settlers reached California in 1841.  A schoolteacher, John Bidwell, and a wagon master and land speculator, John Bartleson, led these people.  Wagon trains of settlers soon followed. So many American settlers poured into California that the United States offered to buy the land, but Mexico refused to sell.

U.S. #1663 – The grizzly bear on the California flag was selected as a symbol of strength.

Military explorer John C. Frémont led surveying parties into California from 1844 to 1846.  The Mexicans saw these expeditions as a threat.  In March 1846, the Mexicans ordered Frémont to leave the area.  Instead, he stood his ground, raising the US flag over Hawk’s Peak, located about 25 miles from Monterey.  Frémont began building a fort, but when Mexican troops came to the area, Frémont withdrew.  On May 13, 1846, the US and Mexico went to war.

In June 1846, California settlers, led by frontiersman Ezekiel Merritt, captured the Mexican fort at Sonoma.  This fort served as Mexico’s headquarters for all of northern California . After capturing the fort, the settlers raised a homemade flag picturing a star, grizzly bear, and the words California Republic.  This event became known as the Bear Flag Revolt.

U.S. #3438 pictures the Big Sur coastline.

The Bear Flag Revolt was not a significant military action.  Regular US armed forces completed the real military conquest of California.  Frémont, Commodore Robert F. Stockton, and General Stephen W. Kearny led US troops.  After the war, Mexico surrendered California in the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo. California then became part of the US.

Gold was discovered in California in 1848 – just before the US and Mexico signed the peace treaty.  The gold was discovered at Sutter’s Mill in the Sacramento Valley, on land granted to pioneer-trader John A. Sutter.  Sutter hired carpenter James W. Marshall to construct a sawmill.  It was Marshall who discovered the area’s first gold nuggets.

News of this discovery spread like wildfire, and thousands of miners rushed to establish claims.  These miners became known as “Forty-Niners,” and they came from all over the world.  Between 1848 and 1849, California’s population grew from about 15,000 to well over 100,000.  The wealth generated by gold transformed small communities like San Francisco and Sacramento into flourishing towns.

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U.S. #954
3¢ California Gold
 
Issue Date: January 24, 1948
City: Coloma, CA
Quantity: 131,109,500
Printed by: Bureau of Engraving and Printing
Printing Method: Rotary Press
Perforations:
11 x 10 1/2
Color: Dark violet
 
U.S. #954 commemorates the 100th anniversary of the discovery of gold in California. The stamp pictures the famed Sutter’s Mill in Coloma.
 
The California Gold Rush
Gold was discovered in California on January 24, 1848 – just before the U.S. and Mexico signed the peace treaty. The gold was discovered at Sutter’s Mill in the Sacramento Valley, on land granted to pioneer-trader John A. Sutter. Sutter hired carpenter James W. Marshall to construct a sawmill. It was Marshall who discovered the area’s first gold nuggets.
 
News of this discovery spread like wildfire, and thousands of miners rushed to establish claims. These miners became known as “Forty-Niners,” and they came from all over the world. Between 1848 and 1849, California’s population grew from about 15,000 to well over 100,000. The wealth generated by gold transformed small communities like San Francisco and Sacramento into flourishing towns.
 

California Admitted To The Union 

U.S. #1373 pictures the Carmel Mission belfry.

On September 9, 1850, California became America’s 31st state.

Long before Europeans first explored California, it was inhabited by as many as 300,000 Indians.  The Hupa and Pomo tribes lived in the north, the Maidu in the central region, and the Yuma in the south.  Because of the region’s high mountains and vast deserts, these groups were isolated from one another, as well as from people farther east.

In 1542, Juan Rodríguez Cabrillo, a Portuguese explorer employed by Spain, became the first European to sail along the coast of California.  In 1579, Sir Francis Drake claimed the land for England.  Afraid they were losing the region to the English, Spain sent more exploring parties to California.  One of these explorers, Sebastián Vizcaíno, urged Spain to colonize the area before England had the chance.

U.S. #954 pictures Sutter’s Mill in Coloma.

In 1769, Captain Gaspar de Portolá, governor of Baja California, founded a military fort at San Diego.  That same year, also in San Diego, Father Junipero Serra established the first California Mission.  Over the next 13 years, Father Serra founded eight more.  By 1823, there were 21 missions in California, each within a day’s walk of the previous one.

Despite the large missionary presence, Spain did not have firm control over the region.  In 1812, Russian fur traders from Alaska established Fort Ross on the northern California coast.  Twelve years later, in response to the Monroe Doctrine – which was in part influenced by Russia’s expansion into the area – Russia agreed to limit its trapping to Alaska.  However, the Russians did not leave Fort Ross until the early 1840s.

U.S. #997 pictures the gold miners who fueled California’s rapid growth, as well as other important resources like oil and citrus fruit.

The missions were a powerful economic force.  Many Indians who lived in these missions were forced to do hard labor for long hours.  Also, as a number of Indians were exposed to new diseases, many became ill and died.  Quite a number of people in California and Mexico wanted the missions shut down.  As a result, the government began selling the missions in the 1830s.  By 1846, nearly all the mission property had been sold.

In 1821, Mexico won its independence from Spain.  A year later, California became a province of Mexico.  The province was allowed to establish its own legislature and military force.  But when Mexico began sending governors to the province in 1825, Californians began to resent the outside influence.  Some citizens engaged Mexican troops in some minor conflicts.  This continued resistance weakened Mexico’s control of the area.

In 1796, the Otter became the first American sailing vessel to reach California’s coast from the East.  Many other ships soon began making this profitable voyage.  In 1826, trapper Jedediah Strong Smith became the first American explorer to reach California by land.  Many trappers and explorers soon followed in his footsteps.  The first group of American settlers reached California in 1841.  A schoolteacher, John Bidwell, and a wagon master and land speculator, John Bartleson, led these people.  Wagon trains of settlers soon followed. So many American settlers poured into California that the United States offered to buy the land, but Mexico refused to sell.

U.S. #1663 – The grizzly bear on the California flag was selected as a symbol of strength.

Military explorer John C. Frémont led surveying parties into California from 1844 to 1846.  The Mexicans saw these expeditions as a threat.  In March 1846, the Mexicans ordered Frémont to leave the area.  Instead, he stood his ground, raising the US flag over Hawk’s Peak, located about 25 miles from Monterey.  Frémont began building a fort, but when Mexican troops came to the area, Frémont withdrew.  On May 13, 1846, the US and Mexico went to war.

In June 1846, California settlers, led by frontiersman Ezekiel Merritt, captured the Mexican fort at Sonoma.  This fort served as Mexico’s headquarters for all of northern California . After capturing the fort, the settlers raised a homemade flag picturing a star, grizzly bear, and the words California Republic.  This event became known as the Bear Flag Revolt.

U.S. #3438 pictures the Big Sur coastline.

The Bear Flag Revolt was not a significant military action.  Regular US armed forces completed the real military conquest of California.  Frémont, Commodore Robert F. Stockton, and General Stephen W. Kearny led US troops.  After the war, Mexico surrendered California in the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo. California then became part of the US.

Gold was discovered in California in 1848 – just before the US and Mexico signed the peace treaty.  The gold was discovered at Sutter’s Mill in the Sacramento Valley, on land granted to pioneer-trader John A. Sutter.  Sutter hired carpenter James W. Marshall to construct a sawmill.  It was Marshall who discovered the area’s first gold nuggets.

News of this discovery spread like wildfire, and thousands of miners rushed to establish claims.  These miners became known as “Forty-Niners,” and they came from all over the world.  Between 1848 and 1849, California’s population grew from about 15,000 to well over 100,000.  The wealth generated by gold transformed small communities like San Francisco and Sacramento into flourishing towns.