The Wild Days of the Palmer River Gold Rush What with cannibal blacks, pig-tailed Chinamen in thousands, lynch-law hangings, gambling dens, shanty towns, murders, grog-shops and Italian opera singers, the Palmer River Goldfields - properly spun out - should provide enough television material for general exhibition for the next ten years. This one book, River of Gold, could easily be used as the jumping-off ground for the lot. Read it with Hector Holthouse; he will be your guide; he has loved every minute of it, and so will you -Canberra Times The gold rush at Plamer River, on Cape York, lasted about seven years in the 1870s, but with 35,000 diggers it was this country's wildest while it lasted. Holthouse has researched the story of those days well to make a lively and very readable book. -The Bulletin
Mercy Bidwell inherited two things from her late father: a journal detailing his quest for the fabled Silver Angel Mine, and his spirit of adventure.
Gold Placer Deposits Near Talkeetna, Alaska
Good Luck!! Bad Luck**: Thames Goldfield
In the Beginning: James Mackay Recalls the Opening of the Thames Goldfield
Moanataiari Bonanza
Blasting Accidents: Thames Gold Mines
Stamper Battery Accidents: Non-fatal & Fatal
Miner's Complaint: Silicosis, Phthisis, Pneumoconiosis : Killer in the Thames Gold Mines
When the magic spyglass transports Mattie, Alex, and Sophie Chapman to the Yukon Territory during the gold rush, they enlist the help of author Jack London to track down a boy's stolen sled dog.
Too Long in Vera Cruz: --The Story of Spanish Treasure