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No, storekeepers that sold supplies to the miners profited. Saloon owners, restaurant owners, gold buyers, horse and mule traders, bankers, and hotel owners also profited. There were probably others who also profited.

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Q: Were the miners the only people who profited from the gold rush?
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What type of housing did the miners in the gold rush have?

The housing of the gold miners were little tents. They were very plain and had a dirt floor. Only very official people would have more improved housing. All the housing was very plain, basic and was often dirty.


How did gold miners not pay taxes?

Only landowners had to pay taxes in the 1850s. Most miners did not own land and therefore did not owe any tax.


What problems did gold licenses create to the miners?

Miners were given three square metres of 'claim' and that was the only place where they could mine. Most 'claims' didn't even have any gold in it, but the miners still had to pay the monthly fee of 30 shillings, so they became poor.


Where did the miners go west?

The miners went west because they thought there would be more land, food and money. They thought there was going to be loads of gold to dig up which they would get lots of money for, but when they got there there was over crowding with all the other miners that thought there was going to be lots of gold and land too. There was no gold left that was worth anything, only little bit of gold but most days the miners would go home empty handed.


Who benefited from a gold rush?

Not only lucky miners but also the wide range of people who provided support services, and the economy as a whole, which had been staggering under the 1840s depression.


How the 49ers got there name?

The name "49ers" comes from "Forty-niners" - the name given to the gold prospectors who arrived in Northern California around 1849 during the California Gold Rush. The name was suggested to reflect the voyagers who had rushed the West for gold. It is the only name the team has ever been affiliated with and San Francisco is the only city in which it has resided


What is known as fool's gold?

Pyrite is the mineral commonly known as "fools gold." It was given the nickname when miners would leave home move to newly discovered gold mines only to discover the "gold" they dug up was worth nothing.


Who made money in the gold rush?

While most of the miners who participated in the Gold Rush made only a modest profit, the businesses that supplied the products the miners needed were the real economic winners. Those who dealt in the fields of transportation, shipping, entertainment or retail became wealthy as a result of the Gold Rush.


How many gold miners survived since 1894?

none, they'd have to be like 130 years old, and that only happens in the bible xx


Are miners affected by nuclear energy?

Only uranium miners I think


Are there people below the earth?

No. Only miners who mine for a job and then come up to go home.


How is gold mined?

Once gold was discovered in an area, miners rushed to stake a claim to a piece of land to work on. Where gold was present in the beds of creeks or rivers, miners used the panning method to wash gravel until only the heavier gold remained. A similar, better method was to use a rocking cradle to separate gold from worthless stone. They rocked gravel and water in the cradle, sifting out lighter materials and leaving gold. Puddling was another version of panning. Huge tubs or vats, often worked by horses, were used to wash gold-bearing soil. In areas where water was scarce, alluvial gold was mined by dry blowing--that is, miners separated gold from sand by dropping the material from a height and allowing the wind to blow the lighter material away. Once surface deposits were exhausted, miners had to sink shafts into the ground. They tried to follow the line of lode--that is, the gold in quartz veins living and travelling conditions on the goldfields of the 1800's were extremely rugged. Often there were no buildings for shelter. Miners encountered worse conditions as they travelled farther from civilization. Many miners returned home after a brief, unsuccessful, period on the goldfields. Very few made the fortune of which they had dreamed when they set out. Miners came to the goldfields from all parts of the world. For example, many Chinese miners migrated to California during the 1849 gold rush. Later, many of these Chinese miners moved to Australia and New Zealand.