At this stage, there weren't many prospectors as people were not encouraged to find gold. Any gold that was found was supposed to be given to the government. However, prospectors tended to look for gold in mounatinous areas, such as through the Blue Mountains and the high country of southern New South Wales.
At this stage, there weren't many prospectors as people were not encouraged to find gold. Any gold that was found was supposed to be given to the government. However, prospectors tended to look for gold in mounatinous areas, such as through the Blue Mountains and the high country of southern New South Wales.
The Australian gold rush started in 1851 when Hargraves discovered gold in New South Wales. Before this, most prospectors were traveling to California in the United States.
Before Edward Hargraves made his discovery, many were traveling to California to find gold. He inspired the Australian gold rush in 1851.
No. Many discoveries of gold had been found before Edward Hargraves found his but it was kept secret in case of chaos.
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Edward Hargraves was thirty four years old when he claimed he had found gold in Australia on February 12th, 1851. Shortly before his death in 1891 an equiry was made that stated that John Lister and James Tom had discovered the first goldfield in Australia.
Although it is not specifically recorded, it is highly probable that gold had already been found at Ophir, which was given its name later by Edward Hargraves. When Hargarves sought to meet the Government's challenge and offer of rewards to anyone finding payable gold in NSW, he enlisted the assistance of John Lister, a man who had already found gold in the region. Lister led Hargraves directly to where gold was found, at Summerhill Creek, at a site which Hargraves named "Ophir".
Yes. The Californian goldrush preceded Australia's goldrush. The Californian goldrush could be said to have led to the Australian goldrush. Edward Hargraves is credited with starting the gold rush in New South Wales. Hargraves had some experience with gold prospecting in California, although not a lot of success. He noted similarities in the topology and geology of the countryside west of Sydney compared to that of the Californian goldfields. Logically speaking, he believed the Australian landscape should also contain gold. Hargraves enlisted the assistance of John Lister, a man who had already found gold in the region. Lister led Hargraves directly to where gold was found, at Summerhill Creek, at a site which Hargraves named "Ophir". Hargraves instructed Lister and two brothers, James and William Tom, in panning and mining techniques he had learned in California, and their persistence paid handsome dividends with the discovery of substantial gold.
Gold was found in New South Wales several decades before the official discovery, but not in payable amounts. Among those who found traces of gold were surveyor James McBrien, who reported finding gold near Bathurst, NSW in 1823. In the next decade, in 1839, Polish explorer Paul Edmund de Strzelecki found gold near Hartley Vale. Reverend WB Clark then found gold near Lithgow in 1941, but he was ordered by Governor Gipps to keep quiet "or we'll all have our throats cut!" The fear was that news of gold would cause riots and escapes among the convicts. However, gold was first officially discovered in Australia in 1851, not far from Bathurst, New South Wales. The one credited with the discovery is Edward Hargraves, whose careful study of the geology of the area had convinced him that it was similar to that of the California goldfields, from where he had just returned. Hargraves enlisted the assistance of John Lister, a man who had already found gold in the region. Lister and the Tom brothers, using Hargraves' cradling equipment, located gold almost immediately at Summerhill Creek, at a site which Hargraves named "Ophir". Hargraves has been credited with the discovery ever since, even though, by rights, credit should go to Lister.
Major Events before the "Discovery" of the Philippines
The first person to discover gold in Australia was Edward Hargreaves in Ophir near Bathurst, New South Wales, Australia on the 12th of February 1851. This was the first "official" discovery of gold in Australia even though there were rumours about discovery of gold before that.
Pike's Peak but wasn't first time Sutter's Mill occurred before then
Pike's Peak but wasn't first time Sutter's Mill occurred before then