It was 1849, and Americans were dreaming of gold. A lucky man had found chunks of it sparkling in a California stream. Word was spreading fast.
All across the country, people left their homes. Farmers dropped their plows in the fields. Preachers closed up their churches. Seamen deserted their ships.
In just a year, nearly 100,000 people traveled west with a single goal: Get rich quick! The gold rush was on.
But the man who really struck it rich wasn’t a miner looking for gold. He was the man who made the miners’ pants.
It was 1849. Americans were dreaming of gold. A lucky man had found some in a California stream. Word spread fast.
All across the country, people left their homes. Nearly 100,000 people went west in one year. They had one goal: Get rich quick! The gold rush was on.
But the man who really struck it rich wasn’t a miner looking for gold. He was the man who made the miners’ pants.
It was 1849, and Americans were dreaming of gold. A lucky man had discovered chunks of it sparkling in a California stream, and word was spreading fast.
All across the country, people left their homes. Farmers dropped their plows in the fields, preachers closed up their churches, and seamen deserted their ships. In just a year, nearly 100,000 people traveled west with a single goal: Get rich quick! The gold rush was on.
But the man who really struck it rich wasn’t a miner looking for gold. He was the man who made the miners’ pants.