Page:The History of Oregon Bancroft 1888.djvu/74

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56
EFFECT OF THE CALIFORNIA GOLD DISCOVERY.

was economy and thrift before, there was now a tendency to profligacy and waste. This was natural. They had suffered so long the oppression of a want that could not be relieved, and the restraint of desires that could not be gratified without money, that when money came, and with such ease, it was like a draught of brandy upon an empty stomach. There was intoxication, sometimes delirium. Such was especially the case with the Canadians,[1] some of whom brought home thirty or forty thousand dollars, but were unable to keep it. The same was true of others. The pleasure of spending, and of buying such articles of luxury as now began to find their way to Oregon from an overstocked California market, was too great to be resisted. If they could not keep their money, however, they put it into circulation, and so contributed to supply a want in the community, and enable those who could not go to the mines, through fear of losing their land claims, or other cause, to share in the golden harvest.[2]

It has been held by some that the discovery of gold at this time seriously retarded the progress of Oregon.[3] This was not the case in general, though it may have been so in particular instances. It took agriculturists temporarily from their farms and mechanics from their shops, thereby checking the steady if slow march of improvement. But it found a market for agricultural products, raising prices several hundred per cent, and enabled the farmer to get gold for his produce, instead of a poor class of goods at exorbitant prices. It checked for two or three years the progress of building. While mill-owners obtained enormous prices for their lumber, the wages of mechanics advanced from a dollar and a half a day to eight dollars, and the day laborer was able to demand and obtain four dollars per day[4]

  1. Anderson's Northwest Coast, MS., 37–9; Johnson's Cal. and Or., 206–7.
  2. Sayward's Pioneer Remin., MS., 7.
  3. Deady, in Overland Monthly, i. 36; Honolulu Friend, May 3, 1851.
  4. Brown's Autobiography, MS., 37; Strong's Hist. Or., MS., 15.