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Stampless Envelope from a 49er Sent back home

Currency:USD Category:Collectibles / Mining Start Price:250.00 USD Estimated At:500.00 - 1,000.00 USD
Stampless Envelope from a 49er Sent back home
SOLD
200.00USD+ (46.00) buyer's premium + applicable fees & taxes.
This item SOLD at 2016 May 13 @ 10:10UTC-7 : PDT/MST
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Letter is from Orrin Mowry. The folded sheet letter has not been cancelled, so it may have been hand delivered. Letter has been translated. "...at Sacramento City 120 miles nearer the mines being about Sixty Five Miles from good diggens." "...I see gold in bags and jars daily." "I certainly expect to get some [gold] as we see others with plenty, yes plenty." He talks about heading to American River, his journey by boat. It ends with "You can send my Letters to San Francisco as an Express runs from all the Mine to San Francisco." Three full pages!



William Stanfield also adds a quick note. William Stanfield and his daughter Mary Jane were the proprietors of "The Indiana Boarding House" at the Rich Bar Gold Camp on the Feather River near present-day Quincy, Plumas co,CA; this was reputed to be the richest gold camp in California William's dau Mary Jane was called "The Indiana Girl" but was an immense woman; she is said to have carried 50 lbs of flour on her shoulder while descending the 5 mile precipitous trail and wading thru 5 feet of snow into Rich Bar; in the Spring of 1851 she was the first woman in the camp; she very rapidly turned her kitchen at the boarding house into the miners' bank, depositing nuggets under the puncheon floor for safekeeping. After he left the Rich Bar, William bought a ranch and erected a Hotel and Stagecoach stop on the Marysville road about 9 miles North of Browns Valley in Yuba County; this site is now a ghost town known as Stanfield Hill [narrative courtesy of John Byram, in Stanfield genealogy] City: Sacramento City State: California Date: 1850 ID# 38020