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(#4) Museum of the City of San Francisco
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(#5) California Mining and Mineral Museum
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(#6) Marshall Gold Discovery State Historic Park
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(#8) Columbia State Historic Park
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(#9) Old Sacramento State Historic Park
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(#10) Gold Rush History Center
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(#12) Sutter Creek
- California, USA
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(#13) Railtown 1897
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(#16) Hangtown's Gold Bug Park & Mine
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(#17) Ironstone Vineyard
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(#18) Malakoff Diggins State Historic Park
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(#19) Leland Stanford Mansion State Historic Park
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(#24) Mark Twain Cabin, Jackass Hill
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(#25) Amador City
- California, USA
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(#26) Drytown
- California, USA
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(#29) Murphys Old Timers Museum
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(#31) Weaverville Joss House State Historic Park
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(#32) Fourth Crossing
- California, USA
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(#33) Kennedy Mine and Tailing Wheels
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(#34) Frank Bekeart's Gunshop
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(#35) Emigrant Museum
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(#36) Gold Museum & Greenhorn Park
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(#37) Shasta State Historic Park
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(#38) Placer County Museum
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(#39) 49er Festival, Groveland/Big Oak Flat
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About This Tool
When James Marshall accidentally discovered gold, he would not realize that a magnificent gold rush would outbreak in California. More than 300,000 gold prospectors came to California to try to find gold mines to get rich overnight, but only a handful of them succeeded. Although more than a century has passed since the gold rush, there are still a large number of historical relics of the gold rush preserved in the plains and mountains of California.
Rich historical and cultural relics, the beautiful Sierra Nevada does not lack unforgettable natural scenery, magnificent river valleys and lush mountain forests are the only way to the history of gold mining. The random tool lists 39 must-visit places on the gold rush history tour.
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