guest ::
login
Home
Collections
Historical Articles
Photos
Publications
Yearbooks
Maps
Multimedia
Help
Heritage Council
Contact Us
Home
> Search Results: recid:253
Search:
any field
abstract
author
coden
collection
division
experiment
fulltext
isbn
issn
journal
keyword
record ID
reference
report number
subject
title
year
Search Tips
::
Advanced Search
Search collections:
*** any public collection ***
Around Vacaville
Bancroft Histories
Books
Brochures & Pamphlets
Echos Of Solanos Past
Ernest Wichels
Heritage Council
Historical Articles of Solano ...
Maps
Multimedia
Newsletters
Photographic Collection
Publications
Solano Historian
Solano History
Solano In Retrospect
Solano, The Way It Was
Studies & Reports
Video
Wood Young
Yearbooks
Sort by:
Display results:
Output format:
latest first
title
author
report number
year
asc.
desc.
- or rank by -
word similarity
10 results
25 results
50 results
100 results
single list
split by collection
BibTeX
Dublin Core
EndNote
HTML brief
HTML citesummary
HTML detailed
MARC
MARCXML
NLM
photo captions only
portfolio
RefWorks
Untitled
Solano History
35
records found 1 - 10
jump to record:
Search took 0.02 seconds.
1.
(100)
First gold, then a future brought Chinese to the area
/
Goerke-Shrode, Sabine
[569]
[WAYITWAS-2005-569]
Large numbers of Chinese men flocked to California around 1850, attracted by the Gold Rush and the hope of earning enough money to return to China, buy land there and raise their families.
Detailed record
-
Similar records
2.
(86)
Chinese enjoy long history in Vacaville
/
Delaplane, Kristin
[405]
[ECHOS-1998-405]
'My grandfather came to America in the 1850s to look for gold. He wanted $200 in gold to buy land in China. He stayed a year, got his $200 and went home to the family he had started there.
Detailed record
-
Similar records
3.
(84)
Chinese a vital part of Solano history
/
Delaplane, Kristin
[320]
[ECHOS-1997-320]
In the 19th century, many Chinese, most of them from Southeast China, came to America's western shores seeking their fortunes. The greatest influx came when they heard of the discovery of gold in California. During this era, many Chinese and others found disappointment in the gold fields, and were attracted to Solano's rich farm land.
Detailed record
-
Similar records
4.
(84)
Chinese immigrants bring rich traditions
/
Goerke-Shrode, Sabine
[66]
[WAYITWAS-2001-66]
The Gold Rush brought many immigrants to California.
Detailed record
-
Similar records
5.
(82)
Gold Rush lured family to California
/
Goerke-Shrode, Sabine
[199]
[WAYITWAS-2004-199]
Luzena Stanley Wilson and her husband, Mason Wilson, are two names that resonate through Vacaville's early history. The couple arrived in California with their two toddlers in 1849, attracted by the Gold Rush. They experienced the hardships of the rough society of Sacramento and Nevada City before finally settling in the fertile Vaca Valley in 1851.
Detailed record
-
Similar records
6.
(82)
Young Ladies' Seminary earned respect
/
Goerke-Shrode, Sabine
[166]
[WAYITWAS-2003-166]
Education has always been a major concern for parents. While only a small number of families with children settled in Solano County during or right after the Gold Rush years, their efforts to provide a quality education resulted in the establishment of several public schools.
Detailed record
-
Similar records
7.
(80)
Culture clashes challenged Chinese
/
Goerke-Shrode, Sabine
[574]
[WAYITWAS-2005-574]
This column continues the story of the Yee family, who came from a small village in southwest China, near Canton. In 1977, Ron Limbaugh interviewed Yee Ah Chong, the son of Yee Gim Wo, for the Vacaville Heritage project. Yee Ah Chong's recollections of this vanished world are preserved at the Vacaville Museum. - Editor
Detailed record
-
Similar records
8.
(79)
No hurry in picking men, Gold Rush women told
/
Goerke-Shrode, Sabine
[691]
[WAYITWAS-2007-691]
Advice was to take one's time, and judge a man beyond his fine clothes.
Detailed record
-
Similar records
9.
(79)
Pioneer settler wanted land, not gold
/
Goerke-Shrode, Sabine
[136]
[WAYITWAS-2002-136]
Though he was born in Orange County, Va., on May 30, 1808, he grew up in Kentucky. Like many young frontier men, he felt the urge to move further west. The year 1830 found him as a farmer in New London, Miss., where he married Cornelia Catherine Lamme, a great-granddaughter of Daniel Boone, on Jan. 19, 1830.
Detailed record
-
Similar records
10.
(78)
Wolfskill family set tone for Solano's future
/
Delaplane, Kristin
[245]
[ECHOS-1995-245]
Information for this article came from the Vacaville Heritage Council and the Vacaville Museum. Wolfskill descendants can trace their story back to the 1740s Prussia and Frederick the Great's ongoing wars. Rather than fight in wars where the loss of life was incredibly high, in 1742, Joseph Wolfskeil moved to the wilderness of Pennsylvania to take his chances.
Detailed record
-
Similar records