ShmoopTube

Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.

Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos


U.S. History 1877-Present Videos 173 videos

U.S. History 1877-Present 11: Reconstruction and Black Codes
6413 Views

Have you ever told one of your siblings to stop poking you, only to have them do something like hold their hand right in front of your face instead...

U.S. History 1877-Present 3: John D. Rockefeller
13980 Views

John D. Rockefeller. Greasy robber baron, or philanthropic saint? Why not both? Boy, that's a weird combination... 

U.S. History 1877-Present 3: Native Americans in the Gilded Age
9665 Views

Today we'll learn about plans to assimilate the American Indian population after reconstruction. If you've ever seen Star Trek, you'll know that fo...

See All

U.S. History 1877-Present 5: Hydraulic Mining 208 Views


Share It!


Description:

Today we're learning about hydraulic mining, which was all the rage in the mid 1800s. Unfortunately it caused a lot of slickens, which meant slim pickens for farmers, which quickened legislation that eventually banned its use. Womp womp.

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:00

Edited at https://subtitletools.com When

00:00

When

00:05

most people think of gold mining,

00:07

they imagine some guy named Toothless [Toothless panning for gold in river]

00:09

Sam peacefully panning in

00:11

a crystal-clear California river.

00:13

If Sam sifts a nugget

00:15

from the water, he does a happy dance.

00:17

And unless he steps on a snail, [boot avoids squishing snail]

00:19

nature remains unscathed.

00:21

Of course, gold mining

00:23

might have started with guys like Toothless

00:25

Sam, but, uh, people quickly

00:27

figured out that panning for gold was like

00:29

looking for a needle in a haystack.

00:31

So folks started innovating techniques

00:33

like hydraulic mining.

00:35

And wouldn't ya know it? It worked like a charm.

00:37

Over three decades,

00:39

it yielded a cool 100,000,000 dollars'

00:41

worth of gold, which is worth about

00:43

7.5 billion dollars today.

00:45

Man, they're lucky they didn't

00:47

summon Smaug.

00:49

But despite all this

00:51

glittering success, the government put an end to the

00:53

gold party. Now why would the government

00:55

do something like that? Sheer

00:57

meanness? Bling envy? Well, probably

00:59

not. See, hydraulic mining

01:01

blasts water at rock or sedimentary

01:03

material to get it moving,

01:05

and then runs that water-sediment

01:07

flurry through gold separating devices.

01:09

Sounds nice and clean,

01:11

right? Like a high-powered shower

01:13

that gets you gold. Where can we buy

01:15

one of those? Sharper Image, perhaps?

01:17

Well, the problem is that hurling

01:19

high-pressured water at any land

01:21

scape, even one made of solid

01:23

rock, causes serious

01:25

erosion. Then there's the small

01:27

problem of millions of tons of water,

01:29

gravel, and sand streams

01:31

ready to run but with nowhere to go.

01:33

Well, thanks to hydraulic mining all over

01:35

the West, water systems got, uh,

01:37

a little scrambled. And a few

01:39

were probably even poached. For instance,

01:41

California's Sacramento area had

01:43

streams and rivers that were filled with

01:45

gravel and rocks. You know what

01:47

Pocahontas likes most about rivers?

01:49

Besides the whole, uh,

01:51

"can't step in the same river twice" thing?

01:53

She likes to have,

01:55

uh, what's that called? Yeah,

01:57

water. Yeah, water

01:59

in rivers. Well, waterways were

02:01

diverting, overflowing, and being

02:03

halted in their tracks. This

02:05

clogging-slash-overflowing situation

02:07

deprived people of water

02:09

and made it way harder to

02:11

navigate the area by boat, or

02:13

uh, pool noodle. All

02:15

the flooding that was happening wasn't

02:17

too cool either. A flood is

02:19

bad enough on its own, but these floods were

02:21

particularly destructive for farmers

02:23

because the waters were filled with silt and

02:25

sand. And you know the old saying:

02:27

"when a fellow's farm floods with sandwater,

02:29

he might as well become an accountant."

02:31

Uh, we might have made that

02:33

one up here at Shmoop, but it proves

02:35

the point. Yeah. Anyway, many farmers'

02:37

farmers quickly became unfarmable

02:39

after being doused in the

02:41

silty water known as slickens.

02:43

There's an appropriately

02:45

disgusting name, if we ever heard one.

02:47

Well, farmers started giving their local elected

02:49

officials an earful and filing

02:51

lawsuits left in right. Well, finally,

02:53

in 1884, federal circuit court

02:55

judge Lorenzo Sawyer mandated

02:57

that the mining industry stop

02:59

discharging its debris.

03:01

In plain English, he said,

03:03

"Hydraulics are off the table,

03:05

boys." With the Sawyer

03:07

injuction, the industry collapsed

03:09

and hydraulic mining became a thing of the past.

03:11

So the government didn't step in

03:13

to crush an industry just for the fun of it.

03:15

They stepped in to protect peoples'

03:17

private property. And even though

03:19

this wasn't pure environmental protection,

03:21

it planted the seeds for laws to

03:23

come. Also, it put Toothless

03:25

Sam back in the game, and somewhere,

03:27

he did a toothless jig.

Related Videos

Why Does the Constitution Still Work for Us?
5723 Views

Ever heard of a "living document"? They eat and breathe just like the rest of us! They even walk around on their own two legs. Okay, fine—maybe t...

The Puritans and the Division of Church and State
1280 Views

If the Puritans had gotten their way, religion would play a much larger role in lawmaking these days. Want to know more? Watch the video for all th...

Shays' Rebellion
6475 Views

What happened between the creation of the Articles of Confederation and the ratification of the current U.S. Constitution? This video analyzes the...

There's More Than One Way to Crack a Modernist Egg
539 Views

The Modernists thought the world had a lot of problems, and they were intent on fixing them—or at least talking about fixing them. Unfortunately,...

Federalism
2532 Views

This video explains Federalism and the quest for a fair balance between state and national power. It covers the progression and compromises of Fede...