“Volunteer Forty-Niners is an admirable example of how a familiar story—the Gold Rush and life in California during 1848-1853—can be enriched and enlarged by imaginative and energetic research in newly discovered resources.” –J.S. Holliday, author of The World Rushed In: The California Gold Rush Experience
— J.S. Holliday
Durham's stirring tale is its own reward. Probably the most valuable dimension of it is not about gold at all, but about the Tennesseans who went and stayed to make their mark in California.
--John Egerton, The Tennessean— John Egerton, The Tennessean
“Durham’s book gives us not only a richly detailed and fascinating view of the many interesting Tennessee characters caught up in the California fever, it also helps us understand better the sectional crisis that was tearing America apart at the same time it brought northerners and southerners together in the West.” –Don H. Doyle, author of New Men, New Cities, New South and co-editor of The South as an American Problem
— Don H. Doyle
“Volunteer Forty-Niners is an admirable example of how a familiar story—the Gold Rush and life in California during 1848-1853—can be enriched and enlarged by imaginative and energetic research in newly discovered resources.” –J.S. Holliday, author of The World Rushed In: The California Gold Rush Experience
— J.S. Holliday
Durham's stirring tale is its own reward. Probably the most valuable dimension of it is not about gold at all, but about the Tennesseans who went and stayed to make their mark in California.
--John Egerton, The Tennessean— John Egerton, The Tennessean
“Durham’s book gives us not only a richly detailed and fascinating view of the many interesting Tennessee characters caught up in the California fever, it also helps us understand better the sectional crisis that was tearing America apart at the same time it brought northerners and southerners together in the West.” –Don H. Doyle, author of New Men, New Cities, New South and co-editor of The South as an American Problem
— Don H. Doyle