fallsfromtrees wrote:Graydon wrote:[snip]
Because the author is on their side, Charis has Silverlode Island. (It's not without historical precedent; the UK got the Transvaal, and the US got the California Gold Strike during the Civil War.) They're going to be able to expand their economy enough while staying on the Writ's restrictions about what money really is.
Really great summary.
Thank you!
fallsfromtrees wrote:A couple of minor nits - the California Gold Strike was in 1849, 12 years before the ACW. What helped by the Comstock Lode Silver strike in Nevada in 1859, which was just in time for the ACW. Other than that, a masterful summary.
The initial strike was 1849, yes, but the hydraulic mining after less and less dense gold deposits in Miocene river channel gravels kept up right through the Civil War and no further (because it was altering the topography, depth of rivers, etc. and starting to make everyone not involved in gold mining rather angry) with regular gold deliveries round the Horn to New York. If I remember correctly, the last bit of undisturbed gold-bearing gravel is under a Union Pacific right-of-way that got put in on level ground and looks like a tall causeway now.
I think/agree it's more likely Comstock is what are esteemed author is thinking about with Silverlode Island. Though possibly Potosí in Bolivia, which paid for most of the New Spanish Empire is the intended model.