2.04.2010
(33) Zemira part of the California Gold Rush
When the men were discharged [from the Mormon Battalion], some of them re-enlisted, and some found employment to earn funds for their trip returning to join their families. Zemira was with several other discharged men who spent the winter as employees at Sutter’s Fort on the Sacramento River. He was there when gold was discovered at Sutter’s Mill, January 24, 1848. That was the beginning of the California gold rush. Zemira “found a rich vein of gold and was successful in obtaining $500 worth of gold dust—enough to begin life for himself in Utah.”57 The following summer the men honorably completed their contracts with Sutter, abandoned the gold fields, and joined their families in the east.
“He (Zemira) was now seventeen years of age, six feet tall with curly black hair and flashing eyes, and had the strength and courage of a veteran soldier.”58
57 - Dec. of G. Palmer & P. Draper, p. 446 - Zemira finds gold vein
58- Ibid – Zemira, Battalion veteran at age 17
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