Author: Created: 10/30/2009 7:57 AM
GPAA Magazine Archive
By Article Admin on 4/17/2012 4:17 PM

Get Gold Prospectors FREE with a GPAA membership!

Gold Prospectors Magazine January February 2012 CoverThe May/June edition of Gold Prospectors, GPAA’s national magazine, features Legends of Crisson Mine and mine owner Tammy Ray’s nugget-laden Gold Digger hot rod as its cover story. Look for more of the usual riveting and adventure-packed stories of gold prospecting and gem & treasure hunting that you've come to expect in our glossy, full-color magazine.

Gold Prospectors Magazine is now on sale at newsstands and is FREE for all GPAA and LDMA members. If you are not yet a GPAA member, Gold Prospectors Magazine alone, is a great reason to join Gold Prospectors Association of America.

By Article Admin on 2/20/2012 8:07 PM

Get Gold Prospectors FREE with a GPAA membership!

Gold Prospectors Magazine January February 2012 CoverThe March/April edition of Gold Prospectors, GPAA’s national magazine, features metal detecting and treasure hunting as its theme. Look for more of the usual riveting and adventure-packed stories of gold prospecting and gem & treasure hunting that you've come to expect in our glossy, full-color magazine.

Gold Prospectors Magazine is now on sale at newsstands and is FREE for all GPAA and LDMA members. If you are not yet a GPAA member, Gold Prospectors Magazine alone, is a great reason to join Gold Prospectors Association of America.

By Article Admin on 1/9/2012 3:56 PM

The Women of Nome’s Gold Rush: 1897-1906

By Priscilla Rhoades

The Women of Nome’s Gold RushAt the height of the Klondike Gold Rush at the turn of the century, Nome was no place for a respectable woman. The congested Alaskan town was dirty, dangerous, and inhabited by hard-living men. Klondike “Klondy” Nelson saw Nome for the first time in 1902 as a curious five-year-old arriving with her mother, Alma. 
Alma Nelson had tired of waiting for her gold-fevered husband to come home to South Dakota and had determined that mother and daughter would join him in Nome. In her memoir, Daughter of the Gold Rush, Klondy described what they saw that October day after leaving their ship:
Nome in 1902 was a jumble of flimsy, false-fronted buildings, half of them saloons. There didn’t seem to be room on the boardwalk for another person. The men seemed to be of every nationality — Scandinavians, Russians, Greeks, Poles, Germans, French-Canadians, even Chinese.

Read more in the January/February Issue of Gold Prospectors Magazine.

Join the GPAA and don't miss an issue!

By Article Admin on 1/9/2012 3:04 PM
Panning for gold is easy! By Tom Massie GPAA CEO / Gold Fever host

Panning for gold is easyI have seen it for myself — someone who has never held a gold pan in their hands entering into the panning contest at a GPAA gold show. They watch a few people ahead of them to see how it’s done and when it’s their turn, they swish the pan around, drop the gold to the bottom, use the riffle traps in the pan and pick out the nuggets with a respectable time and even — once in awhile, when the competition is not to stiff — win! For the most part, the vessels for use in gold panning and the methods of panning are unchanged over the years. The bevel-sided dish pan is the traditional utensil for panning for gold, but anything that will hold water and the dirt ’n gravel will do — such as a frying pan or a pie plate. But, if you expect to have...
By Article Admin on 1/9/2012 2:45 PM

Editor’s Note: What’s up on Wall Street?

By Tom Massie
GPAA CEO / Gold Fever host

Tom Massie will work 4 goldExcuse me while I go  on a rant here, but  this whole Occupy Wall Street thing seems to me to be a bit silly. Now, I know we live in the land of the free and you have a right to free speech, but it kinda seems  to me some of these protesters are protesting for the mere sake of pro-testing. For lack of a better term, I think they find it fun.

A few months ago, we began hearing of “the one percent,” who are responsible for the current economic mess. This one percent apparently makes all their money at the expense of the other 99 percent. Who is this one percent? Is it the late Steve Jobs, who created a lot of really cool equipment that made people’s lives easier?

Read more in the January/February Issue of Gold Prospectors Magazine.

Join the GPAA and don't miss an issue!

 

By Article Admin on 8/4/2011 10:37 AM

Ethel (left) and Edna Berry Ethel Bush Berry’s golden honeymoon

Years before gold was discovered on the beaches of Nome, Alaska, it had already been claimed in what was to become Canada’s Yukon Territory. In the fall of 1895, a California farm girl named Ethel Bush accepted a proposal of marriage from her childhood sweetheart, Clarence J. Berry. C.J. had just returned home to Selma, California from the Yukon Territory, where he had spent 18 months prospecting for gold. Like many other victims of the hard economic times of the 1890s, C.J. had been seduced by the dream of riches beckoning from the streams of the Yukon. In 1894, when he had abandoned his failing fruit farm to follow his golden dream, the muscular, 27-year-old farm boy had asked the girl next door to wait for him. Ethel had promised that she would.

By Article Admin on 8/4/2011 10:22 AM

Crystal Gold Mine EntranceIdaho’s Silver Valley

“If it’s not grown, it’s got to be mined,” Lenny the mine guide stated matter-of-factly as he led our hard hat-wearing group into the dim, damp underground Sierra Silver Mine outside of Wallace, Idaho.

“If you really think about it, you’ll realize how true that is,” he continued, proudly. “The manufacture of everyday products requires silver, gold, copper, lead, zinc and other minerals.”

By Article Admin on 8/3/2011 5:15 PM

Gold Prospectors Magazine Cover Spetember October 2011

Gem Fever

Blue Sheppard and the Stewart Mine

When I first met Blue Sheppard at the Gems of Pala, I saw a miner, a master gem cutter, a mentor and a man — all shrouded in the mystique of the world famous Stewart Mine.
Wearing his trademark black leather vest, a rumpled shirt, heavy boots and holding his miner’s helmet under one arm, Sheppard wiped the sweat from his brow as the Californian sun began to beat down on Queen Mountain.

As the small but fascinated crowd of weekend gem hunters began to sift through the fresh tailings he had just brought down from the mine in the hills above Pala, Sheppard’s eyes lit up as he began to talk about gemstones. His spirit and brilliance came shining through. I knew then I was only seeing the surface of Blue Sheppard and the Stewart Mine. I just had to dig a little deeper.

By Article Admin on 5/27/2011 4:11 PM

Lost Stagecoach Loot

Lost Stagecoach LootWells Fargo stagecoaches rolled across the West for more than a half a century carrying special mail, passengers, gold nuggets, gold bullion and gold dust. By the time the Civil War came around, the Wells Fargo Company was so well known that a number of publishers began to print a new form of literature referred to as the “dime novel.” These booklets featured the tales of stagecoach holdups and train robberies to satisfy their adventure-starved readers. The most popular of dime novels told of Wells Fargo stage robberies done by daring bandits decked out in colorful kerchiefs and “dusters.” of course, every highwayman carried a six-gun and was, supposedly, quick on the trigger.

By Article Admin on 5/26/2011 2:28 PM

The Silver King of Colorado

Great events that change our world are not always caused by the actions or wishes of important people. Often, it’s the ordinary folk going about their daily work who are responsible for greatness. In 1848, a group of laborers in California found a small nugget of gold and the world was never the same again. As news of the find reached them, people from all over the world were gripped by an overwhelming desire for wealth and soon thousands of hopefuls became part of the historic migration to the West. A few did become wealthy and famous, but the majority faded into history.

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2011 Gold Prospectors Association of America