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  2. Black Hills gold jewelry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Hills_gold_jewelry

    The finished jewelry known as Black Hills Gold must be produced in the Black Hills of South Dakota. The different colors of gold used for leaves and other details are made when the pure 24 Karat yellow gold is alloyed with copper to achieve the traditional 14 karat pink (or red) gold, and the gold is combined with silver to create the 14 karat ...

  3. Homestake Mine (South Dakota) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homestake_Mine_(South_Dakota)

    Until it closed in 2002 it was the largest and deepest gold mine in the Western Hemisphere . The mine produced more than forty million troy ounces (43,900,000 oz; 1,240,000 kg) of gold during its lifetime. [1] This is about 2,500 cubic feet (71 m 3) or a volume of gold roughly equal to 18,677 US gallons.

  4. A. E. Coleman - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A._E._Coleman

    A. E. "Fred" Coleman was an American former slave credited with discovering gold in Julian, California and thus launching a gold rush in that area. Coleman was employed as cattle herder and living in the Julian area with his Kumeyaay wife Maria Jesusa Anej and eleven children. [ 1 ]

  5. Black Hills gold rush - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Hills_Gold_Rush

    The workers crushed the rock to release the gold, concentrated the gold by gravity methods, and then exposed the concentrate to mercury that would amalgamate or mix with the gold. Miners call this kind of gold extraction free milling. [7] Gold existed elsewhere in the Black Hills, but it was not in a state suitable for free-milling.

  6. Hills and Dales Estate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hills_and_Dales_Estate

    Hills and Dales Estate is the home built for textile magnate Fuller Earle Callaway and his wife Ida Cason Callaway completed in 1916 in Lagrange, Georgia The property includes the pre-Civil War Ferrell Gardens started by Nancy Ferrell in 1832 and expanded by her daughter Sarah Coleman Ferrell beginning in 1841.

  7. Stiegel-Coleman House - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stiegel-Coleman_House

    The Stiegel-Coleman House, also known as Elizabeth Farms, is an historic mansion house which is located at 2121 Furnace Hills Pike (Pennsylvania Route 501), just north of Brickerville, Pennsylvania. Built in 1757 and substantially enlarged in 1780, it was the home of two of colonial Pennsylvania's early iron and glass makers, William Stiegel ...