Letters from the Alleghany Mountains

audiobook

Letters from the Alleghany Mountains

by Charles Lanman

EN·~6 hours·28 chapters

Chapters

28 total

LETTERS FROM THE ALLEGHANY MOUNTAINS. - LETTER I.

18:05

LETTER II.

8:28

LETTER III.

9:33

LETTER IV.

7:48

LETTER V.

26:20

LETTER VI.

10:34

LETTER VII.

7:40

LETTER VIII.

11:17

LETTER IX.

17:43

LETTER X.

16:09

Description

A series of candid letters from a mid‑nineteenth‑century explorer paints a vivid portrait of life on the edge of the Alleghany Mountains. Written to a trusted friend, the correspondence blends personal reflection with careful observation of a region caught in the throes of a gold fever. The author’s voice is both scholarly and intimate, offering readers a sense of stepping into a diary from a bygone era.

In his first letter he arrives at Dahlonega, Georgia, a fledgling gold‑town still scarred by recent displacement of the Cherokee. He describes log cabins clinging to a rugged hill, streams darkened by mining runoff, and a landscape riddled with shafts and tunnels. The bustling streets, where prospectors sift the earth after every rain, reveal both the promise of riches and the harsh realities of frontier labor.

Through the letters the writer’s keen eye records both the stark beauty of the mountains and the restless drive of the miners. Listeners will hear the clang of pickaxes and feel the crisp air, gaining a vivid sense of a transformative era.

Collections

Browse all

Details

Language

en

Duration

~6 hours (371K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Marcia Brooks, Stephen Hutcheson and the online Distributed Proofreaders Canada team at http://www.pgdpcanada.net

Release date

2015-03-05

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Charles Lanman

Charles Lanman

1819–1895

An energetic 19th-century man of letters, he mixed literary work with public service, travel, and a lifelong interest in American life and landscapes. His books and sketches grew out of a career that moved easily between journalism, libraries, government offices, and the outdoors.

View all books

You may also like