LIMITED TO 2350 COPIES, published in 1967 by Lewis Osborne.  Lacking dust jacket but overall in VERY GOOD CONDITION.  Cream colored textured cloth boards with very little if any corner or edge wear, a few small marks front board, near right hand corner, gilt decoration and titling front board and spine unrubbed.  A previous owner neatly affixed a bookplate behind first free endpaper.  The front endpapers is a facsimile of an antique California map (shown in listing photo) and the back endpaper is a facsimile of an antique Sacramento map.  75 clean and solidly bound thick textured pages, no interior marks, LOTS OF LINE DRAWINGS AND ENGRAVINGS THROUGHOUT.

Winner of the Western Book award. Dr. Stillman's letters from Sacramento during the 1849-1850 period, first published as part of the book, Seeking the Golden Fleece in 1877. Includes an endpaper map of Sacramento City, 1850.

This Wikipedia entry on J.B.D. Stillman describes his journeys relating to gold in California:

"Jacob Davis Babcock Stillman (1819–1888) was personal physician to Leland Stanford, the eighth governor of California. He is "'credited with counseling Mrs. Stanford sufficiently so that after eighteen years of marriage, she bore a son, Leland Jr., in whose memory Stanford University was established by his father.' The nature of this miraculous counseling is not specified."

He and Stanford published The Horse in Motion, the photographs in which (by Eadweard Muybridge) answered affirmatively the question which had been the basis of a longstanding wager among Stanford and others: whether all four hooves of a galloping horse are ever off the ground simultaneously.

Born 1819 in Schenectady, New York Jacob Davis Babcock Stillman, better known as JDB, migrated to California in 1849 and made a name not only as a physican but also as an adventurist, writer and a pioneer in the medical field.

Following his graduation in botany and biology in 1843 from the Union University in Schenectady, the third in the United States at the time, JDB worked as a director in a boarding and later as a surgeon at the Bellevue Hospital Center. He was married to Caroline Maxson the same year. During his tenure at the hospital, he set off at age thirty on a 194-day ship journey on the Pacific Ocean for San Francisco via Cape Horn. He narrates the adventure and hardships he faced during the long journey he made along with a bunch of 97 gold hunters--the misery made worse by a ruthless captain of the ship--in his maiden book, “ Seeking the Golden Fleece.” His wanderlust did not stop there. Soon after he landed in San Francisco, he made another trip on a boat across the Sacramento River to the gold mines with his friend Mark Hopkins Jr. but was back shortly after he fell sick. His book An 1850 Voyage, San Francisco to Baltimore, By Sea and Land, recounts his another epic voyage."

B132