There was a trend during the California Gold Rush to take “Before” pictures ahead of your trip out west to look for gold. The point being that once you inevitably found your share of gold there’d be an “After” picture, depicting your great wealth. A practice that could be considered an act of boldness by some and an act of foolishness by others. In some of the pictures the soon-to-be prospectors – usually from out east, where they were struggling to survive – would be dressed in ragged prospecting clothes with prop chisels and shovels. In some other pictures, the subject’s face and hands would be dirtied-up to look more the part. All of these measures were taken in order to document the moment before the moment they were going to start to do something great.
Of course, there is no record of “After” pictures because many of these people just went to another part of the country to struggle, suffer and die. The plight of these free spirited early Americans does not dull my fascination. I love that they celebrated the accomplishment before the attempt. It’s a type of humanity that feels familiar to me. I can even imagine those posing fools sitting for hours, preening in front of a water-colored background designed to look like the hills of California. I can see them swinging a pickaxe to the perfect freeze frame (of course, photo technology being what it was then, they’d be stuck in that stress-position forever). Those people are no less the historical figures because they took their victory lap before the race began. No, those folks peered out from underneath that exaggerated prospector’s hat and spoke life into their dreams, long before their fingers were crippled by working the sluice box or before they were unceremoniously eaten by a mountain lion or a grizzly. Those people were imbued with the spirit of Fake-It-Until-You-Make-It. And their essence lives on today in what we call Social Media.