The Oregon Trail, Yesterday and Today

$12.95

The Oregon Trail started at Independence, Missouri and continued for approximately two thousand miles until it reached Oregon City on the Willamette River. It would head west across the prairies of Kansas, northwest along the Little Blue into Nebraska, west through the Platte River Valley, and along the North Platte, crossing over to the Sweetwater River to the great South Pass, and then on across the valley of the Green River to the valley of the Bear River; up the bear, crossing to the Snake River, along the Snake, and finally leaving to cut over to the Columbia River, on to The Dalles, and at last to the valley of the Willamette and Oregon City. Traveling about twenty miles a day, the journey would take most emigrants four and one-half to five months. Many would die trying, while others would turn around. That most made it is a credit to the human will and spirit……

SKU: 1029 Category:

Description

Here lies a description of the history of the Oregon Trail- from past to present. It is a unique blend of maps, guides, emigrant diaries and journals, old drawings and paintings, together with recent photographs. This book tells the story of the Oregon Trail in an interesting, easy to read manner and is packed with information for every one, the armchair traveler, the tourist, the historian and the Oregon Trail buff.

The realities of the trail are examined, as the misconceptions that have surrounded it are dispelled. The trail is explored through the eyes of the early emigrants’ art and diaries, which stand as evidence of their experiences and their true amazement as they traveled westward. Old paintings are compared to similar views today as photographed by the author while many of the landmarks along the trail still remain. Learn about he people and events that brought so many people west in the years of its development. Not only will you read about the trail, you will experience it almost as if you were and early emigrant yourself.

ISBN: 978-0-87004-319-2

197 Pages

Caxton Press, 2008