|
Legends Home
Site
Map
What's New!!

American History
Ghost Towns
Ghostly Legends
Historic People
Native Americans
The Old West
Photo
Galleries
Roadside
Attractions
Rocky Mtn Store
Route 66
Travel
Destinations
Treasure Tales
Legends Blog
Free E-Newsletter

12343 W. 79th Terrace
Lenexa,
KS 66215
913-708-5119
Please report
broken links, missing pictures, or other problems online by clicking
HERE or send us an
email. Thanks!
| |
|
|
|
NEBRASKA LEGENDS
Overland Trails of
Nebraska |
|

|
|
<< Previous 1
2
Next
>> |
|
By Addison Erwin
Sheldon, 1913 |
|
Each of the old
overland
trails which crosses
Nebraska from the
Missouri
River to the mountains has a story. It is a story written deep in the
lives of men and women, and in the record of the westward march of the
American people. The story of these
overland
trails was also written in broad deep furrows across our prairies.
Along these trails journeyed thousands of men, women and children with ox
teams, carts, wheelbarrows, and on foot, to settle the great country
beyond. Over them marched the soldiers who built forts to protect the
settlers. Then the long freighting trains loaded with food, tools and
clothing passed that way. So there came to be great beaten thoroughfares
one or two hundred feet wide, deeply cut in the earth by the wheels of
wagons and the feet of pilgrims.
|

Nebraska prairie
|
|
The
Oregon Trail
was the first and most famous of these in
Nebraska.
It started from the
Missouri
River at
Independence,
Missouri,
ran across the northeast corner of
Kansas
and entered
Nebraska
near the point where Gage and Jefferson counties meet on the
Nebraska-Kansas
line. It followed the course of the Little Blue River across
Jefferson, Thayer, Nuckolls, Clay and Adams counties, then across the
divide to the Platte near the head of Grand Island in Hall County,
then along the south side of the Platte through Kearney, Phelps,
Gosper, and Dawson, to a point in Keith county about seven miles east
of Big Springs, where it crossed the South Platte and continued up the
south side of the North Platte through Keith, Garden, Morrill and
Scotts Bluff counties, where it passed out of
Nebraska
into
Wyoming .
The
beginnings of the
Oregon Trail
in
Nebraska
were made in 1813 by the little band of returning Astorians as they,
leading their one poor horse, tramped their weary way down the Platte
valley to the Otoe village where they took canoes for their journey
down the river. These first
Oregon Trailers
left no track deep enough to be followed. They simply made known the
way. After them fur traders on horseback and afoot followed nearly the
same route. On April 10, 1830, Milton Sublette with ten wagons and one
milk cow left
St. Louis,
and arrived at the Wind River Mountains on July 16th. They returned to
St. Louis
the same summer, bringing back ten wagons loaded with furs and the
faithful cow which furnished milk all the way. Theirs were the first
wagon wheels on the
Oregon Trail
across
Nebraska.
The track they made from the mouth of the
Kansas
river up the valley of the Little Blue and up the south side of the
Platte and North Platte was followed by others, and thus became the
historic trail. Their famous cow and the old horse, which seventeen
years before carried the burdens for the Astorians, are entitled to a
high place among the pioneers of the West.
In 1832,
Captain Bonneville, whose story is told by Washington Irving, followed
over Sublette's trail from the
Missouri
River to the mountains. In the same year Nathaniel J. Wyeth following
the same trail pushed through the South Pass in the mountains and on
to
Oregon ,
thus making an open road from the
Missouri
River to the Pacific Ocean. With slight changes, this road remained
the
Oregon Trail
through the years of overland travel. Every spring in May the long
emigrant wagon trains left the
Missouri
River and arrived on the Pacific coast in November. It was a wonderful
trip.
|
|
|
|

Wagon Train in 1847.
This image available for photographic prints
HERE!
|
Every day the train moved fifteen or twenty
miles. Every night it camped. Every day there were new scenes and events.
New friends were found among the travelers. Children were born on the way.
There were weddings and funerals. It was a great traveling city moving two
thousand miles, from the river to the ocean.
There are five periods in the
story of the
Oregon Trail.
The first was the period of finding the way and breaking the trail and
extends from the return of the Astorians in 1813 to the Wyeth wagons in
1832. The second period was that of the early
Oregon
migration and extends from 1832 to the discovery of gold in
California in 1849.
|
|
The third period was that of the rush for gold and extends
from 1849 to 1860. During this period the
Oregon Trail
became the greatest traveled highway in the world, wider and more beaten
than a city street and hundreds of thousands passed over it. The fourth
period is that of the decline of the
Oregon Trail
and extends from 1860 to 1869.
The fifth period, from 1869 to the present day, is witnessing its gradual
effacement.
The best brief description of the
Oregon Trail
is that of Father De Smet, who knew it well and tells of its appearance
when first seen by him and his party of Indians from the Upper
Missouri
in 1851:
"Our Indian companions, who had never seen but
the narrow hunting paths by which they transport themselves and their
lodges, were filled with admiration on seeing this noble highway, which is
as smooth as a barn floor swept by the winds, and not a blade of grass can
shoot up on it on account of the continual passing. They conceived a high
idea of the countless white nations. They fancied that all had gone over
that road and that an immense void must exist in the land of the rising
sun. They styled the route the 'Great Medicine Road of the Whites.'"
In another place Father De Smet tells of the great
government wagon trains he met on the
Oregon Trail
in 1858:
"Each train consisted of twenty-six wagons,
each wagon drawn by six yoke of oxen. The trains made a line fifty miles
long. Each wagon is marked with a name as in the case of ships, and these
names served to furnish amusement to the passers-by. Such names as The
Constitution, The President, The Great Republic, The King of Bavaria,
Louis Napoleon, Dan O'Connell, Old Kentuck, were daubed in great letters
on each side of the carriage. On the plains the wagoneer assumes the style
of Captain, being placed in command of his wagon and twelve oxen. The
master wagoneer is admiral of this little land fleet of 26 captains and
312 oxen. At a distance the white awnings of the wagons have the effect of
a fleet of vessels with all canvas spread."
Continued Next Page |
|

Chimney Rock in
Nebraska
was a landmark for the many emigrants traveling along the
Oregon and
California Trails. |

Oregon Trail
ruts at Rock Creek,
Nebraska
Kathy Weiser, July, 2006.
This image available for
photographic prints
HERE! |
|
<< Previous 1
2
Next
>> |
|
From the Rocky Mountain General Store
People
Postcards - We have
collected a wide variety of people postcards from couples
serenading, to wanton women of the early 1900's, to famous figures.
Each one of these is unique and, in many cases, we have only one
available, so don't wait. To see them all, click
HERE!
 |
| |
|