THIS DAY IN HISTORY – A thousand pioneers head West as part of the Great Emigration – 1843

Via History.com

The first major wagon train to the northwest departs from Elm Grove, Missouri, on the Oregon Trail.

Although U.S. sovereignty over the Oregon Territory was not clearly established until 1846, American fur trappers and missionary groups had been living in the region for decades, to say nothing of the Native Americans who had settled the land centuries earlier. Dozens of books and lectures proclaimed Oregon’s agricultural potential, piquing the interest of white American farmers. The first overland immigrants to Oregon, intending primarily to farm, came in 1841 when a small band of 70 pioneers left Independence, Missouri. They followed a route blazed by fur traders, which took them west along the Platte River through the Rocky Mountains via the easy South Pass in Wyoming and then northwest to the Columbia River. In the years to come, pioneers came to call the route the Oregon Trail.

In 1842, a slightly larger group of 100 pioneers made the 2,000-mile journey to Oregon. The next year, however, the number of emigrants skyrocketed to 1,000. The sudden increase was a product of a severe depression in the Midwest combined with a flood of propaganda from fur traders, missionaries, and government officials extolling the virtues of the land. Farmers dissatisfied with their prospects in Ohio, Illinois, Kentucky, and Tennessee, hoped to find better lives in the supposed paradise of Oregon.

On this day in 1843, some 1,000 men, women, and children climbed aboard their wagons and steered their horses west out of the small town of Elm Grove, Missouri. The train comprised more than 100 wagons with a herd of 5,000 oxen and cattle trailing behind. Dr. Elijah White, a Presbyterian missionary who had made the trip the year before, served as guide.

The first section of the Oregon Trail ran through the relatively flat country of the Great Plains. Obstacles were few, though the river crossings could be dangerous for wagons. As they traversed through Native American territories, the danger of attacks was a small but genuine risk. To be on the safe side, the pioneers drew their wagons into a circle at night to create a makeshift stockade. If they feared Native Americans might raid their livestock—the Plains tribes valued the horses, though generally ignored the oxen—they would drive the animals into the enclosure.

The pioneers quickly learned that they were more likely to be injured or killed by a host of other causes. Obstacles included accidental discharge of firearms, falling off mules or horses, drowning in river crossings, and disease. After entering the mountains, the trail also became much more difficult, with steep ascents and descents over rocky terrain. The pioneers risked injury from overturned and runaway wagons.

Yet, as with the 1,000-person party that made the journey in 1843, the vast majority of pioneers on the trail survived to reach their destination in the fertile, well-watered land of western Oregon. The migration of 1844 was smaller than that of the previous season, but in 1845 it jumped to nearly 3,000. Thereafter, migration on the Oregon Trail was an annual event, although the practice of traveling in giant convoys of wagons gave way to many smaller bands of one or two-dozen wagons. The trail was heavily traveled until 1884, when the Union Pacific constructed a railway along the route.

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8 Comments
Marky
Marky
May 22, 2023 10:04 am

The trail was heavily traveled until 1884, when the Union Pacific constructed a railway along the route

Thats it? Then what happened? Guess Ill have to wait for the sequel.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Marky
May 22, 2023 10:37 am

Epilogue: Then the commiefornians moved north and fucked everything up

Euddie
Euddie
  Marky
May 22, 2023 10:47 am

Portlandia happened.

Ginger
Ginger
  Marky
May 22, 2023 1:18 pm

Sitting Bull said “There goes the neighborhood.”

Jdog
Jdog
May 22, 2023 12:19 pm

There is a fundamental difference between the “pioneers” who founded this country and established the founding documents like the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution, and the “settlers” and “immigrants” that came afterwards.
The pioneers were brave people who valued individual sovereignty and liberty above all else, and were willing to risk their lives to acquire them.
The immigrants who came later to America were the people who were unwilling to stand up for their rights in their former countries and only came to America after it was safe for them to do so.
As time went on, the immigrants came to vastly outnumber the original pioneers and the rebel spirit that the US was founded on was lost. The bankers and corporations took control of government, and began to usurp the powers that were once vested in the people. Through a series of actions beginning with the legalization of corporations and the Civil War and then continuing to the 14th amendment, the creation of the Federal Reserve, the 16th and 17th Amendments, and the Patriot Act, the bankers and corporations have stripped away all power from the people and from the States.
The US is today a Corporatocracy where the government is owned by corporate powers and the people are sublets, and slaves to their corporate masters. Brainwashed by government schools and government controlled media.

well_Inever
well_Inever
May 22, 2023 12:38 pm

Watched a good movie that portrayed this but can’t recall the title. I’m sure you can do a search and find it. One small correction to this article though. “…and children climbed aboard their wagons…” They didn’t climb aboard anything. Except for the driver they walked the whole way unless they became to sick to walk. Here’s a supposed true story of the Mormon westward trek. It’s called 17 miracles.

Euddie
Euddie
May 22, 2023 3:34 pm

I thought about such travel when I drove across country on I-80 in four days.